For years â decades, even â there was little question about whether you could become a venture capitalist if you werenât comfortable financially. You couldnât. The people and institutions that invest in venture funds want to know that fund managers have their own âskin in the game,â so theyâve long required a sizable check from the investorâs own pocket before jumping aboard. Think 2% to 3% of the fundâs total assets, which often equates to millions of dollars.
In fact, five years ago, I wrote that the real obstacle to becoming a venture capitalist has less to do with gender than with financial inequality. I focused then on women, who are paid less (especially Black and Hispanic women), and who possess less wealth. But the same is true of anyone of lesser means.
Consider that one or two partners trying to raise a $50 million debut fund have to come up with $1.5 million. Theyâll collect management fees off that $50 million fund â the standard is 2% annually for the fundâs investment period â but they have to use that $1 million per year to pay for everyoneâs salaries, along with rent, auditing, legal costs and back-office administration fees. That doesnât leave much, which is why having something to start with helps.
LPs: The â§1% of a fund capital commitment you expect from GPs makes it hard for POCs to raise funds.
Consider that âfor a $20M fund, a 2% commitment with 2 GPs is still a $200K commitment for each partner.â This is out of reach for many of us. https://t.co/bguXpa3CiY
â lolitataub (@lolitataub) October 29, 2020
Thankfully, things are changing, with more ways to help aspiring VCs raise that initial capital commitment. None of these approaches can guarantee success in raising a fund, but theyâre paths that other VCs have effectively used in the past when starting out.
1.) Find investors, i.e. limited partners, who are willing to take less than 3% and maybe even less than 1% of the overall fund size being targeted. Youâll likely find fewer investors as that âcommitâ shrinks. But for example Joanna Rupp, who runs the $1.1 billion private equity portfolio for the University of Chicagoâs endowment, suggests that both she and other managers she knows are willing to be flexible based on the âspecific situation of the GP.â
Says Rupp, âI think there are industry ânorms,â but we havenât required a [general partner] commitment from younger GPs when we have felt that they donât have the financial means.â
Bob Raynard, founder of the fund administration firm Standish Management, echoes the sentiment, saying that a smaller general partner commitment in exchange for special investor economics is also fairly common. âYou might see a reduced management fee for the LP for helping them or reduced carry or both, and that has been done for years.â
2.) Learn more about what are called management fee offsets, which investors in venture funds often determine to be reasonable. These arenât uncommon, says Michael Kim of Cendana Capital, a firm that has stakes in dozens of seed stage funds, because they also offer tax advantages (though the IRS has talked about doing away with these).
How do these work? Say your âcommitâ was $1 million over 10 years (the standard life of a fund). Instead of trying to come up with $1 million that you presumably donât have, you can offset up to 80% of that, putting in $200,000 instead but reducing your management fees by that same amount over time so that itâs a wash and youâre still getting credit for the entire $1 million. Youâre basically converting fee income into the investment youâre supposed to make.
3.) Use your existing portfolio companies as collateral. Kim has had at least two managers whose brands have come to be highly regarded launch a fund not with a âcommitâ but rather by bringing to the table stakes in startups theyâd funded as angel investors.
In both of these cases, it was a great deal for Kim, who says the companies were quickly marked up. For the fund managersâ part, it meant not having to put more of their own money into the funds.
4.) Make a deal with wealthier friends if you can. When Kim launched his fund of funds to invest in venture managers after working for years as a VC himself, he raised $1 million in working capital from six friends to get it off the ground. The money gave Kim, who had a mortgage at the time and young children, enough runway for two years. Obviously, your friends have to be willing to gamble on you, but sweeteners certainly help, too. In Kimâs case, he gave his friends a percentage of Cendanaâs economics in perpetuity.
5.) Get a bank loan. Rupp said she would be uncomfortable if a GPâs commit was being funded through a bank loan for several reasons, including that thereâs no guarantee a fund manager will make money on his or her fund, a loan adds risk on top of risk, and because should a manager need liquidity related to that loan, he or she might sell a strongly performing position too early.
That said, loans arenât uncommon, says Raynard. He says banks with venture capital relationships like Silicon Valley bank and First Republic are typically happy to lend a fund manager a line of credit to help him or her to make capital calls, though he says it does depend on who else is involved with the fund. âAs long as itâs a diverse group of LPs,â the banks are comfortable moving forward in exchange for winning over a new fundâs business, he suggests.
6.) Consider the merits of so-called front loading. This is a technique with which âmore creating LPs can sometimes get comfortable,â says Kim. Itâs also how investor Chris Sacca, now a billionaire, got started when he first turned to fund management. How does it work? Say a fund manager is getting paid a 2.5% management fee over the life of a 10-year fund. Over that decade, that amounts to 25% of the fund. Typically, management fees decline over time, to 2% and even slightly lower because you are typically no longer actively managing it but rather managing out the bets youâve made in the first few years.
Some beginning managers blend that management fee â say itâs 20% over the fundâs duration â and pay themselves a higher percentage â say 5% for each of its first three years â until by the end of the fundâs life, the manager is receiving no management fee for it at all.
Without carry, that could mean no income if you arenât yet seeing profits from your investments. But presumably â especially given pacing in recent years â you, the general partner, have raised another fund by the time that happens so have resources coming in from that second fund.
These are just a few of the ways to get started. There are other paths to take, too, notes Lo Toney of Plexo Capital â which, like Cendana Capital â has stakes in many venture funds. Just one of these is to structure to use a self-directed IRA to finance that GP âcommit.â Another is to sell a portion of the management company or to sell a greater percentage of future profits and to use those proceeds, though VCs Charles Hudson of Precursor Ventures and Eva Ho of Fika Ventures avoided that path and suggested that first-time managers do the same if they can.
Either way, suggests Toney, a former partner with the Alphabetâs venture arm, GV, itâs important to know oneâs options but keep in mind, too, that what you start with may ultimately prove irrelevant.
Said Toney via email this week: âI have not seen any data on the front end of a VCâs career that wealth indicates future success.â
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