Capital2Market Empowering the New IPOs: Victor MacLaughlin

As an entrepreneur, I believe it is a tragedy that the number of Initial Public Offerings (IPO) or companies selling their shares publicly has reduced significantly since 2000. From 1980-2000, an average of 311 companies went public per year. Since the technology bubble burst in 2000, the average number of IPOs per year has only been 99. This harms angel investors, venture capitalists, employees and entrepreneurs, because they rely upon an active IPO market for exits and wealth creation. Small companies realized their only exit and sometimes the only way to expand their firm or create wealth for themselves and their shareholders is to sell it, since the option to tap the public markets for capital has greatly diminished. That began to change slowly in April of 2012 when the Jumpstart Our Business Startups Act (JOBS Act) was signed into law.

On September 23, 2013, small businesses rejoiced due to the activation of Title II of the JOBS Act. It counteracted the Securities Act of 1933, which placed a ban on general solicitation. Now, small businesses can publicly raise investment capital from people they have never met before, through advertising and social media platforms. This is now known as equity crowdfunding, as long as they abide by the rules and guidelines of Rule 506 of Reg D with accredited investors.

May 16, 2016 marked the day that allowed everyone to invest in a company of their own choosing. Investing in small businesses is no longer limited to the rich (accredited investors), because Title III of the JOBS Act, also known as Regulation Crowdfunding (Reg CF) leveled the investment landscape for all retail investment crowdfunding. Small businesses now have access to an investor pool of over 300 million potential investors.

Today, Title IV of the JOBS Act states that companies are allowed to raise up to $50 million—known as Reg A+—which is the primary focus of my firm, Capital2Market (C2M).

We hope to create a more robust IPO market for entrepreneurs that are seeking to expand their business, creating jobs and enhancing shareholder value. We are particularly selective in choosing the companies we support through this process. We aim to work with high quality companies with strong and growing track records.

We believe small companies should be generally soliciting investors starting with their own customers. Acquiring investors who are also customers makes sense. We can assist them in targeting other individuals with similar affinities that may not know the company yet, acquiring more investors, customers, and potentially, brand ambassadors. The efficient method of acquiring investors is to find people with an affinity to the business, replicate them, and scale.

C2M empowers every company that it supports to be the star! A supposed benefit of crowdfunding platforms is that issuers (small businesses, startups and projects, like Broadway plays) are provided access to a vast number of investors. Exposure alone is proven by these platforms not to work, as only a small percentage of the investors on the platform will have an affinity to the company. Ultimately, small businesses bring the majority of their investors to the platform, exposing their customers and investors to dozens of other offerings, frankly, only benefiting the platform.

C2M has proven that the issuer should be presented to its affinity group on its own merits. We offer a turnkey solution to uncovering, soliciting and converting like-minded people—just like your current investors and customers—to fill your offering. This may also provide a bump in revenue to boot. We create the front-end, back-end (with our fully compliant broker-dealer), and can handle the marketing for you so that you do not have to compete with so many other offerings on someone else’s platform. You have your own. When you attract and successfully raise capital from investors, those investors are your customers and your investors only. We believe investors make better customers.

By research and data-analytics, we acquire people with an affinity to your company. That creates the highest probability of success for your offering and your firm.

*Ritter, Jay R., Xiaohui Gao, and Zhongyan Zhu. “Where Have All the IPOs Gone?”
SSRN Electronic Journal (2013): n. pag. SSRN. Web. 20 Dec. 2016.