Daniel Cohen

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    « The Headquarters of an Israeli Company | Main | Gemini’s Spring Party »

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    I have found that Israeli can be over-competitive amongst themselves (as can any group) and this can work against us. Here is an idea about forming that billion dollar company in Israel: http://tr.im/gFCq

    I've just launched a new site: http://tr.im/hS6U

    Welcome back.

    She got the fact mostly right.
    The larger exits made in the past 8 years are for companies funded before 2001. Newer companies might still suddenly do a 180 but I highly doubt it. VC's killed the investment possibilities in this country by financing purely ridiculous ventures and ignoring sensible businesses.

    I am now completely confused
    When reading Sarah, I assumed that the measurement is
    for period X, sum Y was invested , sum Z was returned. Z was not supposed to be a return on Y. The only connection between Z and Y is the period of X. So, I told myself, it is only good for mature markets and steady markets. Because if W is your true ROI, and during X invseted Y is bigger then what W is return on, the result (Z/Y) is smaller then W. So, it would appear, Z to Y is only good to measure against some pre-set benchmark. When you compare two industries, or two independent regions, we have to know how investments behaved in the two during past X years and another say X years prior.
    So here both Daniel and the anonymous commenter take different takes on the numbers. I side with Daniel, and not because his understanding of Sarah's facts is like mine above. And not because the measure is perfect, because, as I shown, it is not.
    The reason is that, IMHO, we don't have a better measure. First, VCs will not disclose exact ROIs (Daniel, am I right?). But even if they would, investment in a big exit is spread over a period of time, how do you account for that? I am no accountant, nor an exceptionally gifted statistitian, may be there is a good solution, other then simple Z/Y during X. If so, I would be intrigued to learn what it is.

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