Posts tagged ‘fred wilson’

Venture capital: from the moon back to the mean

October 16th, 2009 by Greg Boutin
A plot of a normal distribution (or bell curve...

Image via Wikipedia

Josh Kopelman, Managing Director of First Round Capital, wrote a great post today building on Fred Wilson‘s VC math problem, and call Why VC Performance Has Fallen Off A Cliff.

I argued in a recent post that in parallel to the “moonshot” approach Josh rightly describes as the norm for VCs,  there must be a model that focuses on extracting revenues from a portfolio of tech companies with lesser risk.

Overall, it’s pretty clear to me that what we call VC companies should cover the entire risk-return frontier for any early-stage tech company, because that would allow large investors to place their bet as they like in this category. I’m not suggesting VCs turn into bankers or private equity investors, but there is a clear case for filling the early-stage funding gap towards tech ventures that hold less risk and more proven revenue models than moonshots. (more…)

No Comments »