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HBS Working Knowledge September 13, 2004 Brush et al. |
Cash and the Woman-Owned Business Yes, it's a fact! Women generally have less cash to "seed" fund their own ventures. This excerpt from the book Clearing the Hurdles explains what women can do about it. |
InternetNews August 31, 2004 Paul Shread |
Copan Catches On Two weeks after shipping the Revolution 200T disk-based storage library Copan has netted a cool $25 million in second rounding venture funding. |
InternetNews August 25, 2004 Colin C. Haley |
Vonage Awash in Venture Capital VoIP upstart Vonage has quickly amassed another $105 million from venture capitalists and is looking to Latin America and Asia to accelerate an already torrid growth rate. |
InternetNews August 24, 2004 Colin C. Haley |
VCs Notice Networking Security Firm Vernier Networks raises new capital to enhance its intrusion detection technology. |
Entrepreneur September 2004 David Worrell |
Paying Your Dues If you're looking for investor money, brace yourself for a rigorous due-diligence process. |
Entrepreneur September 2004 C.J. Prince |
Relief Valve? Once seen as the scourge of capital raising, PIPEs are not just for troubled companies anymore. Done right, a private investment in public equity could bring your business much-needed cash. |
InternetNews August 16, 2004 Paul Shread |
Intransa Rakes In $25 Million, Targets SMBs Intransa appears to be catching on in IP storage, at least enough to convince the company's investors to shell out big bucks with a fourth round of funding. |
InternetNews August 13, 2004 Ryan Naraine |
eBay Takes Craigslist Stake The popular Craigslist trading site hooks up with a wealthy backer to help fund expansion. |
The Motley Fool August 10, 2004 Rich Duprey |
High-Tech Spooks The CIA's private venture capital firm has one investor on edge. |
BusinessWeek August 16, 2004 Robert D. Hof |
"Please God, Just One More Bubble" Too many tech investors, from Wall Street to Sand Hill Road, seem to be ignoring why they crashed after the 1990s hit a dead end. Venture capitalists are pouring money into look-alike startups in nascent sectors and dot-com stocks look pricey. |
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