Raising Money
in Rural Oregon
New Law Lets Communities
Invest in Themselves
Photo here
Who are we?
2
Kristin Wolff
Hatch Board Member (& business owner,
policy analyst) @kristinwolff #socent
#unjobs #workoutloud #startup #realchange
Heather Stafford
Assistant Director of Innovation &
Entrepreneurship @heathastafford
Business Oregon @BusinessOregon
Lisa Dawson
Executive Director
Northeast Oregon Economic Development District
@NEODD (Born & raised in Joseph, OR)
Welcome!
• Oregonian?
• Business owner or aspiring
business owner?
• Involved in economic
development in your
community?
3
4
And
congratulations
Your are now a
(potential)
investor too!
Today’s Goal
A shared understanding of the
law and the opportunities it
creates for entrepreneurs and
investors (that’s everybody) in
rural Oregon.
5
A shared understanding of the law and
the opportunities it creates for
entrepreneurs and particularly
investors (that’s everybody) in Oregon.
The Plan
• Introduction to the CPO
- Why & why now
- What
- How it supports NE Oregon’s
economic development strategy
• Personal Investment Framework
• Making it real! (Special guest: John
MacDougall)
6
7
Securities crowdfunding,
equity crowdfunding,
crowdvesting …
8
Oregon, in good company
9
Investing directly in the kinds of
businesses you want to see in
the world is awesome (and we’re
all figuring it out, together).
Investing in Ourselves
June 27, 2015
Heather Stafford – Asst. Director of Innovation & Entrepreneurship10
Grow our own
What we do
startupexpand recruit
Building blocks of economic development
12
Innovation & Entrepreneurship Division
Grow Our Own
entrepreneurshipinnovation capital
Building blocks of I&E
13
Community Capital or Compatible Capital
An Unprecedented Opportunity
for Oregon Businesses
Introducing Oregon’s
Community Public Offerings
Securities Crowdfunding
A (Surprisingly) Short History
• May 27 first statewide team meeting.
• Division of Finance and Corporate Securities
(DFCS) decided to make it law through Admin.
Rulemaking, 3 Formal Reviews, instead of the
much longer route of becoming a statute.
• Rules became law January 15.
Enable citizens to launch enterprises
that improve communities.
Work with a number of local partners to counsel,
mentor, and train small businesses.
Partners in the CPO Initiative
Why CPOs are Important
• Legal mechanism for entrepreneurs to
raise capital from the community
• Ordinary Oregonians and businesses
able now to gain (100 year apartheid)
• Entrepreneurs drive the deal
• Potential to inject hundreds of
millions of dollars into Oregon’s
economy (1% of Oregonian savings)
• Strengthen Oregon’s start-up culture
• Strengthen all regions of Oregon
Limiting Factors
• Credibility of Company
• Public Awareness of Opportunity
• Ability to Connect to Potential
Investors
• $250,000 Limit Raised by Company
• $2,500 Limit Invested by an Individual
in One Company
Current Status
1. Nine companies filed on Jan 15, and (7
days later) launched on Jan 22
2. In three weeks raised $100K ($207K today)
3. Average investment $1,000 (repeats)
4. Hatch provided over a dozen workshops
in preparation to the nine companies
5. Over 60 mentions in press (print, radio, TV)
6. Hatchoregon.com transactions
How Can You Be A Smart Investor?
• SEC: Securities and Exchange
Commission (federal regulating body)
• Term Sheet: an individualized written
outline for a company’s stock offering
• Intrastate: Oregon based companies
(80% or more assets located in
Oregon) selling to Oregon Residents
Terms to Know
• Technical Service Provider (TSP): a small
business development center used to
review the companies business plan
• Community Public Offering (CPO):
Securities as form of “Crowdfunding”
• Oregon Intrastate Offering Exemption
(OIO): Exemption from securities
registration for domestic offerings
Terms to Know
24
The Tricky Stuff
1. Unregistered: No one looks at the documents
2. Waiting Period: 7 days after filing
3. Advertising = Offering: the business is very
limited in what can be seen by anyone
4. Self-certification: A person must click a button
such as: “I am an Oregon resident” then they
can see the ad and offering documents
5. Documentary Evidence: Copy of driver’s
license, check, bill – enables purchase of
securities
Key Rules –
what the entrepreneur has to file
441-035-0110 Required Filings
1. Letter to Director of the Department of
Consumer and Business Services
2. Submitted copy of all advertising
material
3. Statement of meeting with TSP
4. Executive Summary (owners, amount,
use of funds)
5. Copy of Offering Disclosures (see next
slide)
Key Rules –
what the entrepreneur has to create
to offer to investors
441-035-0120 Required Disclosures
• The Team
• The Business
What is it, its history & current health, use of funds,
and material facts (including any risks)
• The Detail of the Sale
Type, Deal, Terms & Minimum / Maximum
What Kind of Community Do You Want?
What Companies Would You Support?
What Difference Can We Make?
Some Thoughts...
28
Businesses realize higher net incomes, create new, higher-wage jobs, increase product exports, consumers
spend and invest more within the region, non-profits and local governments meet needs and enhance
quality of life of citizens
Businesses are successful and adequately financed, individuals invest and spend money locally, locally-
produced food eaten in the region and more value-added food exported, more tourists spend more money
in the region, infrastructure meets demands of citizens, non-profits accomplish their missions, brownfields
returned to productive use, citizens informed and engaged, downtowns are vibrant
People will be trained, people and organizations will be assisted, projects will be developed and
implemented, funding will be invested
Activities will be conducted by NEOEDD staff and partners in each of the focus areas
Focus Areas: Entrepreneurial Development, Food System Development, Tourism Development, Non-Profit &
Government Support, Brownfields Redevelopment, Collaborative Planning, Partnerships, Leadership
• Partner Consensus
• Hire Hatch Innovation
• Develop Strategic Plan
• Establish Local Impact
Investing Opportunity
Networks
• Host Events – LIIONs, Speakers
• Offer Educational Workshops 30
Thinking About Local Investing
1.What makes it worth doing?
2.What kind of “returns” do you want?
3.How would you prioritize
opportunities you may choose to
review? (Price? Expected Return?
Timeline? Relationship? Impact?
Type of Deal?)
31
www.HatchOregon.org
32
33
A Framework Focused on Community
1. Will it help stabilize and strengthen my local
economy?
2. Will it help start, expand, or support local
entrepreneurs?
3. Will it bring or maintain essential and/or desired
products and services that I want to see?
4. Will it circulate investing dollars in our region?
5. Will it forge key relationships with the business
community and citizens?
6. Will it help grow other forms of critical
community capital?
Marco Vangelisti’s Investment
Framework
Transactions
Relationships
Biophilia
Supportive
of Life?
Marco 8 min. http://vimeo.com/95210753
Investment Framework Example #2
4/2014 36
Investment
Framework
Examples
Special Guest
38
John MacDougall
Founder, President
MacDougall Batmakers
Bend, OR
Thank You!
39
Lingering Questions?

R2R2 June 2015 - Lisa, Kristin, Heather

  • 1.
    Raising Money in RuralOregon New Law Lets Communities Invest in Themselves Photo here
  • 2.
    Who are we? 2 KristinWolff Hatch Board Member (& business owner, policy analyst) @kristinwolff #socent #unjobs #workoutloud #startup #realchange Heather Stafford Assistant Director of Innovation & Entrepreneurship @heathastafford Business Oregon @BusinessOregon Lisa Dawson Executive Director Northeast Oregon Economic Development District @NEODD (Born & raised in Joseph, OR)
  • 3.
    Welcome! • Oregonian? • Businessowner or aspiring business owner? • Involved in economic development in your community? 3
  • 4.
    4 And congratulations Your are nowa (potential) investor too!
  • 5.
    Today’s Goal A sharedunderstanding of the law and the opportunities it creates for entrepreneurs and investors (that’s everybody) in rural Oregon. 5 A shared understanding of the law and the opportunities it creates for entrepreneurs and particularly investors (that’s everybody) in Oregon.
  • 6.
    The Plan • Introductionto the CPO - Why & why now - What - How it supports NE Oregon’s economic development strategy • Personal Investment Framework • Making it real! (Special guest: John MacDougall) 6
  • 7.
  • 8.
  • 9.
    9 Investing directly inthe kinds of businesses you want to see in the world is awesome (and we’re all figuring it out, together).
  • 10.
    Investing in Ourselves June27, 2015 Heather Stafford – Asst. Director of Innovation & Entrepreneurship10
  • 11.
  • 12.
    What we do startupexpandrecruit Building blocks of economic development 12 Innovation & Entrepreneurship Division
  • 13.
    Grow Our Own entrepreneurshipinnovationcapital Building blocks of I&E 13 Community Capital or Compatible Capital
  • 14.
    An Unprecedented Opportunity forOregon Businesses Introducing Oregon’s Community Public Offerings Securities Crowdfunding
  • 15.
    A (Surprisingly) ShortHistory • May 27 first statewide team meeting. • Division of Finance and Corporate Securities (DFCS) decided to make it law through Admin. Rulemaking, 3 Formal Reviews, instead of the much longer route of becoming a statute. • Rules became law January 15.
  • 16.
    Enable citizens tolaunch enterprises that improve communities. Work with a number of local partners to counsel, mentor, and train small businesses. Partners in the CPO Initiative
  • 18.
    Why CPOs areImportant • Legal mechanism for entrepreneurs to raise capital from the community • Ordinary Oregonians and businesses able now to gain (100 year apartheid) • Entrepreneurs drive the deal • Potential to inject hundreds of millions of dollars into Oregon’s economy (1% of Oregonian savings) • Strengthen Oregon’s start-up culture • Strengthen all regions of Oregon
  • 19.
    Limiting Factors • Credibilityof Company • Public Awareness of Opportunity • Ability to Connect to Potential Investors • $250,000 Limit Raised by Company • $2,500 Limit Invested by an Individual in One Company
  • 20.
    Current Status 1. Ninecompanies filed on Jan 15, and (7 days later) launched on Jan 22 2. In three weeks raised $100K ($207K today) 3. Average investment $1,000 (repeats) 4. Hatch provided over a dozen workshops in preparation to the nine companies 5. Over 60 mentions in press (print, radio, TV) 6. Hatchoregon.com transactions
  • 21.
    How Can YouBe A Smart Investor?
  • 22.
    • SEC: Securitiesand Exchange Commission (federal regulating body) • Term Sheet: an individualized written outline for a company’s stock offering • Intrastate: Oregon based companies (80% or more assets located in Oregon) selling to Oregon Residents Terms to Know
  • 23.
    • Technical ServiceProvider (TSP): a small business development center used to review the companies business plan • Community Public Offering (CPO): Securities as form of “Crowdfunding” • Oregon Intrastate Offering Exemption (OIO): Exemption from securities registration for domestic offerings Terms to Know
  • 24.
    24 The Tricky Stuff 1.Unregistered: No one looks at the documents 2. Waiting Period: 7 days after filing 3. Advertising = Offering: the business is very limited in what can be seen by anyone 4. Self-certification: A person must click a button such as: “I am an Oregon resident” then they can see the ad and offering documents 5. Documentary Evidence: Copy of driver’s license, check, bill – enables purchase of securities
  • 25.
    Key Rules – whatthe entrepreneur has to file 441-035-0110 Required Filings 1. Letter to Director of the Department of Consumer and Business Services 2. Submitted copy of all advertising material 3. Statement of meeting with TSP 4. Executive Summary (owners, amount, use of funds) 5. Copy of Offering Disclosures (see next slide)
  • 26.
    Key Rules – whatthe entrepreneur has to create to offer to investors 441-035-0120 Required Disclosures • The Team • The Business What is it, its history & current health, use of funds, and material facts (including any risks) • The Detail of the Sale Type, Deal, Terms & Minimum / Maximum
  • 27.
    What Kind ofCommunity Do You Want? What Companies Would You Support? What Difference Can We Make? Some Thoughts...
  • 28.
  • 29.
    Businesses realize highernet incomes, create new, higher-wage jobs, increase product exports, consumers spend and invest more within the region, non-profits and local governments meet needs and enhance quality of life of citizens Businesses are successful and adequately financed, individuals invest and spend money locally, locally- produced food eaten in the region and more value-added food exported, more tourists spend more money in the region, infrastructure meets demands of citizens, non-profits accomplish their missions, brownfields returned to productive use, citizens informed and engaged, downtowns are vibrant People will be trained, people and organizations will be assisted, projects will be developed and implemented, funding will be invested Activities will be conducted by NEOEDD staff and partners in each of the focus areas Focus Areas: Entrepreneurial Development, Food System Development, Tourism Development, Non-Profit & Government Support, Brownfields Redevelopment, Collaborative Planning, Partnerships, Leadership
  • 30.
    • Partner Consensus •Hire Hatch Innovation • Develop Strategic Plan • Establish Local Impact Investing Opportunity Networks • Host Events – LIIONs, Speakers • Offer Educational Workshops 30
  • 31.
    Thinking About LocalInvesting 1.What makes it worth doing? 2.What kind of “returns” do you want? 3.How would you prioritize opportunities you may choose to review? (Price? Expected Return? Timeline? Relationship? Impact? Type of Deal?) 31
  • 32.
  • 33.
  • 34.
    A Framework Focusedon Community 1. Will it help stabilize and strengthen my local economy? 2. Will it help start, expand, or support local entrepreneurs? 3. Will it bring or maintain essential and/or desired products and services that I want to see? 4. Will it circulate investing dollars in our region? 5. Will it forge key relationships with the business community and citizens? 6. Will it help grow other forms of critical community capital?
  • 35.
    Marco Vangelisti’s Investment Framework Transactions Relationships Biophilia Supportive ofLife? Marco 8 min. http://vimeo.com/95210753
  • 36.
  • 37.
  • 38.
    Special Guest 38 John MacDougall Founder,President MacDougall Batmakers Bend, OR
  • 39.