Micro VCs Are all BFFs... Forever?
Monday, July 26, 2010 at 03:53PM Micro VCs are notorious for building large and friendly syndicates. One or two players decide (sometimes rather quickly) to make a seed-stage investment in a new startup, and as a round comes together they invite in a number of their Micro VC and angel cohorts. What’s the reasoning for all of this chummy behavior? While traditional VCs sometimes have a love/hate relationship with their syndicate partners (often depending on how well their mutual portfolio companies are performing), it seems as though in the Micro VC arena all of the players speak and act like best friends. Can this friendship last forever?
Just like traditional VCs, Micro VCs syndicate to pool their risk and their (tangible and intangible) resources in maximizing the upside of the investment while hedging the downside. Therefore, the most obvious reason for Micro VCs to syndicate more prevalently is due to capital constraints. When a Micro VC is working from a relatively smaller pool of capital (usually less than $25M per partner), it would prefer to spread risk out further. Plus, unlike traditional VCs which have capacity to invest over the life-cycle of the startup, Micro VCs can usually only afford to play for a round or two. Or not even a full round in many cases. By definition MicroVCs need each other.
However, the friendly nature of syndicates is not just dictated by capital constraint, but deal sourcing and velocity as well. Perhaps implicit in Micro VC model is the aim to potentially maximize the number of good deals to deploy capital, as opposed to maximizing the amount of capital deployed into a number of potentially good deals. Given the number of deals that they do each year, Micro VCs more actively turn to their peers for deal sourcing. This situation is further exaggerated by the smaller funds they manage which result in less management fees. Without additional cash flow coming into the firm, Micro VCs lack the ability to hire associates or other support to provide leverage on deal sourcing, so they instinctively turn to their fellow firms.
This reliance on outsider syndicates for deal flow does present risks for Micro VCs. Outsourced deal sourcing shouldn’t be confused as outsourced deal diligence – a potential fatal flaw which does certainly happen. Playing nicely in syndicates is not reliable due diligence, period. This group-think effect also fosters a negative situation for entrepreneurs as well. With Micro VCs building syndicates in familiar packs, a cursory investment decision by one group-member can spread quickly. Somebody passes in a clique, and soon an entrepreneur is receiving an automatic “no” from the rest of the network of informal ties.
The third reason Micro VCs travel in overly-friendly packs is that the Micro VC space is relatively immature, so the supply of good investment opportunities is still outweighed by the demand. Almost all of the firms or quasi-firms are just a couple years old. As the Micro VC space matures and there are additional entrants in the market, potential competition for getting into deals and more capital in each will increase. This evolution will drive up the “price” of getting into good deals and the chumminess will be dampened.
Moreover, as some Micro VCs experience success and decide to change strategies by “growing up” into traditional VCs, their capital constraint goes away. So players who were friendly originally may be less so down the road. Yet just as traditional VCs are face their peer firms as coopetition, this situation will endure in the Micro VC segment as well. As the space matures some of the over-enthusiastic pupply-love will be lost. And if Mirco VCs lose their defining characteristics and become the pigs at the end of Animal Farm, they’ll lose the overtly syndicate friendliness.
But as long as these Micro VC players remain capital constrained and seek a higher deal velocity, they’ll remain good friends forever. A critical mass of high quality friendly syndicates creates an activation energy for an ecosystem. Having more smart people giving their time and their resources into a startup market creates a ripple effect of new companies, better performing companies, and ambitious entrepreneurs. Afterall, it’s good to have friends.
Reader Comments (10)
I believe coinvesting relationships between micro VCs can stand the test of time. By definition we back young companies and often times it takes more than 1 seed round before they are truly ready for the traditional VC ecosystem. Also by keeping the funding syndicate to angels and micro VCs you preserve the dual track option of an early exit.
Play nice now. Seems everyone in the VC space needs each other these days. Can't tell if you want these firms to fight or to get along. OK to lean on others at times.
Great post. I think it will also be interesting to see whether that "love/hate" relationship does in fact develop in specific instances. We've thought about this a bunch (how to construct a syndicate that will function well over the life of the Company), and it seems that a shared vision for the Company's evolution and capital consumption is critical.
The "so what" is to talk up front about reserving policy, projected burn rates, fund vintage year, etc. Also a good idea to understand perspectives on the aforementioned "dual track" exit options: two well-meaning, like-minded fund managers can hold a very different point of view down the road as to whether it's time to stay lean or step on the gas.
For entrepreneurs, it's a horrible place to get stuck between two VCs with conflicting convictions regarding the business direction going forward. So perhaps a good idea to look for the following: (1) personalities who you think will work constructively when differences arise; and (2) syndicate partners with a history of working through issues together.
Few businesses ever go exclusively "up and to the right": the true test of character is how folks behave when the rough spots are hit.
Working in such a Micro VC company, I agree perfectly with your speech. Amazingly, your point of view is actually quite a "theory" since we experience the same tendency in France. And anywhere else I guess.
Great Post David. Your points are valid.
Should see how it evolves over time.
Cheers,
Venugopal
Vengo Ventures.
Are you being serious? The angels in Silicon Valley already bicker with each other and bad-mouth other angels they don't like. But maybe you already knew about this and made it a post?
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I really enjoyed this article. I am always trying to foster good relationships with people who can help my cause. This really breaks it down to a step by step process which is good.
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