How helpful is venture capital experience to building startups?
My experience in venture capital
As I’ve blogged about before (though quite a while ago), I spent some time at Mohr Davidow Ventures as Entrepreneur-in-Residence – for more about what that job is, read here and here. A couple years before that, I had spent some time at MDV in their Seattle office, towards the end of the dot com bubble, as an analyst/intern. Both experiences were a ton of fun, and I justified the ~3 years in venture capital where I could have been starting companies as an education that would help me later on.
Now, a couple years later, I thought I would reflect a little bit on where the VC experience helped and hurt me relative to actually trying to build a startup. The net of it is that the time was mostly helpful, and a big chunk of knowledge transferred over, but it was mostly high-level stuff. A lot of running a startup involves mastering nitty gritty details, and the VC experience did nothing to help there :-)
For the lazy/impatient, here are some key things I’d say where it can help:
- It helps with traditional investor/entrepreneur information asymmetries
- Lots of tactical holes still exist
- Investors can often oversimplify startup issues, or overmatch on patterns
- Helps with understanding of investor motivations, which can otherwise appear mysterious
Let’s dive into each of these issues below.
It helps with traditional investor/entrepreneur information asymmetries
Some of the stickiest situation for entrepreneurs are cases where they infrequently encounter a situation, which generates information asymmetries where an investor often knows much more. These asymmetries often involve events like fundraising, selling a company, recruiting executives, etc. In the positive case, investors can be helpful and coach startups through these times, which is great. In the negative case, it provides an opportunity for investors to engage take advantage of naive entrepreneurs, which is not so great. This is why sites likes VentureHacks and TheFunded are useful, because they help even the playing field.
Part of the problem for me, however, is that only the General Partners at VC firms end up actually doing deals. All the associates, EIRs, etc often participate, and you see the final deal terms, but rarely get to see all the back-and-forths that end up with the deal getting done. This creates familiarity with the process, but not the battle-tested experience of having gone through lots of nitty gritty negotiations. But even then, you hear about, and know what the levers are, so everything is less mysterious.
(But like I said, VentureHacks and TheFunded are great, and I only wish there were sites with that level of candor about this obscure industry)
Lots of tactical holes still exist
One area where a venture capital background didn’t help at all was dealing with all the tactical details of getting a company off the ground. In particular, the biggest hole by far is hiring and managing people, which gets abstracted at the financial level. Someone in VC-land can talk abstractly about strong teams, but you don’t have to go through the process of interviewing dozens of people to find the right person.
I’ve written up some of my thoughts here on this topic, in a post called “Building the initial team for seed stage startups” where I talk about a couple points I’ve come to believe:
- Hiring T-shaped people versus specialists
- Try to get doers
- More candidate flow solves a lot of problems
- Interview for the actual work youâll be doing, not skillset trivia
- Raw intelligence is just one factor â donât overestimate it
There are also some even deeper questions that are unanswered by VC experience, such as how you actually build out a suitable recruiting pipeline? Or how do you interview people where you don’t have the skillset to comment about their competence one way or the other?
I would say hiring is probably one of the most difficult areas to master, and although there are other block and tackle issues – accounting, leasing an office, operations, etc – getting the right people is just a very hard topic. It’s not a surprise that so many startups struggle with it.
Investors can often oversimplify startup issues, or overmatch on patterns
Venture investors often spread their time across a whole number of industries – you look at their websites, and they’ll say they invest in everything from consumer internet to clean tech to life sciences. MDV was no different, and we were responsive to companies across a large number of markets. One VC explained to me early on that you have to respond to what entrepreneurs are producing, and if you get too “top-down” about a particular industry, it gets easy to overinvest in a bunch of mediocre companies rather than trying intently to just focus on finding the best single team and opportunity you can.
Mike Moritz has talked about this before:
Moritz waxed philosophical by comparing venture capital investing to bird spotting. “I rarely think about big themes. The business is like bird spotting. I don’t try to pick out the flock. Each one is different and I try to find an interestingly complected bird in a flock rather than try to make an observation about an entire flock.” For that reason, while other firms may avoid companies because they perceive a certain investment sector as being overplayed or already mature, Moritz said Sequoia is “careful not to redline neighborhoods”.
Continuing with the ornithological analogy, Moritz pointed to Cisco and said, “There’s a lot to be said for investing in the ugly duckling.” When Don Valentine led Sequoia Capital’s investment in Cisco, many others had passed on the husband and wife founding team of Len Bosack and Sandy Lerner.
One of the difficulties for me personally in seeing a wide variety of companies all the time was that it was impossible to not start to pattern match and draw conclusions about the companies that were probably false. You end up in the proverbial “mile wide, inch deep” level of knowledge about that industry, which makes it all too easy to make generalizations. Similarly, there is a drive to simplify your understanding of a company, since you have to socialize it and talk to other venture partners about particular spaces and companies, which also causes oversimplfication.
Contrast this to startup life, where you end up devoting yourself to one company (which may encapsulate many ideas, as you iterate) for the period of years. You end up diving very deep into situations, and learning about all the different details tradeoffs that cause products to be successful versus not.
Helps with understanding of investor motivations, which can otherwise appear mysterious
Finally, one area where having a venture background helped a lot was understanding investor motivations in general. Entrepreneurs ask a lot of great questions, like, “Why don’t investors want to invest in my idea X which will be highly profitable?” or “Why does hot consumer internet startup X lose tons of money but is valued so much?” The answers to these questions drive a lot of investor behavior, which can be mysterious if you don’t know what’s going on.
The interesting part is understanding why VCs are structured the way they do, why they have a 1 in 10 portfolio strategy, and how they think about their Limited Partners. They have a boss too, of course :-)
The major point here is that building medium-sized, profitable companies that aren’t growing quickly is not really part of the venture capital model. Knowing that can help with all sorts of things, such as massaging your business plan into something “sexy” that investors will respond to. Similarly, it will help get everyone aligned on major decisions, such as financing events, exits, exec team building, etc.
Want more?
If you liked this post, please subscribe or follow me on Twitter. You can also find more essays here.
I write a high-quality, weekly newsletter covering what's happening in Silicon Valley, focused on startups, marketing, and mobile.
Views expressed in âcontentâ (including posts, podcasts, videos) linked on this website or posted in social media and other platforms (collectively, âcontent distribution outletsâ) are my own and are not the views of AH Capital Management, L.L.C. (âa16zâ) or its respective affiliates. AH Capital Management is an investment adviser registered with the Securities and Exchange Commission. Registration as an investment adviser does not imply any special skill or training. The posts are not directed to any investors or potential investors, and do not constitute an offer to sell -- or a solicitation of an offer to buy -- any securities, and may not be used or relied upon in evaluating the merits of any investment.
The content should not be construed as or relied upon in any manner as investment, legal, tax, or other advice. You should consult your own advisers as to legal, business, tax, and other related matters concerning any investment. Any projections, estimates, forecasts, targets, prospects and/or opinions expressed in these materials are subject to change without notice and may differ or be contrary to opinions expressed by others. Any charts provided here are for informational purposes only, and should not be relied upon when making any investment decision. Certain information contained in here has been obtained from third-party sources. While taken from sources believed to be reliable, I have not independently verified such information and makes no representations about the enduring accuracy of the information or its appropriateness for a given situation. The content speaks only as of the date indicated.
Under no circumstances should any posts or other information provided on this website -- or on associated content distribution outlets -- be construed as an offer soliciting the purchase or sale of any security or interest in any pooled investment vehicle sponsored, discussed, or mentioned by a16z personnel. Nor should it be construed as an offer to provide investment advisory services; an offer to invest in an a16z-managed pooled investment vehicle will be made separately and only by means of the confidential offering documents of the specific pooled investment vehicles -- which should be read in their entirety, and only to those who, among other requirements, meet certain qualifications under federal securities laws. Such investors, defined as accredited investors and qualified purchasers, are generally deemed capable of evaluating the merits and risks of prospective investments and financial matters. There can be no assurances that a16zâs investment objectives will be achieved or investment strategies will be successful. Any investment in a vehicle managed by a16z involves a high degree of risk including the risk that the entire amount invested is lost. Any investments or portfolio companies mentioned, referred to, or described are not representative of all investments in vehicles managed by a16z and there can be no assurance that the investments will be profitable or that other investments made in the future will have similar characteristics or results. A list of investments made by funds managed by a16z is available at https://a16z.com/investments/. Excluded from this list are investments for which the issuer has not provided permission for a16z to disclose publicly as well as unannounced investments in publicly traded digital assets. Past results of Andreessen Horowitzâs investments, pooled investment vehicles, or investment strategies are not necessarily indicative of future results. Please see https://a16z.com/disclosures for additional important information.