Time and again there have been hundreds of athletes who made enormous
amounts of money during their careers only to wind up with nothing
after they retire. In fact, recent studies show roughly 70% of
professional athletes will go broke within a few years of hanging up
their jerseys. It’s a staggering statistic and one that the Angel Venture Forum (AVF) in partnership with former Saint Louis Rams wide receiver Brandon Williams is working to change.
AVF is sponsoring “Angel Training Camp: Where athletes, entrepreneurs
and capital connect,”a half-day seminar on July 10, 2012, geared toward
current and retired professional athletes, coaches, executives and
professional athletes, that will provide an overview of the private
investing process. The goal is to train athletes to become MVP angel
investors.
Angel investors
are high net worth individuals or groups of individuals—often retired
executives or entrepreneurs—that typically invest in early-stage
entrepreneurs in exchange for equity ownership in their companies,
anywhere from 5% to 25%. There are currently more than 3000,000 angels
active in the US, investing about $22 billion in total last year. Deals
can range from $150,000 to $1 million.
Athletes are often approached with deals—especially start-up and
early stage ventures—because they are qualified high net worth
individuals. But most of the time these deals are not scalable,
profitable enterprises in the long run, notes Marc C. Mathis, managing
partner of AVF and managing director of the Mataron Development Group.
“I can’t stand to see when a guy like Terrell Owens, Warren Sapp or Allen Iverson is highlighted in the media for going bankrupt,”
says Mathis. “So, the one thing I wanted to implement with this program
is to focus on the education, bringing these guys into the
entrepreneurial ecosystem so that they could understand what angel
investing is all about and how to evaluate the companies that they
invest in.”
The highly interactive seminar will be held at the law office of
Womble Carlyle in Washington, DC, and will include expert presentations,
panel discussions and small group case studies. Topics to be addressed
include an introduction to angel investing, angel portfolio
strategy, evaluating opportunities, strategic partnerships, structuring
the deal, valuation, the post-investment relationship, monitoring your
investments and wealth management.
Williams, who serves as the president of the NFL Players
Association’s former players Saint Louis chapter, holds a similar
program called Venture Draft, “Where Athletes, Technology and Capital Intersect.” Using ABC’s Shark Tank
series as a model for vetted entrepreneurs to pitch to prominent sports
figures, the program aims to get more pros to invest in tech companies,
he says.
Williams has spent the past several years studying how athletes can
better monetize their brand, regardless if it is regional or national.
He says he built his company, Brandon Williams Economic Development
Corp, upon some of the same business principles as Magic Johnson
Enterprises.
“We know this space is lacking minorities let alone minority
athletes, so getting these guys to understand how the angel and venture
capital world works is critical.” Williams adds that today’s athletes
need planning beyond their playing careers. If money earned during the
length of the athlete’s career is not properly invested, he or she will
end up either in debt or bankrupt. “We are trying to give them that
playbook off the field as investors.”

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