Mere Exposure Effect Hello, this is Hall T. Martin with the Startup Funding Espresso -- your daily shot of startup funding and investing. Mere exposure effect is a cognitive bias defined by Wikipedia as the tendency to express undue liking for things merely because of familiarity with them. Angel investors are much more likely to invest in deals in which they have more exposure to it.\xa0 This can lead to investments in substandard startups. To avoid the mere exposure effect, the investor should first recognize it as a bias and keep it in mind when reviewing startups for funding. The investor should ask the question, "why invest in this startup?" and check for the answer. If it\u2019s because the startup is familiar but the team, product, or market is not outstanding, then it should be a pass. While familiarity may give the investor more information about the startup it should not stand in for proper diligence. The investor should have a set of criteria by which to judge startups and should use that criteria in testing them for funding. \xa0 Thank you for joining us for the Startup Funding Espresso where we help startups and investors connect for funding. Let\u2019s go startup something today. _______________________________________________________ For more episodes from Investor Connect, please visit the site at: \xa0 Check out our other podcasts here: \xa0 For Investors check out: \xa0 For Startups check out: \xa0 For eGuides check out: \xa0 For upcoming Events, check out \xa0\xa0 For Feedback please contact info@tencapital.group\xa0\xa0\xa0 Please , share, and leave a review. Music courtesy of .