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The Business of Venture Capital. Mahendra RamsinghaniЧитать онлайн книгу.

The Business of Venture Capital - Mahendra Ramsinghani


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to sponsor new investments, but I plan to reduce my workload, so that I can start saying “yes” to some of the other aspects of my life that have been on hold over the past twenty years.

      Forever grateful.

      JJG

      (Jim Goetz)

      Christy Richardson, director of Private Investments, Hewlett Foundation, has been a Sequoia LP for over two decades. “The best indicator of a well-executed succession plan is when the senior partner wants to leave, but the younger partners ask them to stay and continue to share their knowledge and experience. We have often watched for how the leaders are building the next-generation team, and stepping away at the right time. Sequoia works hard to help their next-gen and newest partners succeed,” she says.

      We'll Turn the Lights Off When We Leave

      “At Foundry Group, we have no succession plan. We will turn the lights off when we are done, and leave.”

      —Brad Feld, Foundry Group

      While the transition for teams at Sequoia was a planned move, for Jerry Colonna, author of Reboot and a CEO coach, the exit from the world of VC investments was abrupt. He was co-leading investments for a fund with $23 billion under management. His prior partnerships include stellar names like Fred Wilson, of Union Square Ventures, and JP Morgan. He volunteered to help the New York City Olympic bid in 2012. Indeed, Jerry was at his peak. And then the Twin Tower attacks occurred. “My home had been attacked,” Jerry said. “I came out of an Olympic bid committee meeting and I stood across the street from the pile, as they referred to it — Ground Zero, which was still smoldering. It all felt like it was falling apart. It felt like there was a complete charade.” At that moment, Jerry contemplated suicide. He called his therapist, who urged him to “get in a cab and come see me,” and that was a pivotal point, which led him to spend years in reflection. He emerged from all the hurt and ashes as a mensch and a mentor to startup founders.

      For Paul Holland, the role was reversed. He started his career in an operating role after a chance meeting with Reed Hastings, founder of Netflix. “It was at a hot tub party 30 years ago,” recalls Paul, and he ended up working with Reed, shaping the trajectory at Netflix. After eight years of investing at Foundation Capital, and as a GP for six funds, Paul plans to transition out of the fund. “The third generation of management is coming in at Foundation. We need to make it easy for them. Transitions need to be structured and respectful for both sides. At 35, you don't know what it is like to be 58,” he says. And on his way out, he did a parting favor to a junior partner. He helped shepherd a particularly risky seed investment that the junior partner would work on. As he heads off to his next phase in life, Paul has made some lasting contributions, not just to his LPs but to the industry as whole. He produced a documentary — Something Ventured — which memorialized the views of some of the legends of the first generation — these include Arthur Rock, Don Valentine, and even the late Tom Perkins, founder of Kleiner Perkins.

      For some that got out, it was triggered by a life-event, for others, boredom. And we should ask of ourselves, as Don Valentine did, can we leave behind a better firm — a better society or a better tomorrow? Or did we try to enrich ourselves one last time as we head out that door? In one of the Silicon Valley firms, a retiring GP presented an elaborate NPV calculation and a payment stream that the junior partners had to commit to pay to the retiring GP. The departing partner planned to collect a “royalty for using his name” for several years, and after all that, he even retained a percentage of the GP. The new members of the firm were bonded labor, albeit Tesla-driving Stanford-graduates.

       “Like as the waves make towards the pebbl’d shore,

       So do our minutes hasten to their end;

       Each changing place with that which goes before,

       In sequent toil all forwards do contend.”

      1 1. The Tim Ferris Show #373: Interview with Jerry Colonna.

      It's easy. It's not easy.

      The hardest and the most humbling part of a VC's journey is often raising a venture fund. And in raising a fund, you make an explicit promise to serve your LPs. Whether you give them a ticket to the ringside view of the technology circus, or empower them to play an active role in shaping the future, as a fund manager, the first thing you do is serve your LPs. Bob Dylan's song “Gotta Serve Somebody” is a gentle reminder that no matter how high you go, there is always someone who we serve.

      You may be a business man or some high-degree thief.

      They may call you doctor or they may call you chief.

      But you're gonna have to serve somebody…

      So in this section, let's figure out the basics — who you serve, your fund strategy, targeting the right fund investors and LPs, the arcs of story-telling, decks and data rooms, road shows, and more.


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