Former reporter to lead Wisconsin Angel Network

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Dan Blake, project manager for a California electronic medical records installation at Epic Systems, will leave his post and join the Wisconsin Technology Council as the director of its Wisconsin Angel Network in mid-March.

Blake will succeed Zach Brandon, who recently became president of the Greater Madison Chamber of Commerce.

Blake was previously a reporter and web producer at the Chicago Tribune, where he was part of a small team that launched the paperโ€™s first Internet news desk, which grew Website visitors by 34 percent in one year.

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A Madison native, Blake earned degrees from the University of Iowa and the University of Denverโ€™s Daniels School of Business, where he completed a masterโ€™s in business administration with an emphasis on finance and accounting.

During his stints in Chicago and Denver, Blake also worked with members of the regionโ€™s entrepreneurial and early stage investment communities. He is a member of Built-in Chicago, a networking community for that cityโ€™s startup and investment world. In addition to his background with health information technology and new media, Blake has worked on projects involving electronic recycling and the forest products industry.

โ€œDan Blake will work extremely well with Wisconsinโ€™s investor community as well as its entrepreneurs, due in part to his ability to connect with and understand emerging markets that may interest those investors,โ€ said Tom Still, president of the Wisconsin Technology Council.

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โ€œI am excited to work with Wisconsinโ€™s angel groups and early stage investors to help them find and connect with promising entrepreneurs, startups and emerging companies,โ€ Blake said. โ€œThis sector is vital to Wisconsinโ€™s continued growth.โ€ The Wisconsin Angel Network was created in late 2004 as a program of the Tech Council, which is the non-profit, non-partisan science and technology advisory board to the governor and Legislature. With support from the Wisconsin Economic Development Corp. and investors, the WAN has grown from a handful of angel networks and funds to a network of more than two-dozen investor groups.

In 2007, total reported angel investments in Wisconsin stood at $11.7 million. By 2011, that total had grown to $61.1 million in investments statewide.

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