Get your free personalized podcast brief

We scan new podcasts and send you the top 5 insights daily.

To invest in competitive companies like Zoom where direct access was unavailable, LeadEdge bought positions from LPs in the funds that already held the stock. This derivative approach provided economic exposure without needing the company's or the GP's permission.

Related Insights

Borrowed from private equity, continuation funds allow a GP to move a prized asset from an old fund into a new vehicle they still control. This provides liquidity to LPs in the original fund who can choose to cash out, while others can roll over and continue to ride the winner.

The old VC model of taking 30% in a Series A and accepting dilution is being replaced. Now, funds take what ownership the market allows early on and then 'ladder up' to their 20% target by participating in subsequent growth rounds, tenders, and even IPOs. This multi-stage approach is essential for competing in today's market.

Rather than competing with mega-firms to lead rounds, small or solo GPs can secure allocations in top deals by being a complementary, neutral "Switzerland" investor. This strategy involves writing a smaller, non-threatening check as the second or third investor on a cap table.

To source proprietary hybrid capital deals, avoid the capital markets teams at PE firms, as their job is to minimize cost of capital. Instead, build relationships directly with individual deal partners in specific industries. This allows you to become a trusted, go-to provider for complex, time-sensitive situations where speed and certainty are valued over price.

To participate in highly competitive late-stage deals, some VCs organize SPVs without management fees or carry. While not directly profitable, this helps the startup fundraise, strengthens the relationship, protects the VC's original investment, and signals access to LPs for future funds.

Top-performing, founder-led businesses often don't want to sell control. A non-control investment strategy allows access to this exclusive deal flow, tapping into the "founder alpha" from high skin-in-the-game leaders who consistently outperform hired CEOs.

Firms like Sequoia investing in direct competitors (OpenAI and Anthropic) shows that late-stage venture has evolved. When taking small, non-board seat stakes for hundreds of millions, firms act like public market funds, buying a portfolio of category leaders without the information access that would create a true conflict.

To kickstart a critical funding round, Ladder's co-founder needed to lead with his own cash but was tapped out. He creatively found liquidity by convincing the GP of a fund he was an LP in to let him sell his stake to another investor, who then also joined the new round.

Large LPs are increasingly investing directly in top-tier private tech companies, circumventing traditional VC funds. They gain access through SPVs with minimal fees, creating a competitive dynamic where VCs must justify their value proposition against direct, low-cost access to the most sought-after deals.

The firm's LP base consists almost entirely of executives and entrepreneurs. This network is actively used to source deals, perform back-channel diligence, and provide portfolio companies with high-level customer introductions, creating a significant competitive advantage.