We continue our VC Fundamentals series with Portfolio Construction & Management — how do you build and manage a fund's portfolio as a whole, beyond each individual portfolio company and investment decision? We brought in two of the very best people in the world to help us dissect this topic: Jaclyn Hester & Lindel Eakman of Foundry Group. Jaclyn and Lindel have been early and longtime LPs in some of the best venture funds in the world: USV, True, Spark — and of course Foundry — and now also sit on the GP side of the table at Foundry. Tune in for a master class on how the best VC managers think about generating and optimizing fund performance.
Sponsors:
Topics Covered:
- The bar for what "good" venture fund performance looks like in terms of returns:
- Where venture sits on the spectrum of capital allocation options available to limited partners
- The difference between "gross" and "net" fund returns and why IRR is still important
- The distribution of returns across venture firms & funds — how many hit the performance bar — and the importance of diversification vintage years
- Portfolio construction: how do you allocate the fund's capital across companies?
- Why have a "portfolio" at all vs. loading up on a few high conviction investments — and what an LP's incentives are for diversification vs. a GP's
- How to determine overall $ size you should target for a fund
- Concentration vs diversification and the concepts of "shots on goal" and "groups" of high-potential companies within a portfolio
- Fund reserves planning — are you "making your money at the buy", or able to buy up over time in your winners?
- Balancing playing offense and defense:
- The upside potential of "interstitial rounds"
- Whether it's possible to save a company with more capital, and if pivots are a good idea
- Time allocation vs capital allocation within a fund:
- Understanding and managing your own cognitive biases
- Why time & effort allocation across a portfolio rarely matches capital allocation (and shouldn't)
- Why a firm's partnership dynamics are typically the most important driver of funds' outcomes
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