Startups

Frank Bonsal of New Markets Venture Partners looking for entrepreneurs ‘solving real problems’

Frank Bonsal, right, with Wasabi Ventures’ Ray Thek. Frank Bonsal III, longtime partner with Bonsal Capital and a general partner with New Markets Venture Partners in Howard County, said at Startup Grind that “venture guys are solving problems,” and, in turn, are “looking for entrepreneurs that are solving real problems.” Although sparsely attended compared to […]

Frank Bonsal III, right, during a Startup Grind event in fall 2012.

Frank Bonsal, right, with Wasabi Ventures’ Ray Thek.
Frank Bonsal III, longtime partner with Bonsal Capital and a general partner with New Markets Venture Partners in Howard County, said at Startup Grind that “venture guys are solving problems,” and, in turn, are “looking for entrepreneurs that are solving real problems.”
Although sparsely attended compared to September’s inaugural event, Tuesday night’s Startup Grind at Loyola University Maryland was a chance for startup owners to hear from an experienced venture capitalist. The firms for which Bonsal works have invested in a number of successful local companies, including Moodlerooms (which merged with Blackboard in April 2012) and StraighterLine, both of which are based in Baltimore city.

Some of what Bonsal shared was obvious enough: entrepreneurs should not take outside capital if “you’re just looking for a salary.” Nonetheless, it’s Real Talk worth noting.
10 points to remember from Frank Bonsal:

  1. “Never take outside capital unless you’re sure that dollar gives you a multiplier effect.”
  2. Baltimore doesn’t “need a big hype engine. Baltimore needs wins.”
  3. Enterprise companies will forever be sexy. Bonsal said he likes investing in companies “with $250,000 [to] $500,000 in recurring revenue, a proven customer base and a [business-to-business] solution.”
  4. “We like entrepreneurs to invest in their businesses … with their own capital.”
  5. If entrepreneurs are solving problems worth solving, and it’s scalable, “they deserve investment.”
  6. More experienced teams with maybe a duller idea are worth investing in, as they “typically spend less and get more out of [their business].”
  7. In education technology, Bonsal said he like companies that are “solving real problems, maybe not turning something on its head.”
  8. Equally important in EdTech, he said, is to not invest in “things that supplant teachers.”
  9. “The best companies just find a way to win.”
  10. Did we mention that Bonsal wants companies to win? “Get the scoreboard to light up,” he said.

As late Oakland Raiders’ owner Al Davis would say, “Just win, baby.”

Companies: Moodlerooms / New Markets Venture Partners / StraighterLine

Before you go...

Please consider supporting Technical.ly to keep our independent journalism strong. Unlike most business-focused media outlets, we don’t have a paywall. Instead, we count on your personal and organizational support.

Our services Preferred partners The journalism fund
Engagement

Join our growing Slack community

Join 5,000 tech professionals and entrepreneurs in our community Slack today!

Trending

Federal grant freeze fire drill leaves orgs scrambling to brace for Trump-era priorities

Entrepreneurship unifies: Introducing a new podcast on ecosystem building

As demand for AI infrastructure surges, Johns Hopkins experts warn of deregulation risk

Announcing: Technical.ly Builders Conference is May 8-9, 2025

Technically Media