Angels Decoded

Andy Walsh

Writing a check is easy. Knowing why is the flex. Angel investing is underused, misunderstood, and explained badly. We are in cahoots with Play Money to deliver a raw take on the craft. Subscribe. Then decide.

Episodes

  1. Ep#6: SAFE Notes — Simple, Fast… and Fuzzy

    1D AGO

    Ep#6: SAFE Notes — Simple, Fast… and Fuzzy

    SAFE notes are meant to make early-stage fundraising easy. And they do. But most founders and angels don’t fully understand what they’re signing up for. In this episode of Angels Decoded, Cheryl Kellond and Andy Walsh unpack how SAFEs actually work, why they’re the default at early stage, and where they can catch people out. They’re fast, flexible, and let founders raise money over time without stopping to run a full round. But under the surface…Valuations are mostly signal. Ownership gets unclear. And stacked SAFEs can quietly eat into founder equity. At the same time, what many angels miss is that SAFEs can work in their favor, with non-dilutive upside as the company grows. Subscribe now What We Break Down SAFE ≠ simple: Easy to use, hard to fully understand.Valuation is still a signal: You’re not pricing the company… but you kind of are.Rolling capital wins: Raise as you build, not all at once.Stacked SAFEs = hidden dilution: Founders take the hit, not early investors.Angels benefit more than they think: Early checks can compound without dilution.The Big Idea SAFE notes make fundraising faster. But if you don’t understand them…you won’t know what you own until it’s too late. Andy Walsh 2x exited founder and host of Startups Decoded (Top 2% globally). Andy helps founders sharpen judgment and build companies through practical experience and operator insight. Cheryl Kellond Founder of Play Money and active angel investor. Cheryl focuses on democratizing angel investing and helping new investors build diversified portfolios while supporting founders with practical guidance and community. Access All Areas. Subscribe: Substack Web: angelsdecoded.com Resources Startups Decoded Podcast: https://startupsdecoded.com

    19 min
  2. Ep#5: Small Checks, Big Impact — The Real Math of Angel Investing

    MAR 13

    Ep#5: Small Checks, Big Impact — The Real Math of Angel Investing

    Many new angels think their first check has to be big to matter. In reality, the opposite is often true. Oversized early bets can limit diversification and reduce the odds of success. The real advantage in angel investing comes from building a portfolio over time. In Ep#5 of Angels Decoded, Cheryl Kellond and Andy Walsh unpack the psychology and strategy behind check size, portfolio construction, and why writing smaller checks can actually create more impact for both founders and investors. The data is simple: returns improve once investors reach around 30 investments. That means angel investing isn’t about one big bet. It’s about thoughtful diversification, learning over time, and backing founders in a way that fits your financial reality. This conversation also explores how SPVs make small checks practical, why angels should check their ego at the door, and how even a $1,500 investment can create meaningful influence when paired with experience and support. Listen & Watch:  Apple || Spotify || YouTube The Realities We Break Down 1) The Check Size Myth Many new angels assume bigger checks equal more value. In reality, writing smaller checks allows investors to build diversified portfolios and learn the ecosystem without overextending early. 2) The 30-Investment Rule Data from AngelList shows the strongest returns typically appear after 30 investments. Diversification, not conviction, is the statistical edge in early-stage investing. 3) Why SPVs Make Small Checks Work Small checks don’t need to burden founders. When angels invest through SPVs, founders receive one clean entry on the cap table while investors participate collectively. 4) Impact Beyond Capital Sometimes the most valuable angels aren’t the ones writing the biggest checks. Experience, introductions, and operational insight can matter far more than the dollar amount invested. The Big Idea Angel investing isn’t about writing the biggest check. It’s about building a portfolio, supporting founders, and deploying capital thoughtfully over time. Small checks, when combined with experience and network, can drive meaningful impact for both startups and the broader innovation ecosystem. Chapters 00:00 Introduction00:44 Why investors obsess over check size04:35 The impact of small checks on founders07:45 Angel investing and impact12:04 Diversification and the 30-investment rule14:57 Starting small and learning the ecosystem17:30 Why small checks still matter Andy Walsh 2x exited founder and host of Startups Decoded (Top 2% globally). Andy helps founders sharpen judgment and build companies through practical experience and operator insight. Cheryl Kellond Founder of Play Money and active angel investor. Cheryl focuses on democratizing angel investing and helping new investors build diversified portfolios while supporting founders with practical guidance and community. Access All Areas. Subscribe: Substack Web: angelsdecoded.com Resources Startups Decoded Podcast: https://startupsdecoded.com AngelList: https://angel.co

    18 min
  3. Ep#4: The Truth About Cap Tables and Angel Investing

    MAR 6

    Ep#4: The Truth About Cap Tables and Angel Investing

    Every new angel investor wants to see their name on the cap table. It feels official. It feels powerful. It feels like you’re really “in the game.” But in reality, that small line on a cap table can create a surprisingly large operational burden for the founder you’re trying to support. In Ep#4 of Angels Decoded, Cheryl Kellond and Andy Walsh unpack the practical realities of cap tables, dilution, and why many angels misunderstand the role they should play once they invest. The uncomfortable truth is simple: small checks shouldn’t slow companies down. When angels insist on being directly on the cap table without understanding the legal mechanics behind it, they often introduce friction that founders have to spend time and money managing. This conversation explores why the best angels focus less on status and more on support. Listen & Watch: Apple || Spotify || YouTube Subscribe now The Realities We Break Down 1) The Hidden Cost of Cap TablesEvery individual investor listed on a cap table creates administrative work. Legal filings, shareholder approvals, and document updates all add up. Over time, each name can cost a startup $1,500–$2,000 in legal overhead. 2) The ROFR ProblemMost angels don’t know what a Right of First Refusal (ROFR) actually is. But if you’re on the cap table, you’ll be asked to sign documents tied to it. One confused signature can delay a financing or acquisition. 3) Dilution Isn’t the EnemyEarly investors often obsess over dilution. But if a company is raising new capital and growing, dilution simply means the business is becoming more valuable. Fewer shares at a much higher value is still a win. 4) Influence vs. ImpactBeing on the cap table doesn’t give angels meaningful power. The most valuable angels are the ones who help founders with introductions, advice, encouragement, and real-world experience. The Big Idea Angel investing works best when it functions as support, not control. Small checks shouldn’t create large operational headaches. Whether through SPVs or thoughtful investment structures, the goal should always be the same: Give founders capital without slowing them down. Chapters 00:00 Introduction and Collaboration Plans00:20 Understanding Cap Tables and SPVs03:35 Dilution and Its Implications for Angel Investors08:54 Cap Tables vs SPVs — What Actually Matters18:06 Angels Decoded End Card The Hosts Andy Walsh: 2x exited founder and strategist. He helps investors and founders navigate the “power dynamics” of early-stage capital without the fluff. Cheryl Kellond (aka “Shezza”): 3x founder and CEO of Play Money. She’s on a mission to move accredited professionals from the sidelines into the game with a data-backed, pragmatic approach. Access All Areas. Subscribe: Substack Web: angelsdecoded.com Resources Startups Decoded Podcast  AngelList

    18 min
  4. Ep#3: Why SPVs are the "Professional Grade" Way to Angel Invest.

    FEB 27

    Ep#3: Why SPVs are the "Professional Grade" Way to Angel Invest.

    There is no such thing as a "simple" direct investment. If you think being directly on a startup’s cap table is a badge of honor, you’re likely creating a massive administrative burden for the founder you claim to support. In Ep#3 of Angels Decoded, Cheryl Kellond and Andy Walsh unpack why the Special Purpose Vehicle (SPV) is the pragmatic choice for anyone looking to move from "hobbyist" to "professional" investor. The reality is sharp: Most individual angels lack the time to manage 1065 tax forms, K-1s, and the endless "Rofer" (Right of First Refusal) documents that flood an inbox during a growth round. By pooling capital into an SPV, you aren't just simplifying your life; you’re de-risking the founder’s future by keeping their cap table clean for institutional VCs. The "Under the Hood" Realities We Unpack: The Respect Tax: Every unique name on a cap table costs a founder roughly $1,500–$2,000 in legal overhead over a decade. An SPV collapses that "tax" into a single line item.The "Black Box" Myth: Traditional SPVs often hide investors from founders. We discuss why transparency, giving founders your contact info while keeping the legal structure separate, is the only way to be a "value-add" angel.The Cost of Compliance: We get into the middle of fees. Yes, there is a cost to professional management, but it’s a fraction of the "time tax" you'd pay trying to DIY your own legal reviews and tax reporting.The numbers paint the real story. If you want to support a founder, don't just give them capital, give them optionality and a friction-free path to their next round. This conversation is the roadmap for how to do exactly that. Chapters 00:00 The Power of Making Multiple Bets01:56 What is an SPV? (Getting under the hood of the LLC structure)04:50 Why Direct Cap Table Investing is a "World of Hurt" for Founders07:50 Navigating Fees: Why "Free" Investing Doesn't Exist12:52 The Human Element: Building Relationships through Stakeholder UpdatesThe Hosts Andy Walsh: 2x exited founder and strategist. He helps investors and founders navigate the "power dynamics" of early-stage capital without the fluff.Cheryl Kellond (aka "Shezza"): 3x founder and CEO of Play Money. She’s on a mission to move accredited professionals from the sidelines into the game with a data-backed, pragmatic approach.Access All Areas. Subscribe: SubstackWeb: angelsdecoded.com

    17 min
  5. Ep#2: Why 30 is the Magic Number for Angel Portfolios.

    FEB 20

    Ep#2: Why 30 is the Magic Number for Angel Portfolios.

    There is no such thing as an "expert" angel investor. If you believe a single large return makes you an expert, you’re treating angel investing like a lottery ticket.  In Ep#2 of Angels Decoded, Cheryl Kellond and Andy Walsh unpack why that "one-off" mindset is a recipe for failure. The reality is pragmatic: the only reliable predictor of returns in early-stage startups is the number of checks you write. Using data science from AngelList, we explore the "magic number" where angel investing shifts from a gamble to a predictable asset class. The Hard Truths We Unpack: The Power Law: Signal is low at pre-seed. You need volume (30–50 companies) to capture the outliers.The Reinvestment Trap: Reinvesting in "winners" often dilutes returns. Your capital is better spent finding the next new rocket ship.Sustainable Pacing: You don't "expert" your way out of math. Pacing 6–7 investments a year is the professional standard for a healthy portfolio.The numbers paint the real story. If you’re looking to move past the "lurking" phase and build a data-backed roadmap for private market investments, this conversation is where it is at. Chapters  01:09 The Math Behind Angel Investing: Abe Othman’s Data 04:02 The Power of Multiple Bets: Indexing the Market 06:21 The Magic Number: Why 30 is the Threshold 11:20 Infinite Regret: Why Angels Shouldn’t Double Down 15:37 The Shift: From Lottery Ticket to Predictable Asset ClassAbout the Hosts  Andy Walsh: 2x exited founder, host of Startups Decoded, and strategist helping founders sharpen judgment and execute with speed.  Cheryl Kellond: 3x founder, 3x Ironman, and founder of Play Money, a platform designed to move accredited professionals from "lurking" to "leading" in private markets. Access All Areas. Subscribe: SubstackWeb: angelsdecoded.com

    17 min
  6. Ep#1: Beyond the Check: Turning Angel Capital into Strategic Leverage.

    FEB 13

    Ep#1: Beyond the Check: Turning Angel Capital into Strategic Leverage.

    Writing an angel check is easy. Knowing why is the flex. In the debut episode of Angels Decoded, Andy Walsh and Cheryl Kellond trade the “country club” luncheon for the raw truth about early-stage capital. Angel investing is no longer just for semi-retired hobbyists on the driving range; it’s becoming the most strategic leverage a founder can have. Subscribe now The Death of the “Dumb Money” Myth For decades, angel investing was seen as a social activity, a philanthropic nod to a friend’s kid or a way to pass time at a luncheon. But the landscape has shifted. Within the last five years, a new wave of operator-led capital has emerged. This isn’t just money; it’s a strategic lead. Because angel capital isn’t tied to the rigid “billion-or-bust” math of large VC funds, it gives founders the optionality they need to survive the “messy middle” of building a business. The 20 Million Household Opportunity There are currently 20 to 25 million US households that meet the criteria for “accredited investor” status. Yet, statistics show that way less than one million have actually made an investment. According to recent surveys, 75% of accredited investors say they want to invest in startups but don’t know where to start. They are held back by three perceived barriers: Access: Not knowing where to find high-quality deals.Knowledge: Not knowing how to evaluate a cap table or a term sheet.Time: The fear that being an angel requires a full-time commitment.Play Money: The “Lurk and Learn” Model Cheryl Kellond, 3x founder, 3x Ironman, and active angel with 50+ companies, is solving this through Play Money. It’s designed to be the “Instagram meets AngelList” for the next generation of investors. The goal? To allow the millions of people sitting on the sidelines to “get reps” seeing deals without the pressure of an immediate check. By democratizing the “spidey sense” of veteran operators, the platform moves investors from lurking to leading. The Three Gates of Validation How do you ensure you aren’t just gambling? Cheryl outlines the three gates every deal on Play Money must pass: Professional Vetting: The deal usually has a lead investor who manages money for a living.Operator “Spidey Sense”: The Play Money team evaluates the founder’s resilience and market timing.Founder Hustle: The founder must prove they can activate their own network before being rolled out to the broader community.What’s in the Episode? 00:16 – Meet the Hosts: Two Exits and Three Ironmans.03:17 – The Evolution: From Luncheon Clubs to Strategic Operators.07:42 – Decoding Accreditation: Income vs. Assets and the rules of self-attestation.11:20 – The Play Money Model: How to “Lurk and Learn” for free.18:14 – In Cahoots: Why we’re building this platform now.Subscribe. Then Decide. Angel investing is the ultimate craft for those who want to turn capital into cultural and financial impact. This isn’t about noise; it’s about practical intelligence for people who want to own a piece of the future.

    19 min

About

Writing a check is easy. Knowing why is the flex. Angel investing is underused, misunderstood, and explained badly. We are in cahoots with Play Money to deliver a raw take on the craft. Subscribe. Then decide.

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