Holy shit was Syndicate good. Probably the best experience I had playing games as a kid (and my intro to Gibson, Stephenson, and Sterling), with the possible exception of Populous.
Bullfrog was genius.
If anyone with any say in the games industry is by chance reading this, I would easily pay $99+ for a "Shadowrun Returns" style remake of the game, instead of sequels to the mediocre, Syndicate in name only FPS they released last year:
Are these syndicates only now possible because of the crowdfunding provisions in last year's JOBS act, or is it just that nobody thought of doing things this way before?
Naval probably hatched this plan when VC's screwed him in Epinions. Brilliant payback.
In the USA one still can't crowdfund (from non-accredited investors) yet, but in a couple of months one will be able to share with the general public that they're fundraising.
These raises are possible because of Rule 504, 505, & 506 of the SEC.
Somewhat, but not quite...Real Estate brokers get a cash commission, not a piece of the home value. But the analogy comparing AngelList to an MLS makes sense.
I'm not sure where you live, but in the US, the standard commission for a registered broker selling a house is six percent of the selling price of the house, not a flat fee. But yes, they do not get to keep that six percent in perpetuity.
Standard commission for residential real-estate is in the 6 percent ballpark, but it's negotiable. It's also split between buyer's agent and listing agent, unless the listing agent brings the buyer (which may be considered a conflict of interest in some areas, but I'm not sure how it gets worked out).
Sometimes a FSBO seller will offer to pay a buyer's agent 2.5% or so, unless they don't want to work with agents at all.
It's a waste of money IMHO, but some people like to have an agent involved. I've had far better luck selling property on my own than using agents though.
Technically it's illegal to set commission rates, but 6 percent was the norm. In the Bay Area however, it's the new norm to offer 2.5-2.0% to Selling agents (those bringing buyers to the deal). I'm not sure exactly what the Listing agents put as the commission fee, but I'd imagine they're likely splitting it 50/50.
Can anyone show an example of what 20% of the carry would look like. I'm a bit unclear how much the advisor gets here and how much AngelList is getting (and what they are getting exactly).
Let's say the pre-money valuation of a startup is $4m and they raise $1m. The syndicate would own 20% of the company.
Let's say the company exits for $20m. Let's ignore preferred stock and assume it's all common to make the math easier. The syndicate would get $4m.
The first $1m would be payed back to the entire syndicate. The lead would get an additional 20% of the $3m or $600k. Then the rest of the $2.4m would be split amongst the syndicate.
> The first $1m would be payed back to the entire syndicate
i'm not an expert but i believe the carry is the portion above and beyond the promised return - in this case, the syndicated invested $1m, the promised return (let's call it 10% a year) would then be $1.1m (let's call it a year of waiting).
wouldn't the carry (the "bonus", basically) be 20% of $2.9m?
or maybe these deals lack a promised return and define the carry as anything beyond returned principal?
Bullfrog was genius.
If anyone with any say in the games industry is by chance reading this, I would easily pay $99+ for a "Shadowrun Returns" style remake of the game, instead of sequels to the mediocre, Syndicate in name only FPS they released last year:
http://www.metacritic.com/game/pc/shadowrun-returns