Angel investing is one of the most exciting, and often misunderstood, ways to deploy capital.
I get asked all the time: What makes a great angel investor? It’s a fair question, but the answer isn’t as glamorous as people might hope. There’s no silver bullet. No guaranteed formula. But there are patterns. And there are plenty of hard-earned lessons most angel investors only discover after years in the game.
Whether you’re writing your first check or your fiftieth, this is a long, emotional, illiquid, and often confusing journey. One where instinct, conviction, and context matter as much as spreadsheets and slide decks.
Here’s my rapid-fire list of things most angel investors don’t fully appreciate when they first jump in:
Mindset and Strategy
You need to have a focused thesis.
You need to write a lot of checks.
You need to diversify your bets.
Don’t overconcentrate into one deal.
You must invest money you don’t need back.
You need to forget about the investment for a long, long time.
Risk and Reality
Even the best-laid plans often fail.
Execution is everything.
Entry valuation matters more than you think.
SAFEs and convertible notes might never convert.
Startups take longer to exit than you expect.
The TAM slide is always exaggerated.
A headline exit doesn’t always mean a great return.
The startup you invest in might not be the one you exit with.
Humility and Influence
You’re not as impactful as you think you are.
You don’t have all the answers.
Your mentorship is nice, but not always necessary.
Your check matters more to you than to the founder.
Even with good intentions, you’re busy.
If you really want to help: make warm, proactive intros. That’s the most valuable thing you can do.
Founders and Teams
It’s all about the people.
Founders give up more often than we like to admit.
Founders break up. It’s brutal.
The stage of the company must match the talent.
Past success doesn’t guarantee future success.
People are complicated.
Structure and Misalignment
Understand the future capital strategy.
Capital stacks can cause misalignment.
The first money in is not always treated the best.
SAFEs and party rounds often benefit others more than you.
What You Think You Know…
The best ideas don’t always win.
Markets aren’t won. They’re led.
The public markets aren’t your benchmark.
Success is relative.
The deal you were unsure of might win big.
The “can’t miss” deal might definitely miss.
An outstanding golfer friend of mine has a favorite piece of advice: “Want to get better? Play more.”
Same with angel investing: Write more checks. Learn from each one. Build your own pattern recognition.
And if you’re looking for a way to do that with structure, diversification, and support, we’ve built the York IE Rolling Fund for exactly that. It’s a way to access early-stage, high-potential companies across sectors, backed by our full platform, expertise, and network.
We invest with conviction. We support with experience. And we’re in it for the long game.
Let’s go build, together.