The Business of Venture Capital. Mahendra Ramsinghani
in this firm and we work closely with each other.”
THE FELLOWSHIP OF INVESTORS
For experienced professionals, the Kauffman Fellows Program can be one potential path to enter the hallowed halls — a two-year, hands-on training program designed by the VCs for the VCs. The program offers structured learning opportunities with evolving module to explore themes of innovation, investing, leadership, and self-awareness.
Punit Chiniwalla, MD, with a corporate venture firm pursued the coveted Kauffman Fellows Program, which eventually helped him land smack in the center of the hypercompetitive venture universe of Sand Hill Road. Punit had made his first investment at a university venture fund, even before he had graduated from business school. This experience, combined with a PhD, enabled Punit to land in the Kauffman Fellows Program. After a brief stint on Sandhill Road, Punit manages the US offices of an international corporate venture fund. The much-sought-after program, whose mission is to “identify, develop, and network emerging global leaders in venture capital,”16 is a near-guaranteed entry ticket into the world of venture capital.
Junior Partner, Hungry Partner
Paul Graham of Y Combinator writes, “Junior persons scour the web looking for startups their bosses could invest in. The junior people will tend to seem very positive about your company. They're not pretending; they want to believe you're a hot prospect, because it would be a huge coup for them if their firm invested in a company they discovered. Don't be misled by this optimism. It's the partners who decide, and they view things with a colder eye.”14
Peter Thiel, investor and entrepreneur, points out that the junior person is often an advantageous starting point for entrepreneurs. “Tactically, the first thing to do is find someone who does need to make investments. That can mean finding a senior associate or a principal for your first pitch, not a senior partner. This contravenes the conventional wisdom that holds that you should not pitch to junior people. (“Don't pitch someone who can't write a check themselves.”) That wisdom is wrong. Junior people will give entrepreneurs a fair shake because they need good deals to their name. If they don't find those deals, they won't become senior, and they very much want to become senior. So seek these people out: they are motivated in a way more seasoned VCs are not… . No senior VC needs to do an investment. You should never forget that. Any senior VC that you're talking to is already wealthy and has many famous deals to show for it. Your company is probably not going to make a material difference to him but does present a significant chance of adding to his workload and failure rate; there will therefore be a certain amount of inertia against the deal … on average most deals don't pan out but do take time.15
While working full-time at a venture capital firm, each Kauffman Fellow engages in a two-year, hands-on apprenticeship that includes professional coaching in seven modules, mentoring by seasoned venture partners, and triennial sessions of industry and leadership curriculum. The program claims that the fellowship's value can be measured along three axes of investing: apprenticeship, leadership development, and being a part of a global network.
Each year, about 20 to 30 fellows are picked from a pool of about 200 applicants. The application process is a two-step dance, which is rigorous by any measure. The written application and the interview — reviewers include leading venture capitalists — look for a prior track record of accomplishments that are significant. Entrepreneurial background trumps operational background; in fact, it trumps everything else.
At the interview stage, the universe of 200 applicants narrows down by about a third. Each candidate is grilled by panels of four to five venture capitalists. The next stage is the finalist stage, where candidates who cross the finish line are then matched with firms who are seeking to bring on fresh talent. If any firm does not pick up a finalist, the process ends. For those selected, the sponsor venture capital firm pays a hefty tuition in addition to the salary for the two-year internship. These would-be Fellows are assigned mentors from established venture firms who, over the course of a two-year period, will provide insights and formal training into the art and science of venture investing.
Some of the common characteristics of Fellows include “a bias toward entrepreneurs; deep scientific, technology, or business domain expertise; an aspiration to contribute to the building of companies, either as an investor or as a startup leader; an appetite for risk, ambiguity, and unstructured environments; and humility, empathy, a sense of service, and unquestioned integrity.”17
ADJACENT ENTRY POINTS
Getting in to a top-tier venture fund is tough. Yet, practitioners have found ways to meet their career goals by starting in an allied universe. These pathways are not as competitive, and each one has its pros and cons. As they say, there is no straight path into venture capital.
About 6 to 8 percent of all venture capital investments in United States come from corporate venture capitalists (CVCs). Besides a financial return, corporations invest in startups to gain a view of the newest new thing. Corporate venture capital funds are sponsored by the mother ships to help generate financial returns. Allied objectives for CVCs include identifying novel technologies to enhance revenue streams and amplify a corporation's competitive position. Other corporate objectives include validation of new market segments as well as leveraging relationships between the corporate venture capital portfolio and corporate business units. About 60 percent of corporations invest in venture funds as LPs, and 90 percent of CVCs invest directly in startups. Getting in a corporate venture capital firm of repute such as Google Ventures or Intel Capital can be a strong starting point for practitioners. Angel networks also offer excellent opportunities to entry-level candidates and are forgiving playgrounds where skills can be honed.
Opportunities in the institutional investor (LP) universe can be a starting point. Pension funds — both private and public — Fund-of-Funds, university endowments, foundations, and insurance companies have to deploy assets in the universe of venture funds. Family offices also offer a strong starting point for practitioners. These are addressed in greater detail in Chapter 8.
Investment banking firms, law firms, marketing firms, and even journalists have seen talent transition into venture capital.
From Entrepreneur to VC
The recent wave of investors has come from a demonstrated entrepreneurial background. Having started a company, raised capital, and generated an exit eminently qualifies you to serve other entrepreneurs well. But that does not guarantee success as an investor.
Exhibit 4.1 illustrates the pros and cons of each pathway.
Exhibit 4.1 Entry Points in Venture Capital.
Pathway | Opportunities | Challenges |
---|---|---|
Entrepreneurial/ startups | Engage with entrepreneurs. Ability to understand value drivers, technology challenges, and team dynamics. |
Shifting from player to coach — managing temptation to jump in and drive when companies underperform. Sector expertise can be narrow. Pace can be too slow. As one entrepreneur-turned-VC remarked, “As a CEO, I was used to six emergencies before 9 a.m. As a VC, I am getting so bored and |