In many cases, the investment our community gets from those organizations is actually about building. They give a small amount of capital up front to help leverage these organizations to build, essentially.
In the case of Western Economic Diversification, for example, we have a program whereby we identify nascent angel networks. We have a group of 10 or 15 people who are doing investments regularly and are coordinating, and we help them to grow into a network of 50 people or maybe 100 people, and actually beyond that, to collaborate more with other networks, because these networks are social networks, and not everybody is always going to get along with each other.
It's important to make sure that when the opportunity comes to collaborate beyond the means of your own network, you have an easy way to tap into those other pools of capital to help these companies grow. Otherwise, these companies are left to themselves to figure this out. They usually provide some kind of base support that helps certain initiatives, like recruitment drives, marketing, or research, in many cases, to help these people do a better job collecting their own data. They usually do a horrible job of doing this, as angel investors.
In our case, it's the same. The project funding we've received has often helped to support some of the research initiatives and some of our data, creating resources for our members to become more educated. We recently launched an education program for the angel investor community based on some of that support that we've had.
The challenge, if any, has been that it's sometimes regionally focused because of the nature of these organizations. That does limit our hand in terms of where we can grow and develop.
I have a graphic I'll show you of what our membership looks like in terms of dollars invested in members. If you look at this, what you'll notice is that a lot of the growth in this community has happened in Ontario and Quebec. Quebec gets a tremendous amount of support from the local government and institutional capital. They've had a tremendous amount of success and, in many cases, have best practices to share with the rest of the country. Ontario is the same because of FedDev. We've had four or five years to build this community in Ontario, and that's resulted in fantastic success. In western Canada, we've only been working on this for two years now, and in eastern Canada it's very nascent.
This is where you can see the direct impact of some of the funding that has been received by those communities. In terms of turning it into investment for entrepreneurs, we've actually been able to measure this funding and have come up with a statistic which suggests that for every dollar the government has invested—whether directly to the networks or to us—into this community, into building the infrastructure to really facilitate these transactions to happen, we've been able to track about $37 of investment going to entrepreneurs and companies from those investors that we engage.