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Business News/ Companies / Dancing with the start-ups
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Dancing with the start-ups

Some celebrities are lavishing their promotional love on start-ups rather than big brands

Anjula Acharia-Bath helps celebrities invest in start-ups. Photo: Emily Berl/The New York TimesPremium
Anjula Acharia-Bath helps celebrities invest in start-ups. Photo: Emily Berl/The New York Times

Since at least Sarah Bernhardt’s time, celebrities have looked for ways to parlay their name recognition into extra cash. Back in the 19th century, Bernhardt—the most celebrated actress of her day—endorsed a popular brand of soap. “I have used Pears’ Soap and find there is nothing so satisfying in the world," she enthused in one ad.

Today, celebrity endorsements are everywhere. It’s no surprise to see people like Matthew McConaughey, Jennifer Aniston and Halle Berry lending their star power to ads for cars, bottled water, make-up and a host of other products.

Now some celebrities—both established and up-and-coming—are lavishing their promotional love on start-ups rather than big brands. Often, those deals involve equity. In exchange for a small percentage of a company, a celebrity investor agrees to provide publicity, feedback and valuable connections. Celebrities who have taken this route include Ashton Kutcher, Tyra Banks, Bono and Drew Barrymore.

With equity, of course, there is a risk of losing money. But if a celebrity picks a company that turns out to be a hit, it’s a gift that keeps on giving, unlike most endorsement deals. And investing in a start-up generally requires less legwork than, say, starting a clothing line or opening a restaurant. The new trend could also be a matter of celebrities seeing start-ups stealing the California spotlight.

“When you look at Hollywood stars, they make a certain amount of millions, and they’re used to being the ‘it’ kids," said Anjula Acharia-Bath, who helps stars make start-up investments. “Now you see that the ‘it’ kids are these people who are building these start-ups and walking away with billions of dollars."

Timothy Karunaratne, who pairs emerging firms with influential investors, put it this way: “I think it’s a fair statement to say most people would rather be Mark Zuckerberg than Will Smith. I think that’s a fair statement, and that’s pretty fascinating."

Acharia-Bath and Karunaratne are part of an informal network that has sprung up to bridge the financing gap between Hollywood and Silicon Valley.

Karunaratne, in addition to serving as the CEO of Parkt, an urban parking start-up, is a founder of the Startup Agency. Housed in a business incubator and accelerator in a 10th-floor penthouse on Sunset Boulevard, the agency’s open office is divided up by what appears to be the side of an aeroplane that’s been dipped in chrome. In an earlier era, Hugh Hefner crashed here after late nights downstairs at his Playboy Club.

Karunaratne and his co-founder, Jonathan Gonen, recently united Gyft, a gift card management platform, with Kutcher, the actor. A-Grade Investments, Kutcher’s 4-year-old venture capital fund, invested in Gyft.

“The network that A-Grade has is very, very powerful," said C.J. MacDonald, a founder of Gyft. “They’re very well connected and they can open up doors that other people can’t."

If “Ashton picks up the phone and calls someone, that person calls back," MacDonald added.

For people like Acharia-Bath and Karunaratne, star value means little without strategic action, which might mean making introductions to potential business partners. Celebrities might also provide feedback on a product, or discuss it on a talk show. Social media also plays a part, with stars singing their products’ praises on sites and services such as Facebook, Instagram, YouTube and Twitter.

But building this bridge involves artful negotiation and deep knowledge of two very different spheres.

Karunaratne cut his teeth in the investment banking division of Goldman Sachs. He was always interested in the entertainment industry, particularly in making Hollywood more diverse. At 26, he left his finance job to work in the mailroom of the talent agency William Morris, now William Morris Endeavor. He left his job as an agent trainee in 2012 with the intention of starting his own company, which crystallized into the Startup Agency after he met Gonen.

“A lot of people think that you can just connect" a celebrity and a company, Karunaratne said. “And, yes, connecting is great, but there is still a lot of other stuff that has to be done."

The network of connectors extends beyond Los Angeles. In San Francisco, for example, there’s Shervin Pishevar, a founder of the venture capital fund SherpaVentures and a strategic adviser for Uber, the ride-sharing service. In New York, there’s Nathan Coyle, a former talent agent for Creative Artists Agency who now leads business development for the lifestyle and e-commerce website Refinery29. (He helped bring Barrymore on board as the website’s editor at large earlier this year.)

For some, like Acharia-Bath, advising stars about their investments isn’t a full-time job. After working for the Forsyth Group, an executive search firm that hires talent for start-ups, she became CEO of DesiHits, which connects Hollywood producers with South Asian stars. Her work in the music industry helped her cultivate ties with celebrities who now help fund many of the firms in which she also has a personal investment. The stars include Priyanka Chopra, the singer and actress, and Siva Kaneswaran, a singer and a member of the Wanted, the pop band.

Kaneswaran invested in the Muse, a career search tool, after Acharia-Bath told him about it. This summer, he moved from London to Los Angeles in part to connect with accelerators there and to learn about more emerging companies.

“I wanted to get more involved in start-ups so I could actually be part of developing a concept and help it grow," he said.

Janina Gavankar, an actress who stars alongside Debra Messing in The Mysteries of Laura, a new TV series, invested in the Hunt in 2012 on Karunaratne’s advice. Gavankar called herself an “honest, savvy user" of the Hunt site, which helps people track down and buy items they see online or on the street. She said she shared her Internet-scouring methods with Tim Weingarten, the Hunt’s CEO.

“I’m a hunter," Gavankar said. “Somebody posts something and I say: ‘Ha! I’m going to find it.’ I go down the rabbit hole."

Weingarten says he takes Gavankar’s input into consideration, adding that his No. 1 goal when looking for celebrity investors is to “find somebody who is influential and will use the product organically and have passion about it, so their usage doesn’t become about just having equity in the company". His investors include Banks and Christina Milian, the singer and actress.

Milian said her personal affinities guided her equity investments in the Hunt and in French Girls, an iPhone app for drawing portraits. “You can go with your gut feeling," she said. “As a consumer, what do I want to download? What do I want to spend money on?"

Not all pairings come together seamlessly. Before linking Gyft with A-Grade Investments, Kutcher’s firm, Karunaratne tried to forge a connection between Gyft and a television personality who saw her main value as a tweeter.

But “the conversion on Twitter is pretty low," Karunaratne said. “We’ve seen things tweeted out to 20 million people with a link in it and maybe 500 people clicked on the link." Acharia-Bath finds herself fighting the expectation that every start-up will have a Hollywood ending, with a heady initial public offering and huge payouts.

“Now people are so savvy about big exits to the point where it’s unrealistic because everyone thinks everything will be like Facebook or WhatsApp," she said, referring to Facebook’s recent acquisition of WhatsApp, the messaging platform, in a deal worth as much as $19 billion.

The trend may seem to offer yet another way for the rich to get richer. Then there’s the question of whether fans ought to know if a star has a financial stake in the product du jour, or if her exclamation point and emoji-laden tweet about it was typed without any dollar signs in mind.

“It’s a little bit murkier" than the traditional endorsement model, said David Bell, a marketing professor at the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania. But with social-media-skilled consumers and news-hungry blogs ready to call out stars for doing anything seemingly untoward, it’s in a celebrity’s best interest to promote products and services they genuinely support, he said.

“There’s a built-in reputation defence mechanism," he said. “If I already have an engaged base of fans and I start endorsing things that aren’t that good, presumably that information would travel pretty quickly. If you’re doing something that’s underhand, odds are it would end up on TMZ or something like that."

©2014/ THE NEW YORK TIMES

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Published: 22 Sep 2014, 12:03 AM IST
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