Transfluent’s big gamble has paid off. Its fundraising experiment on the Finnish crowdfunding site Invesdor raised EUR 0.69m, or 115% of the target amount, in eight weeks.
As Slator reported on April 20, 2017, the funding round values the company (pre-investment) at EUR 8m, and does not come cheap for investors. But as of press time (16 hours left before the round closes), 178 investors have taken the plunge to own a piece of the startup.
Transfluent’s Founder & CEO Jani Penttinen told Slator the results exceeded their expectations, and would likely bring about 200 new shareholders, in addition to its previous 40 shareholders.
“Approximately 35% of the investment were actually made by two institutional funds — Visionplus Fund I Ky (EUR 0.21m) and Aloitusrahasto Vera Oy (EUR 0.05m),” he said, adding that the average investment is approximately EUR 2,457, excluding the bigger investments by the two funds.
Jari Tuovinen, Co-Founder of Visionplus, an early investor in the company (it led the USD 1m Series A funding in January 2014) explained in a forum at the Invesdor website that the company has committed to subscribing at least pro rata.
“We decided to do our part to help push the campaign to successful completion by subscribing for 8,800 additional shares,“ he said. “The whole idea of this crowdfunding round is to maximize the overall knowledge about Transfluent and also give as many investors as possible access to this round with the same terms as institutional investors.”
Prior to this round, Transfluent’s biggest investors were Penttinen and his wife, Xiaowen Sun, both with 19%, followed by Visionplus (15%), Aloitusrahasto Vera Oy (8%), and Acrium Investment (5.5%).
Since Transfluent is not a publicly traded firm, Penttinen emphasized that there is no way to purchase shares in the company under normal conditions.
“We could have gone the traditional route and looked for venture capital (VC) financing, as we have done in the past, but we wanted to expand our ownership. My vision for Transfluent is to be “everyone’s favorite translation company” and an important step towards that goal was to give everyone a chance to become a shareholder,” he said.
