2. § A word of caution
§ The role of a VC
§ India vs the West
§ Skills required to be a VC
§ Life in the day of a VC
We’ll talk about
3. A Career in VC
A word of caution
Over a 10 year period…
2-3x
>3x
1-2x
<1x
Over-performs the
market
Underperforms the
market
% of VC Funds
5%
10%
35%
50%
98%
5%
2%
95%
Other VC funds Top 20 VC funds
% of VC Funds % of Return
Survivorship bias, selection bias and skew
U.S is a saturated market; Potential for new funds in India
3
4. To the LP | To the fund | To the portfolio
The Role of a VC
5. A Career in VC
The role of a VC – to the LPs
5
Exit 1
Exit 2
Exit 3
Exit 4
Exit 5
Exit 1
Exit 2
Other
Exits
Equity,
Fixed Income etc.
VC
VC Capital allocation 5-10%
Expected return from VC = 3-4x
Typical route
Pareto
LP Portfolio
6. A Career in VC
The role of a VC – to the fund
6
1. Find great founders and teams that will scale with the company (early stage)
Find great fast-growing businesses (later-stage)
2. Predict market trends – understand where the world is (probably) headed
3. Build your own team – funds have small teams, challenging to build
4. Fundraise from LPs – becomes a larger part of the job with seniority
7. A Career in VC
The role of a VC – to portfolio companies
7
1. Provide a strong network that can be leveraged by the portfolio companies across Strategy, Hiring, Mentoring,
Product & Marketing
2. Be a good board member – this is different from being a good investor
3. Follow-on fundraises – help companies get more capital and eventually plan an exit
4. Guide the founder along her journey – entrepreneurship can be a lonely path
8. Not currently. May converge in the future.
Are VC roles the same in India and the West?
9. A Career in VC
India vs. the West
9
India is unique – Entrepreneurs need to do a lot more things
+ + =E-commerce Payments Logistics
Infrastructure is weak; no predictability of service
+ =Content Delivery
9
10. A Career in VC
India vs. the West
10
VC Ecosystem in India is still very early (but growing)
India-focused VC dry power by global and domestic funds
$B
U.S is
~$150B
Total # of funded start-ups in India
U.S is
~100k
000’s
Accel - US Fund 1 and India Fund 2 were both $65M – 1985 and 2008
~2% of funds have India focus; <1% have an India office, even fewer are India-based
11. A Career in VC
India vs. the West
11
Only a handful of exits till now; secondaries and acquisitions are the norm
Equity Markets
U.S. has ~200 IPOs every
year
India in 2018
Maturity of exits will bring in a lot more interest
12. A Career in VC
India vs the West
12
• Rounds are smaller, valuations are lower
$10M Seed is commonplace in the US, reserved for rare occasions and serial entrepreneurs in India
• Capital isn’t as freely available as in the West, raising is harder
$500K seed in US will close on a paper-plan on a good day, much harder in India
• Typical VCs in the West -
Ivy League MBA, Investment Banking background, recently seeing entrepreneur VCs
65% of Midas List have MBAs
• Typical VCs in India -
Ex-entrepreneur or part of company leadership, MBA agnostic, recently seeing finance VCs
• In the US, money was king. That’s not enough in India.
Pendulum swung too much in the US in favour of capital; YC and similar initiatives are pulling it back
India requires an entrepreneurial spirit
14. A Career in VC
Skills required to be a VC
14
1. People reading skills
Ability to pick the right founder, recognize patterns of success in individuals and teams
Need to select founders that scale with the company
2. Understanding market trends and technology
Specific - What is hot right now? Can it be big? Is it the right time?
Generic - Where is the world headed? What problems need to be solved? (Domain expertise helps)
3. High Speed of Unlearning
What you knew yesterday may no longer be true
Need constant self assessment and re-evaluation
15. A Career in VC
Skills required to be a VC
15
4. Pattern recognition
What can you see that others cannot? Shadow senior partners, experience through cycles counts for a lot
5. Empathy for entrepreneurs
You are not in control; parent-ego state (looking down) will not help
What is not empathy? – Saying YES to everything, spoon-feeding, micro-managing
6. Connector style
Who in your network can solve this problem or move it?
Any gaps you can fill by hiring from your network?
7. Sourcing dealflow
Build a strong and diverse network over time; founders will come back for their next company
Sourcing has to proprietary at steady state – no use in having the same shopping list as everyone else
Good founders do their research and pick their VCs, not the other way around
16. A Career in VC
Skills required to be a VC
16
8. Board member skills
You can only direct and nudge; let the entrepreneur solve the problem
This is very different from being a good investor
9. Intellectual & emotional honesty
To both the portfolio and the fund
10. Finance knowledge
Common-sense framework is important both to enter the deal and after
11. Fundraising skills
Pitching and raising funds from the LPs; Skill becomes more important with seniority
17. A Career in VC
Skills required to be a VC
17
Finally,
Risk taking & Risk Appetite
You need to look things through various lens -
Need to constantly assess risk vs. reward; Risk-taking and crystal-ball gazing must be calculated
Market
Size
Growth
Timing
Competition
Distribution
Macro factors
Business
Users
PM Fit
Economics
Defensibility
Network effects
Investments
"7 year test"
Team
Knowledge
Track record
Dynamics
Aspirations
Can they scale?
18. A Career in VC
Skills required to be a (deep-tech) VC
18
What to do?
Be passionate about tech!
What not to do?
• Fall in love with the tech
Important to see how tech will lead to 10x differentiated businesses
• Keep the blinders on
Look around and be aware of state of the art and competition
• Be an expert
Talk to experts, understand the core, validate the hypothesis and the tech
• Rely on experts
Incumbents often give negative feedback. Use their expertise to get your hypothesis well-rounded
19. Should I become a VC?
Depends on your motivation. VC jobs are not a stint.
20. A Career in VC
Life in the day of a VC
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- Fund raising (from the LPs)
- Build solid team (own)
- Build strong pipeline
- Selection process
- Helping the companies and founders
- Planning exits
Few days are no wins – lose deal to a competitor, day full of uneventful meetings, stuck in diligence
Most days are small wins – solving a problem with a portfolio company, introducing a new sourcing method, learning
something new, meet good companies (and mostly passing), get closer to an answer;
These work up to big wins – Company makes a new investment, portfolio company raises a new round
Self Motivation is key! Lifetime VC - do most of these and enjoy it!