Fred Wilson on AngelGate and Where the Web is Going

I had a chance to talk with Union Square Ventures partner Fred Wilson this morning, both during and after a meeting he had with half a dozen startups at the offices of Extreme Venture Partners, a fund and incubator with dual headquarters in Toronto and San Francisco. Wilson — whose firm has a stake in a few companies you may have heard of, such as Twitter, Foursquare and Zynga — came to town in order to meet with both venture investors and startups with a view towards possibly investing in some Canadian companies, and said afterwards that the Toronto startup environment “reminds me a lot of New York.”

I’m going to write a separate post about some of the companies that Wilson met with and his thoughts on the local startup ecosystem, but during our conversation the venture investor also had some comments about the recent “AngelGate” clash between “super-angels” and traditional VCs, as well as some advice about what some of the big trends are online that he is thinking about as he makes investments for Union Square.

On AngelGate:

The reality is that that market has changed a lot in the last two or three years. There’s a lot more money out there, it’s gotten very competitive. And usually what happens when things get competitive is prices get bid up, terms change, and the early participants feel it — they can’t win every deal, they can’t be in every deal and I think people start to get nervous. I think that’s largely what you’re seeing. You’re seeing people who’ve been in the market for a long time worrying about the fact that their market position isn’t what it used to be.

Is there too much money? I think it depends who you ask. Certainly for entrepreneurs there’s not too much money. But for people who used to be able to get into every deal at really great valuations, yeah there’s too much money for them — but for the market as a whole I’m not that worried about it. It’s certainly a good thing for me as an investor because more opportunities are getting funded, and it’s certainly good for entrepreneurs because more of them getting funded, so I think largely it’s a good thing.

Wilson also talks in the video about whether the so-called AngelGate meeting represented “collusion,” and whether some of what happened was a result of personal egos getting out of joint. During the startup meeting he attended, when asked about the “super-angel” phenomenon, Wilson said that he thinks on balance it can be a very positive thing for VCs like Union Square. “If someone wants to put in $250K and work as hard as I do, even though I’ve invested a lot more? I say bring it on,” Wilson said. “That’s a home run for me and a home run for the entrepreneur.” Among the super-angels who take this approach is Ron Conway of the SV Angel fund, Wilson said — “he works that hard for everyone, regardless of how much he has put in.”

Trends to be aware of:

Globalization is a huge trend. If you look at FB, Twitter, Google — 75 to 80 percent of their users are outside the U.S., so globalization of web services at scale is something I’m really interested in. There are entrepreneurs all over the world creating new web services that are as interesting as those getting created in the traditional tech centres like the Valley, Boston, New York. So globalization is probably the number one thing I’ve been thinking about.

Wilson also talked about the implications of mobility and how he is thinking about that in terms of his investments — and not just mobile with respect to specific devices or services, but how people can participate online from anywhere, and how more and more data is being produced because mobile devices have sensors that can change your experience or add value to it.

What he is thinking about now:

I’m really interested in the intersection between reputation, identity and knowledge — so things like Quora and StackOverflow (a Union Square Ventures portfolio company). These kinds of services use social media in a narrower and maybe higher value way to help people, and that’s really interesting to me. If you look at StackOverflow, developers who do the best job of generating answers to software development issues have their reputations rise in the system, and on the back side of StackOverflow is a job board, and so employers can come in and hire people and see what their reputation is. So when you think about how a Q&A site flows into a job board and how reputation is the key connective tissue there, I think that’s a really fascinating thing.

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