Hustle as a Differentiator

hustle

One of my favorite Pat Grady lessons is the one he shares about his wife, Sarah Guo. The short of it is that while Pat was just enjoying his weekend down the wine country, Sarah had used that same car ride over to make several phone calls and several messages over the weekend. A time that most VCs take off for themselves, their family, or their hobbies. But Sarah took to get to know the founders, the team, key executives and everyone who was at the company.

For a deal that Sequoia, a16z, and Benchmark were also fighting over, the firm that won the deal was Greylock. And it was because of Sarah. She had spent so much time with said founders that they couldn’t imagine working with any other partner except for her.

Similarly, rumor has it that Mark Zuckerberg was able to buy Instagram also because of a flurry of conversations over Easter weekend in 2012, when no one else was expecting to be working. And while one can argue the ethics behind how the deal went down (i.e. the intensity of communication, threats or that Zuck was driven by paranoia), the fact stands that Facebook acquired that 13-person company with no revenue at a time when Twitter had offered supposedly $500M to acquire the photo-sharing company, and that Sequoia had also offered to mark the company at half a billion. But when literally anyone else could have won the deal, Facebook did.

I wrote about responsiveness being a telltale sign of excellence earlier this month. So this one is more or less an expansion of that.

I’ve always appreciated the ability in others who are able to make things happen. The hustle. Time doesn’t wait for you to wake up. From my buddy Andrew flying across the nation to close a candidate to Blake Robbins who cold emailed Nadeshot three times per week and bought him tickets to the Cavs NBA Finals game to win the chance to fund 100 Thieves. I hear about these stories every so often, from simple things, like flying to meet a founder and not expecting the founder to fly to the Bay, to more wilder stories to a lawyer cold emailing his way to Elon to get an exec position at SpaceX or sending fan mail to a music artist to put a song into outer space. And I can’t help but feel an immense amount of respect (also often inspired to take action myself).

The truth is most people don’t. Not because they physically can’t send an email on the weekend or jump on a phone call at 10PM. But because they won’t.

As an LP, one of the wavelengths I measure emerging GPs on is their ability to win deals. Too often these GPs brag about their networks and operating experiences. More often than not, not differentiated. I kid you not. Like 99% of the time. But in an age, where every GP has a podcast or a newsletter. Or a community. Hell, every GP knows someone who knows an Elon or a Bill Gates or a Jensen Huang (or they know them themselves).

Admittedly, they all start looking the same. But every so often, I meet a GP or a founder who can’t boast a crazy network or crazy set of prior exits. And the only thing they can boast is their hustle. And they are able to show for it. Those are the folks who I think will change the world.

I will admit, hustle is hard as hell to share in a pitch deck. In many ways, I advise GPs and founders to not include it because there is almost no way that a deck is the best platter to share one’s hustle. Then again, the people who are the greatest hustlers don’t need me to tell them that.

They know. And as the Nike slogan goes, they “just do it.”

Photo by Garrhet Sampson on Unsplash


Stay up to date with the weekly cup of cognitive adventures inside venture capital and startups, as well as cataloging the history of tomorrow through the bookmarks of yesterday!


The views expressed on this blogpost are for informational purposes only. None of the views expressed herein constitute legal, investment, business, or tax advice. Any allusions or references to funds or companies are for illustrative purposes only, and should not be relied upon as investment recommendations. Consult a professional investment advisor prior to making any investment decisions.

How to Get Access into Top Tier Funds | Felipe Valencia | Superclusters | S3E9

felipe valencia

Felipe Valencia is one of the co-founders of Veronorte, a venture capital investment firm based out of Colombia. In the first decade, Veronorte focused on managing Corporate Venture Programs for some of the largest Corporations in Latam.

These days, they’re diving into a Fund of Funds investment strategy in the Venture Capital space. For the last 12 years, Veronorte has invested in over 25 startups across the U.S., India, Europe, Mexico, and Colombia, and in more than 12 Venture Capital funds, primarily in the U.S.

With over 20 years of experience under his belt, Felipe has dabbled in various fields like robotics, the internet, international trade, and infrastructure project management.

Felipe graduated summa cum laude with a Mechanical Engineering degree from EAFIT University. He also holds a Master’s in Web Communication from the European Institute of Design in Rome and an MBA from the University of Chicago, where he focused on entrepreneurship and finance.

Felipe’s journey has taken him all over the world: He worked for AVG – Robotics in Los Angeles, did research and development in Mechatronics at Siemens in Germany, and was the Commercial and Strategic Director of Indexcol in Colombia. He also served as the Commercial Attaché at the Colombian Embassy in China and led the Proexport office there. Most recently, he was involved in business development at Pierson Capital in Beijing and managed infrastructure projects in Mexico.

You can find Felipe on his socials here:
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/felipevalencia/
Veronorte: https://veronorte.com/

And huge thanks to this episode’s sponsor, Alchemist Accelerator: https://alchemistaccelerator.com/superclusters

Listen to the episode on Apple Podcasts and Spotify. You can also watch the episode on YouTube here.

Brought to you by Alchemist Accelerator.

OUTLINE:

[00:00] Intro
[02:54] Felipe’s teenage years under a life of terror
[10:01] How Medellin has changed over the years
[13:12] Tales from Felipe’s travels across 10 cities in 4 continents
[17:53] How did Felipe made his foray into VC?
[22:46] How did Felipe meet his co-founding partner Camilo?
[26:31] How Felipe pitched a VC fund without a track record
[39:16] How did Felipe and Camilo think about compensation in Fund I?
[47:40] How did Veronorte transition from a VC fund to a fund of funds?
[55:14] The Monte Carlo simulation of fund of funds strategies
[1:03:04] How much better does a venture fund need to do than public markets?
[1:05:46] How did Veronorte get into top tier established funds?
[1:12:00] What coffee brand did Felipe bring on his visits to the US?
[1:13:38] How did Veronorte close Latam family offices in their fund of funds?
[1:17:04] How does Veronorte communicate with their LPs?
[1:23:58] The difference between an emerging firm and a frontier firm
[1:28:55] Portfolio construction at Veronorte
[1:34:50] What podcasts does Felipe listen to?
[1:38:19] Felipe’s advice for the wanderlust
[1:43:39] Thank you to Alchemist Accelerator for sponsoring!
[1:44:39] If you enjoyed this episode, albeit longer, please do leave a like and share it with one friend who’d enjoy this episode!

SELECT LINKS FROM THIS EPISODE:

SELECT QUOTES FROM THIS EPISODE:

“Diversification is a good way to control dispersion of returns.” – Felipe Valencia

“Every time they go to a meeting, they go with a present.” – Felipe Valencia, on building relationships

“This is an access class, not an asset class. And to show access, you need to bring these established firms. It’s not that we will invest in any shiny name, and we have passed on amazing firms that have an amazing brand because they don’t fit in our strategy.” – Felipe Valencia


Follow David Zhou for more Superclusters content:
For podcast show notes: https://cupofzhou.com/superclusters
Follow David Zhou’s blog: https://cupofzhou.com
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The Value of Being an Outsider

fence, inside, outside

In 1968, NASA tasked the late George Land to create a test that would help NASA hire more creative geniuses. Does genius and creativity come from nature or nurture? As such his job was to create a test so simple that even children could take it. And he found that for children ages 4-5, out of 1,600 children, 98% of them qualified to be a genius. Divergent thinkers. Then, he waited five years to assess these same children. To which he found, only 30% qualified. Then another five years later, only 12% of the same children were what he counted to be geniuses.

It begged the question: What percent of adults are geniuses?

The answer, 2%.

For those curious, I’d highly recommend George’s 2011 TEDx talk about the topic.

Of course, the lesson from all of this is the fallacy of modern-day education. And the same is true for the adult world between convergent thinkers and divergent thinkers. I believe in the world of venture at least, we have terminology that’s little less palatable (at least for me, although on occasion I’m guilty of using them myself): insiders and outsiders.

My friend Anne sent me this piece by Auren Hoffman recently on insiders and outsiders. An incredibly well-written piece, and quite thought-provoking. I’ve largely thought about how outsiders can become insiders, but silly me, less about the value of staying an outsider or an insider aiming to become an outsider. Moreover, that to be successful as an insider, there’s actually a rather predictable path to become one. Or at least to help your children become one. Go to Harvard. Play insider sports, like gold, or horse-riding, or sailing. And son. But in Auren’s words, to be successful as an outsider, well, “being [an outsider] is MUCH higher beta. They could end up changing the world for the better. They also could blow it up. Or just never be accepted and live less happy.”

And while I may not agree with everything that Auren proposes, a lot of it makes sense. In fact, 11 words definitely caught my eye. “Outsiders take things from insiders.  Insiders inherit things from other insiders.” And as such, insiders play the status quo; outsiders change the status quo.

It’s interesting. Every generation of VC, there’s a changing of the guard. Many of the new regime are outsiders. People who think different. People who exhibit a level of creativity that is uncommon in VCs. Either in the form of business models or how they provide value. How they build brand. Or simply how their brain works. People that in bringing a fresh perspective were able to find the next great companies unlike any other.

Interestingly enough, in my buddy and Superclusters guest Jaap’s recent study of 2,092 North American and European VC funds, he found that these are the folks who are more likely to hit fundraise targets than any other GP persona. Aka 45% success rate. And perform highest at 2.4X net TVPI, but only average on DPI and IRR.

Source: Jaap Vriesendorp’s cluster model on 2,092 VC funds. Find a more interactive one here.

My guess here is that these outsiders, in being artisanal about their craft and — well, at least with respect to the VC industry at large, divergent thinkers — find their tribe rather quickly because LPs quick self-select themselves in or out of a relationship with them. They’re the round pegs in the square holes, to borrow a Steve Jobs moniker. So when most others look square, the few round holes instantly identify with these round pegs. And more often than not, they’re new to the asset management game, so have lower fund targets and a more precise strategy. Downside to that is they’re still learning the ropes of exit strategies and fund management. Which also explains the high volatility in returns.

And while there’s much higher beta in being an outsider, there’s plenty of research to suggest that there is also greater alpha. But it’s going to be unfair. The deck is rigged against you. There’s a great Marcus Aurelius line. “Mental toughness is knowing life isn’t fair and still playing to win.”

The outsiders who win exhibit exactly that mental fortitude against stacked odds. Besides, there’s joy in doing things differently.

Photo by Randy Fath on Unsplash


Stay up to date with the weekly cup of cognitive adventures inside venture capital and startups, as well as cataloging the history of tomorrow through the bookmarks of yesterday!


The views expressed on this blogpost are for informational purposes only. None of the views expressed herein constitute legal, investment, business, or tax advice. Any allusions or references to funds or companies are for illustrative purposes only, and should not be relied upon as investment recommendations. Consult a professional investment advisor prior to making any investment decisions.

Why Trust is Built from the Small Things | Ben Ehrlich | Superclusters | S3E8

Ben Ehrlich is the founder and General Partner of First Momentum Capital, where he helps seed a new generation of venture capital firms. He is also the Director of Strategy at the Long Term Stock Exhange. Previously Ben worked across the venture ecosystem supporting companies in the Canadian Technology Accelerator, OutCast Communications and Cribspot (YC 15). In his free time Ben takes his Irish setter doodle hiking and enjoys watching the University of Michigan football team (mostly) win.

You can find Ben on his socials here:
Twitter: https://x.com/benjaminehrlich
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/benjamin-ehrlich-43b75498/

And huge thanks to this episode’s sponsor, Alchemist Accelerator: https://alchemistaccelerator.com/superclusters

Listen to the episode on Apple Podcasts and Spotify. You can also watch the episode on YouTube here.

Brought to you by Alchemist Accelerator.

OUTLINE:

[00:00] Intro
[03:43] The origins of the Out of the Crisis podcast
[06:54] Ben’s advice for rookie podcasters
[08:35] How did Ben first meet Eric Ries?
[11:46] The play-by-play for Ben’s interview with LTSE
[13:36] What do decisions and conversations look like at LTSE?
[16:23] Building trust among team members
[18:29] How does Ben build trust with GPs?
[25:14] How did First Momentum Capital start?
[30:42] What was the pitch to close First Momentum’s first fund?
[33:54] How does Ben underwrite Fund I managers?
[36:42] How does Ben measure a GP’s future deal flow (as opposed to today’s)?
[45:40] What does a “No” from Ben look like?
[57:50] Thoughts on fund governance
[1:05:57] What is the role of serendipity in Ben’s life?
[1:08:17] Commisso Bakery in Toronto
[1:10:35] Thank you to Alchemist Accelerator for sponsoring!
[1:11:35] If you enjoyed the episode, I’d appreciate it if you could share it with one friend!

SELECT LINKS FROM THIS EPISODE:

SELECT QUOTES FROM THIS EPISODE:

“Make sure to pay the government, doctors, and podcast producers on time.” – Ben Ehrlich

“If you want to build trust with someone [on your team], if they screw up, you have to be okay with them screwing up because you put them in the situation.” – Ben Ehrlich

“We’re looking for concentrated, non-correlated bets.” – Ben Ehrlich


Follow David Zhou for more Superclusters content:
For podcast show notes: https://cupofzhou.com/superclusters
Follow David Zhou’s blog: https://cupofzhou.com
Follow Superclusters on Twitter: https://twitter.com/SuperclustersLP
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What Limited Capital Does to Founders and Investors

pitch, presentation

My friend invited me to a demo day earlier this week. Albeit, it was a bunch of summer interns presenting their project they’d been working on for the last two months. The few investors and I who sat on the judging panel were all admittedly quite surprised by the quality of pitches and products from students and hell, even within two months. In fact, these 10-11 interns have gotten much further in product development and customer discovery than most founders I’ve seen across the span of a year. Whether sampling bias or not, the latter is probably about 50%+ of what I see these days. And you’d think that AI would have sped up the product development cycle.

But I digress.

Simply put, I was impressed. So, in efforts to simulate actual pitches at demo days, I asked a team who had presented five features they’d been working on and gotten each to a working prototype. “If you had to kill three of the five features, which three would you kill?”

To which, the “CEO” replied: “To be honest, all five are quite important. But if we had to kill a feature, it’d be the AI chatbot, but the rest of the four go hand-in-hand.”

I pushed for a more discerning answer, but was met with a paraphrased version of the last answer. And of course, it left a little more to be desired. What I was looking for was something of more prescriptive specificity. For instance, “we’d focus on usage metrics, particularly with respect to retention cohorts and actions per session across all the features. And depending on what features seem to perform better than others, our plan is to focus 70% of engineering resources on the top feature, 20% on the second most popular feature, and 10% focused on either a permutation of the other three or spending time with our customers to see where they’re the most frustrated.” It may not need to be the “right” answer, but having a thought-out answer is helpful.

After all, the original question boils down to the fact that most founders fail from indigestion not from starvation. Charles Hudson wrote this great piece last month, aptly named “The Last $250K.” In short, one of the most common behavioral changes he’s observed is when founders are down to their last $250K. And, three things stand out in particular:

  1. “The most important things to work on become incredibly clear.”
  2. “The data needed to validate the company’s hypothesis becomes much clearer.”
  3. “There are things that the company was doing that they stop doing because those things don’t really matter given the gravity of the situation.”

It’s a quick read. And I highly recommend it. Much of which I personally agree with. Not sure if that’s usually the $250K mark, but my personal sample size is far smaller than Charles’. Constraints are the breeding grounds of creativity.

What’s really interesting is that my first reaction to that blogpost was just like how the last 4-6 months of runway leads to deep focus, how do the last 4-6 months affect fund managers? And it’s not too far off.

  • Deployment speed slows. The simple reason is that they no longer feel the fire under their belly to deploy. Either because they’re close to their target portfolio size or they need to elongate the time horizon while they’re actively raising their next fund.
  • The quality bar for what gets funded goes up. Since your deal flow pipeline is likely not contracting, there’s a flight to quality. And quality more often than not, translates to traction, logos/brands, and founder’s prior experiences. While there are always outliers, I see many GPs take less risky bets that they would’ve otherwise.
  • GPs are actively planning for the next fund’s strategy. And actively synthesizing lessons learned. Or at least, with respect with how they pitch LPs. And if they’re an emerging manager, or a fund without clear wins in their last fund, the most important things also become painfully clear. They often focus on the 20% that drove 80% of fund returns.
  • GPs are spending a lot more time on portfolio support. Not only because graduation rates become a lot more important (for fund returns and narratives for prospective LPs), but also because references matter in diligence. And well, if you’re fundraising for your next fund, you can be damn well sure that a sophisticated LP is going to do anywhere between 10-50 reference checks. On-list and off-list. 20-30% of which with your portfolio companies.

Thematically, focus. While there are other constraints that help improve a founder or a fund manager’s level of focus, limited runway (or capital to deploy) is a natural forcing function. The best ones I’ve seen often impose artificial constraints early on, before things get rough. Rules and codes of conduct. Things they promise themselves and the team never do. Aligning compensation behind performance. In other words, operational discipline.

Naturally, it should be to no surprise that investors of any kind spend a lot of time on organizational discipline before they choose to invest.

Photo by National Cancer Institute on Unsplash


Stay up to date with the weekly cup of cognitive adventures inside venture capital and startups, as well as cataloging the history of tomorrow through the bookmarks of yesterday!


The views expressed on this blogpost are for informational purposes only. None of the views expressed herein constitute legal, investment, business, or tax advice. Any allusions or references to funds or companies are for illustrative purposes only, and should not be relied upon as investment recommendations. Consult a professional investment advisor prior to making any investment decisions.

An Inside Peek into the Mind of an Individual LP | Susan Kimberlin | Superclusters | S3E7

Susan Kimberlin builds and invests in things that are Good & Useful. She is an angel investor, limited partner and product leader with a career that is equal parts building SaaS software products, and investing in companies, funds, teams, and projects that promote social equity with practical solutions for real-world problems. She is committed to bringing more diverse people into investing and the innovation economy. With a background in building search and natural language products for companies like PayPal and Salesforce, she leverages her experience to help her portfolio companies with product and fundraising strategies. Susan believes that bringing diverse perspectives to creative and practical challenges is the best way to create durable and impactful change.

In addition to her tech roles, Susan co-owns and manages Tammberlin Vineyards, growing Rhône wine varietals in Bennett Valley, Sonoma County. She works on documentary and narrative film projects as an executive producer, supporting creative projects that raise awareness, start conversations, and bring joy. She is a lifelong singer, and has been singing with pop a cappella group The Loose Interpretations for nearly 20 years.

You can find Susan on her socials here:
Twitter: https://x.com/susansearchpro
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/susankimberlin/
Substack: https://goodanduseful.substack.com/

And huge thanks to this episode’s sponsor, Alchemist Accelerator: https://alchemistaccelerator.com/superclusters

Listen to the episode on Apple Podcasts and Spotify. You can also watch the episode on YouTube here.

Brought to you by Alchemist Accelerator.

OUTLINE:

[00:00] Intro
[02:51] What are madrigals?
[10:10] How to balance high expectations for your team and the trust that they will get there
[14:53] How does Susan recognize drive and excellence in others?
[21:49] What made Susan’s founding LP check in Backstage Capital so unique?
[26:01] Difference between LP stakes and GP stakes
[38:51] The smokes and mirrors behind the first pitch
[43:54] Susan’s investment strategy as an individual LP?
[50:21] What topic would Susan give a TED talk in that’s not startups or venture?
[59:24] Thank you to Alchemist Accelerator for sponsoring!
[1:00:25] If you enjoyed this episode, could you share this with one other friend?

SELECT LINKS FROM THIS EPISODE:

SELECT QUOTES FROM THIS EPISODE:

“Communication between us is the definition of our experience in the world.” – Susan Kimberlin


Follow David Zhou for more Superclusters content:
For podcast show notes: https://cupofzhou.com/superclusters
Follow David Zhou’s blog: https://cupofzhou.com
Follow Superclusters on Twitter: https://twitter.com/SuperclustersLP
Follow Superclusters on TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@super.clusters
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Anecdotal Telltale Signs of Exceptionalism

dune, sand, great

I’ve been lucky enough to meet a number of founders and fund managers over the years. Many of which I probably have no business of meeting and getting to know. And I count myself fortunate every day to have the opportunities to do so.

Nevertheless, and as an FYI, all of this is completely anecdotal. Maybe at some point I’ll find data to support this. Hell, maybe there’s already data on this. But as is the perk of this blog, I get to write about just things on my mind.

Per some recent conversations with friends, having already shared with them, thought I’d share the below. Some telltale signs I’ve noticed in founders and fund managers that are world-class before the rest of the world knows it:

  • Highly responsive. It’s insane to think about this given their busy lives. But the folks I’ve been lucky to invest in and (gosh darn it) passed on who’ve gone on to create hundreds if not thousands of jobs respond remarkably fast. Sometimes within minutes of me sending them a message/email. But on average before half the day is over. I will say I’m personally slipping here a bit as of late. But I guess, that just means I’m not world-class by my own definition. Many seem to be night owls, at least when they’re still hustling. I’m not personally sure if they’re working deep into the night, but at least, they’re responding to me at 2AM, and I’m trying to figure out what they’re doing then.
  • They exercise in the morning, or have a morning routine that they do every day without fail, even when on vacation. It could be writing, journaling, making that morning cup of espresso just right, or making breakfast for their kids EVERY morning. It’s ritualistic, so that they perform just as well on the first meeting of their day as they do their last.
  • Operationally disciplined. They’re really good at saying no. They set clear boundaries. Often times, boundaries that most people have not heard of. And many, even after hearing them, may find bizarre or strange. But in an odd way, they make a lot of sense if you give them the time of day. I was calling a friend recently on this, and he was sharing that he’s not the kind of friend that most people want. He doesn’t show up at birthday parties or celebrations. He also doesn’t post to socials regularly to congratulate friends on promotions or otherwise. But he aimed to be, and ends up being the first call friends make when shit hits the fan. And because of that practice, he can be laser focused on his priorities every day.
  • They’re really good at using analogies. In many ways, it’s the classic 7-year old test or the grandma test. They’re extremely high context individuals in a lot of different disciplines. And if I were to define it (not original, but I forget the attribution, might be Tim Urban), high context individuals are those that are well-versed on a given subject. Low context folks are those are out of the loop. For example, a PhD in neuroscience is high context on how different reward systems affect dopamine, but possibly low context on Marvel Cinematic Universe lore. And when someone is high context in not just one area but in a lot of areas — in other words, people might call them polymaths, or at the very least, well-read — it’s easy for them to pull analogies in ways that best help relay what they want to say to the other person’s ears. Like a crypto founder (probably one might be able to guess who) who once described to me one-way hash functions as putting fruits in a blender. Or Josh Wolfe who describes the battle of ethics in a company a battle between intentions and incentives. Or that society is a constant battle between deception and detection.
  • They ask really good questions. Questions you’ve likely never heard asked before. And many can get to proficiency on any subject quite quickly. Largely, probably because of how they think and how they eventually arrive at an answer.
  • Words are used intentionally and with specificity, and rarely, if ever, use amorphous terms and superlative adjectives. Like success, community, unique, compelling, unfair advantage, best, better, and so on. And if they do, they are quick to define what they personally mean when they use those words.

Photo by Linhao Zhang on Unsplash


Stay up to date with the weekly cup of cognitive adventures inside venture capital and startups, as well as cataloging the history of tomorrow through the bookmarks of yesterday!


The views expressed on this blogpost are for informational purposes only. None of the views expressed herein constitute legal, investment, business, or tax advice. Any allusions or references to funds or companies are for illustrative purposes only, and should not be relied upon as investment recommendations. Consult a professional investment advisor prior to making any investment decisions.

The Art and Science of Reference Checks | Raida Daouk | Superclusters | S3E6

raida daouk

Raida Daouk started her career in banking before moving to the investment team of BY Venture Partner, a venture fund with offices in Beirut and Abu Dhabi. She quickly climbed the ranks within the company and ultimately became a Venture Partner.

Recognizing a void in the market for personalized venture consulting services, Raida established Amkan Advisory, a boutique consultancy firm specializing in assisting family offices and high-net-worth individuals in identifying venture funds that align with their specific strategies. Given that first-time fund managers often possess the most aligned incentives with their investors, she understood the significant value they bring to the venture capital landscape. However, Raida also understood the reluctance of family offices to commit capital to relatively unproven managers. By curating a portfolio of carefully selected funds, she aims to mitigate the perceived risk associated with investing in first-time managers while still accessing the high-growth potential of emerging ventures.

Amkan Ventures emerged to offer LPs access to emerging managers beyond their direct reach. Focusing on small Funds I and II led by ambitious managers with a conviction-driven approach, the firm prioritizes delivering returns and nurturing opportunities in the venture arena.

Amkan Ventures’ first close occurred in April 2024, with one investment already made in a $30M fund I out of NY and one more about to be announced.

Raida currently serves on the Selection Committees of RAISE Global and The Bridge Platform.

You can find Raida on her socials here:
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/raidadaouk/
Amkan Ventures: https://www.amkanventures.com/

And huge thanks to this episode’s sponsor, Alchemist Accelerator: https://alchemistaccelerator.com/superclusters

Listen to the episode on Apple Podcasts and Spotify. You can also watch the episode on YouTube here.

Brought to you by Alchemist Accelerator.

OUTLINE:

[00:00] Intro
[02:45] The impact of biology on Raida’s career
[06:24] If Raida were to teach a founder psychology course
[08:42] Raida’s definition of “running through walls”
[10:16] Similarities and differences between founders and fund managers
[11:36] What does GP-thesis fit look like?
[14:38] How Raida got to a yes on Nebular Ventures?
[20:35] The personas of different kinds of references
[26:05] The one question that Raida always asks during reference calls
[28:31] Is there such a thing as too many references?
[31:57] What if you don’t have a network of references as an LP?
[35:26] How does one set up the venture arm of a family office?
[40:28] What is the GCC?
[43:58] The best way to build relationships in the GCC
[47:54] The origin story of Amkan Ventures
[52:19] How did Raida build a strong understanding of the foodtech space?
[53:58] Where did Amkan’s name come from?
[58:26] What fund is in Raida’s anti-portfolio?
[1:00:30] What’s Raida’s take on solo GPs?
[1:03:10] How does your mindset change as an LP if you had evergreen capital?
[1:06:58] Thank you to Alchemist Accelerator for sponsoring!
[1:07:59] If you enjoyed this episode, it would mean a lot if you could share this with one other friend!

SELECT LINKS FROM THIS EPISODE:

SELECT QUOTES FROM THIS EPISODE:

“It’s always best to start the relationship when there is no ask.” – Raida Daouk

“The average length of a VC fund is double that of a typical American marriage. So VC splits – divorce – is much more likely than getting hit by a bus.” – Raida Daouk

“The more constraints you have, the more conviction you will have in each manager.” – Raida Daouk


Follow David Zhou for more Superclusters content:
For podcast show notes: https://cupofzhou.com/superclusters
Follow David Zhou’s blog: https://cupofzhou.com
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The Strength of Battle-Tested Friendships

These days I’ve been spending a lot of time thinking about succession and key person risks. Definitely influenced by a number of conversations I’ve had with a partnership I invested in who broke up and LPs who take the long-term perspective on investing in funds.

When I say long-term, I mean when those LPs invest in a firm, it’s not just a single check into one fund. They plan to budget out $XX million dollars over the next three funds or so. Or across 9-10 years primarily to invest in this fund manager. We’ve talked about how underwriting a solo GP is actually much easier than underwriting a partnership, at least on the key person risk side of things.

If a solo GP dies, they die, and the firm naturally cannot go on. And any capital reserved for them automatically goes towards net new investments. If a partnership loses a key partner, then it’s this awkward dance to figure out if the remaining partners are worth re-upping on. And a re-underwriting needs to occur.

Before I go any further, let me first define key person risk for the uninitiated. Key person risk is the risk created when a single person leaves or dies that creates meaningful knowledge, brand, or performance loss at the institution. Simply put, when shit hits the fan in a partnership, how volatile will the transition be?

As such, my recent conversations informs much of what I write below. For the purpose of this blogpost, I’ll focus on partnerships as opposed to solo GPs and founders.

All great relationships are battle tested. Battle-hardened. In fact, when I ask a set of co-founders how they resolve disagreements, and they say, they never disagree, I run in the opposite direction fast. So fast that I could be cast as Barry Allen. Maybe. If my acting were better. If two people never disagree, they’re either the same person (which is hard, ’cause even biological twins disagree) or they’ve never truly worked on something together that they would call their life’s purpose.

To me, the formula for battle-hardened relationships has two key variables.

  1. Depth – High stakes
  2. Breadth – Time for the stakes to manifest

Even if artificially high stakes. Even if in the moment, all parties involved must truly believe that this is the be all, end all. That there is no Plan B. There’s no going back. That everyone has to see it through. In Hollywood, I believe it’s called the inciting incident. A clear market in time that after a set of events that there is no way one can go back to their old life. Whether it’s the state championships for a sport among high school students, or fighting for survival in the middle of nowhere. For artificially high stakes, one must distort the reality, so that at the minimum they must convince themselves of the gravity of the situation.

Why do high stakes matter? Because only then does one put their all into something. And when you truly care, you hold nothing back. High stakes reveals the character you are. If people can accept and embrace you at your worst, everything else is a cherry on top.

This varies for different people. Sometimes it takes time to care. Other times, it takes time to fully realize what’s at stake. And others still, may never get to that point of realization. For example, in a ball game with four quarters, sometimes it isn’t until the score is neck and neck in the fourth quarter do you give it your all.

So in practice, I love spending time with folks to talk about their past. Their origin story. And get into the weeds on key inflection points not only in their own lives, but also in the time they’ve gotten to know each other. When did they first work together? When did they realize they were more than just colleagues? At what point did they introduce their families to each other? What was the point of realization?

Most investors focus primarily on length of a relationship, which is definitely valuable information, but without depth, it’s easy to know someone for decades and care very little for their growth and success.

Photo by Kimson Doan on Unsplash


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The views expressed on this blogpost are for informational purposes only. None of the views expressed herein constitute legal, investment, business, or tax advice. Any allusions or references to funds or companies are for illustrative purposes only, and should not be relied upon as investment recommendations. Consult a professional investment advisor prior to making any investment decisions.