Thank you very much. Bonjour. Thank you for having me today.
I'll keep my comments brief. Unfortunately, because of the timetable, we were not able to provide you with documentation in both French and English, although that is on its way. The standing committee should receive that information shortly.
To give you a little background on the National Angel Capital Organization, we are a member-driven organization whose vision is to knit the angel capital community together across Canada, facilitating knowledge transfer, developing best practices, and co-investment with an end goal to invest in high-potential companies across the country to build that small or medium-sized enterprise and take those companies to the global stage. Our mission is to support angels as they foster the growth of the next generation of innovative Canadian companies at all levels. We do that through four key areas, including: professional development; communication; networking events, such as the National Angel Capital Summit, which is taking place this November in Ottawa; and advocacy-related activities. We have a member base of approximately 2,000 angels, composed of both groups and individuals.
I want to give you a definition of what or who an angel is. An angel is a person who provides risk capital to innovative start-up companies, building a bridge between their idea and their commercial viability. Again, we are looking at how we invest in early stage companies and people with early stage ideas, and we help drive those ideas to a commercial entity, a company formation, and then take them all the way through the market. They are also typically individuals who have been successful entrepreneurs in a variety of sectors, so they're sector agnostic. Some are in technology, some are in other industries, but all are able to provide not just the capital required but also vast knowledge of how to build a business, typically from the start-up phase right through to growth. They are mentors for companies at the early stage and they provide vast experience and expertise as well as a network to help those entrepreneurs get to the next level of their business.
We, as angel investors, are accredited. We follow the SEC regulations, so accredited angel investors, for your background, are those who have $1 million in assets, if you don't include their residences, and those who have approximately $200,000 or greater in income. Typically, they are providing not just the capital but mentorship in a variety of other activities.
To give you some stats to put it into the Canadian context, before I dive into some of the details around what we're here to talk about, there are approximately 1,500 angels that represent angel groups in the country, which is a very large mass. That number is growing quite rapidly. We estimate a doubling of that over the next two years as angel capital begins to form itself as an asset class, differentiated but complementary to venture capital.
We did a study in 2010 just to see where angel groups and angel individual investors were at in terms of the deal flow they were seeing, at what stage, and so on. We identified approximately 1,850 companies that were disclosed, seeking out angel groups specifically on an annualized basis. That translates into about 250 active portfolio companies in the angel groups. Angel groups realistically will invest in two to three, maybe four, companies on an annual basis at approximately $1 million into each of those companies annually. If you drive that number up, we're looking at—over the course of the last five years that we've been able to measure—about $1 billion in investment going into those very early stage companies and then driving those companies to small and medium-sized businesses that are playing at the global scale.
How do we make investments and why is it relevant to CICP and the work of OSME? We make investments based on a number of criteria. We look at the team. We identify the market size and the opportunity and who the competitors are in that space. We look at the sales pipeline and how we are going to assist in investing in the company from a dollar perspective, and how are we going to build that company? We look at how the company is going to operate now and as it scales.
Finally, and most importantly, who are their customers? How many do they have, if any? What are we going to do as angel investors to help drive that process of identifying customers, getting those first, second, and third customers in the door, and using those customers as leverage to then take the company out to the market in full force.
We're in a high-risk business. Angel investing is high risk by its very nature. Getting that first customer validation, that first customer attraction, is really important and key, oftentimes, to our first investment in a company. It's not just about the company getting its customer base; it's also about the fact that as angel investors we typically look for that first customer validation to make the case to make the investment.
What has been the impact of OSME and CICP, from our perspective? We have been involved in CICP and OSME across the country from a very small perspective. I did a quick poll of some of our angel groups just to see where they're interfacing with the agency and where they are not, and it varies in terms of who is interacting with whom. Overall, and I can speak more specifically to CICP, CICP is being seen as a win for angel-led companies that are looking to identify customer targets in the government, for a number of reasons, and I'll give them to you.
The first reason most people came up with, and certainly it's been my experience, was to provide that reference customer opportunity for the small business at the beta-customer stage. This is not just important for customer validation and for the validation of the technology. The Canadian government as a customer for a small enterprise carries a lot of weight when that company goes into the international marketplace for sales. It acts as a very good validator for the company as they're moving to identify their customer targets. Often there can be, in the case of convergent technologies, a cross-pollination between government agencies that can be facilitated by CICP. That, I think, will start to become a bit more enlightened as CICP actually begins to grow and gets over its baby steps.
The other thing this kind of program does is provide a gateway for a company at the early stages so that it can identify, learn, and de-risk its own pathway as it educates itself on how to sell into a complicated structure, a complicated organization. I know that OSME has been working hard at trying to fill that gap, and so has CICP. There is more work to be done there. There are a couple of things that are relatively straightforward, I think, that can be implemented that will solve that problem.
There are two other ways in which these programs currently are helping small and medium enterprises once they have an angel investment. One, again, is the early revenue, the early customer validation and market traction that becomes very attractive to both us, the angel investors, and the customers. Also, the validation of technology applications, and it was touched on by the earlier presenter, is very important, because validating the technology not just from a pull but also from a push standpoint is very important. Companies don't need to spend a lot of cycles guessing. If there's a mechanism by which we can draw those two together, the customer and the company, at the entrepreneurial level such that they can identify and work together on opportunities to solve real problems, that will make an enormous difference in how the procurement programs work, and ultimately in what kinds of companies can be generating massive growth for Canada and beyond.
My recommendation from the National Angel Capital Organization for OSME and CICP really is to continue to engage us, which they are already doing, on the selection committees for the procurement program and at the advisory board level. We're happy to play a role, and will continue to do so as long as we're asked to work with the government to identify opportunities for small and medium enterprises to find solutions to problems. As I said before, build the network such that it's not just the entrepreneur coming to the government with a solution that may or may not be an appropriate fit. What is on the wish list of some of these agencies and government departments, and how can technology companies and others around Canada work together through a network to build capacity and ultimately find solutions that are going to be beneficial for everybody and that win for everybody?
It was touched on again by the previous speaker that there is a need for better promotion and better public relations around what the OSME and CICP programs actually do. There have been some material steps made with respect to CICP that I think have been very good, as far as getting out and promoting in small ways. But some sort of partnership opportunity with agencies like NACO and others that can help get the word out in a very tangible format to members, who can then identify ways in which they can interface with these organizations and programs, will be an essential driver in identifying how we can find the right fits and build some capacity.
Finally, it's kind of a dual-pronged answer, but it's really a rolling process for companies to apply for CICP. If that's successful, you will ultimately have knocking on the door to expand the funding into the CICP program beyond the $40 million that has currently been allocated to ensure that program continues.
Those are my remarks.
I'm pleased to take any questions now, and I'll refer back to the chair.