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Technology Investment Network

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Technology Investment Network
NameTechnology Investment Network
Founded1990s
HeadquartersLondon
Area servedGlobal
Key peopleSir Stelios Haji-Ioannou, Sir Richard Branson, Sir James Dyson
IndustryVenture capital, Angel investing, Private equity
ProductsDealflow, Syndication, Accelerator programs

Technology Investment Network is a private investment platform that facilitates connections among angel investors, venture capitalists, entrepreneurs, and institutional backers across global technology hubs. It operates events, syndication channels, and online deal portals to accelerate funding for startups while providing due diligence, mentoring, and exit support. The organization has worked with prominent investors and portfolio companies spanning fintech, biotech, cleantech, and artificial intelligence.

History

Founded amid the rise of the dot-com era, the organization emerged contemporaneously with groups such as Techstars, Y Combinator, AngelList, Sequoia Capital, and Accel Partners. Early activity intersected with the expansion of NASDAQ-listed technology firms and the aftermath of the Dot-com bubble, influencing syndication practices used by British Business Angel Association members and European Investment Fund stakeholders. Expansion phases tracked the growth of regional hubs like Silicon Valley, Cambridge, England, Berlin, Bangalore, Tel Aviv and Hong Kong, and responded to regulatory shifts exemplified by legislation in the United Kingdom and United States Congress affecting private placements. Strategic partnerships were formed with entities such as Barclays corporate innovation units, Goldman Sachs technology teams, and university-affiliated incubators like Imperial College London and Stanford University.

Structure and Membership

The network's membership spans individual angels, family offices, corporate venture arms, and limited partners drawn from firms like Andreessen Horowitz, Benchmark Capital, Kleiner Perkins, Index Ventures, and Balderton Capital. Institutional relationships include links to European Investment Bank, World Bank programs, and regional development agencies in Scotland and Wales. Membership tiers recall models used by Chartered Institute for Securities & Investment-aligned groups, with governance mirrors of British Venture Capital Association codes and compliance frameworks similar to Financial Conduct Authority and Securities and Exchange Commission best practice. Events convene delegates from Microsoft, Google, Amazon (company), Apple Inc., Facebook, SoftBank, and multinational conglomerates engaged in strategic investment.

Investment Activities and Services

Services offered replicate those provided by accelerator programs and syndicates including screening, dealflow curation, co-investment vehicles, term sheet negotiation, and portfolio management, paralleling offerings from Plug and Play Tech Center, 500 Startups, MassChallenge, and Startupbootcamp. The network runs pitch events inspired by formats from Slush (conference), Web Summit, Dublin Tech Summit, and Collision Conference, and hosts mentorship drawn from executives formerly at Intel, ARM Holdings, Cisco Systems, IBM, and Oracle Corporation. It provides sector-specific diligence akin to practices at Biotech Advisory Boards and Cleantech Group reviews, engaging specialists from MIT, Harvard University, European Molecular Biology Laboratory, and patent counsel with backgrounds tied to the European Patent Office and United States Patent and Trademark Office. Ancillary services include introductions to secondary markets like London Stock Exchange, New York Stock Exchange, NASDAQ OMX, and exit planning resembling strategies used by Rothschild & Co and Goldman Sachs advisory teams.

Notable Deals and Portfolio Companies

The network has participated in financings and secondary rounds alongside investors in companies comparable to TransferWise, Revolut, Spotify, Deliveroo, Monzo, Stripe, Klarna, UiPath, DeepMind, Graphcore, Improbable, Babylon Health, Darktrace, Oxford Nanopore Technologies, Ocado Technology, ARM Ltd., ARM Holdings, ARM alumni projects, and early-stage rounds for firms emerging from Y Combinator and Techstars. Syndicated rounds have included collaboration with SoftBank Vision Fund, Tiger Global Management, General Catalyst, Bessemer Venture Partners, Lightspeed Venture Partners, and Foundry Group. Some exits mirrored paths taken by Deliveroo (IPO interest), strategic acquisitions by Microsoft and Google (company), and buyouts by Blackstone Group and KKR.

Business Model and Revenue Streams

Revenue streams combine membership fees, success fees on completed financings, carry from co-investment vehicles, sponsorship income from conferences similar to Web Summit and TechCrunch Disrupt, and consultancy retainers tied to corporate innovation projects with firms like IBM and Accenture. Additional income derives from licensing of deal-sourcing technology used by platforms akin to Carta (company), data subscriptions resembling offerings from Crunchbase and PitchBook, and event ticketing revenues similar to SXSW. The model aligns with monetization strategies employed by AngelList syndicates, Seedcamp, and Entrepreneur First.

Governance and Leadership

Governance typically involves a board composed of experienced investors, serial entrepreneurs, and corporate partners with backgrounds at McKinsey & Company, Boston Consulting Group, EY, PwC, and Deloitte. Leadership roles have included non-executive directors and chairpersons drawn from alumni networks of University of Oxford, University of Cambridge, Imperial College London, Harvard Business School, and INSEAD, and operational executives with prior tenures at Barclays, HSBC, Santander, and Deutsche Bank. Advisory panels often feature figures from public institutions such as Department for International Trade delegations and former executives from United Nations trade initiatives, providing strategic oversight and compliance alignment with international investment norms.

Category:Investment organizations Category:Venture capital