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About Brady Bohrmann
Brady has over 20 years of experience as a venture capitalist and operating executive in both information technology and biotech. His focus is on early-stage investments and backing talented entrepreneurs.
Throughout his venture capital career, he has worked with over 75 companies. He currently is a director or observer of many Avalon portfolio companies, including Backupify, Chart.io, Cloudant, Inc., Conjur, Indix, Juliet Marine Systems, Kaltura, Kinvey, Memrise, Nanigans, Pingup, Redbooth, Selectable Media, Simulmedia, The Happy Cloud, Twinstrata and Vook.
For early stage VCs, the investing space is becoming more competitive, which is healthy and good for the startup ecosystem.
VCs who see themselves as stewards, or coaches of their founder’s creativity and talent, will retain their value.
By contrast, VCs who seek to control companies, slavishly adhering to a numbers game, may very soon find themselves replaced by other sources of investing that allow them to retain more ownership of their idea.
1. There are two kinds of VCs
In my experience, I’ve encountered two main types of venture capitalists:
• VCs who think that the entrepreneur works for them
• VCs who think they work for the entrepreneur
Avalon Ventures believes that as a VC, we work for the entrepreneur. We take a “hands in, eyes in” approach and let the founding team lead the company.
We see our role as one of coach and mentor, engaging at strategic points, rather than at every opportunity.
Two Kinds of VC
2. People are the most important part of the equation
Not surprisingly, we put an emphasis on the quality of the people we are investing in over the product itself.
Great entrepreneurs are hard to find. Not everyone is cut out for the journey.
We need to be able to:
• Trust the founder
• Understand where this venture fits into their life’s story arc
• Know if they are in it for the long haul
People are the most important part of the equation
The same goes with our co-investors.
We need to know they’re not going to run at the first sight of blood.
People are the most important part of the equation
We’ve co-invested with over 80 different firms and place tremendous value on the relationships we’ve built — some going on 25 years.
3. Your reputation matters now more than ever
Whether you’re a first time entrepreneur or a veteran VC, reputations are earned on a daily basis.
In today’s salient, interconnected world, your reputation matters more than ever.
Every interaction of every day is an opportunity to either build up or tear down your integrity.
Your reputation matters now more than ever
Shortcuts — on either side of the table — are always costly, and the true costs are only known too far down the road.
Your reputation matters now more than ever
People of integrity are rare because it is easy to compromise values to get ahead.
If you are true to who you are, especially when tough decisions come around, you will be well served.
Your reputation matters now more than ever
4. Base executive compensation upon company needs
There is a delicate balance between providing incentives to make the company succeed for the long term and ensuring that leadership feels valued in the present.
People rarely feel adequately compensated.
Strategies like requiring founders to re-vest ownership have proven effective for the long-term health of the founder and the company.
It assures both partiers are continually invested in the company for the long haul.
Base executive compensation upon company needs
The bottom line: Do what the company needs to grow to the next stage and recognize that those needs change over time.
Especially in the early stages, it’s best to spend more time on growth metrics and less time on financial metrics to determine compensation.
Base executive compensation upon company needs
5. Retail the covenants that you will use, lose the others
Many VCs stress the importance of protective provisions and subsequently control over the companies they back.
Instead of overloading young companies with options you will likely not employ, remove traditional provisions and only keep ones you will actually use.
Retain the covenants that you will use, lose the others
VCs should look to the ways they can be most productive and offer help as the company grows without making the entrepreneur feel too controlled.
Retain the covenants that you will use, lose the others
While protective provisions are standard features of venture capital agreements, entrepreneurs should be wary of VC firms that pile them on.
As one writer puts it, “Working for an investor-backed company isn’t indentured servitude.”
Retain the covenants that you will use, lose the others
The Takeaway• With the emergence of new funding
platforms, we don’t know what corporate governance will look like 3, 5, 10 years from now.
• VCs who realize their job is to coach their founders to success, value relationships, are full of integrity, and cut traditional deadweight will retain their value.
• At its best, this relationship comes down to entrepreneurs and their mentors, which is why it’s always better to have someone with you in the foxhole.
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