The Business of Venture Capital Book Chapter 1 Summary

dominic norton
3 min readDec 30, 2020

Institutional investors or limited partners (LPs) look for the following:

  • Performance track record and background of fund managers
  • Investment strategy and its relevance to (a) managers’ expertise and (b) market conditions

LPs comprise of:

  • pension funds
  • endowments
  • foundations
  • corporations
  • private family offices
  • individuals
  • Fifty‐two percent of venture funds complete their fund‐raising in 12 months. Others spend as much as 24 to 36 months on the road.
  • Of the funds that successfully got off the ground, only 7 percent are first‐time funds.
  • About 70 percent of the funds successfully reach or exceed their targeted fund amount.

Entrepreneur — venture capitalists have to pitch a thousand pitches to institutional investors to raise their fund and execute a predetermined plan.

RAISE THE VENTURE FUND

  • VCs raise money from financial institutions
  • Investment professionals or general partners (GPs) develop an investment strategy

FIND THE RIGHT INVESTMENT OPPORTUNITIES

A venture fund has to build a portfolio of companies that promise strong returns. Each portfolio company should demonstrate the potential to generate a return that equals a multiple of 8 to 10 times the capital invested.

A venture firm may have multiple funds e.g. Hackathon Entertainment Ventures (Firm), Hackathon Entertainment Early Stage Fund 1, Hackathon Entertainment Early Stage Fund 2

GENERATE FINANCIAL RETURNS

  • Fund returns, measured by internal rate of return (IRR) are a function of two factors: time and capital
  • The faster a portfolio company is sold, for as high an amount, the higher the IRR.
  • Almost 80 percent of all investments fail
  • Time is not your friend: The longer a start‐up takes to reach a critical value milestone, the more concerned investors become.
  • VCs are nurturing a company that they ultimately plan to sell to the highest bidder
  • A venture capitalist makes money in two ways: a base salary and a percentage of the profits (called “carry” or “carried interest”).
  • Most funds are structured so that the profits are distributed after they have covered all the previous losses in the fund.

ROLES AND RESPONSIBILITIES

  • General partners (GPs, managing directors or managing GPs) — negotiating terms for investment opportunities, participating in boards of current portfolio companies, responding to any LP/investor requests, and putting out a few fires
  • Vice presidents
  • Principals
  • Associates
  • Analysts — Source investment opportunities and screen these for further deliberations
  • Venture partner and entrepreneur‐in‐residence positions — Source investments that fit within the fund’s investment strategy or offer sector expertise to assist other partners in making decisions

COMPENSATION

  • VCs are compensated by two methods: (1) management fees and (b) share of profits called carried interests or carry.
  • Investors pay an annual management fee, typically 2 to 2.5 percent of the committed capital per year
  • Investors also keep 80 percent of the profits, and the fund managers take home 20 percent

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