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Seed investors are finding they must step back into old portfolio companies (8-12 years post-investment) because later-stage board members are often disengaged. These larger fund partners are distracted by new, massive AI funds and are effectively "asleep at the wheel," creating dysfunctional boards.
Many late-stage investors focus heavily on data and metrics, forgetting that the quality of the leadership team remains as critical as in the seed stage. A new CEO, for example, can completely pivot a large company and reignite growth, a factor that quantitative analysis often misses.
Benchmark learned that large funds create an "overhang of misfit" with the practice of early-stage investing. The pressure to deploy massive capital volumes conflicts with the hands-on, shoulder-to-shoulder partnership that early founders need, leading to less joy and purpose.
PE investors often fail to unlock a portfolio company's full potential by only interacting at the board level. Engaging deeper with operational leadership is crucial to understand the team's true quality and identify opportunities to transform the value proposition, which are often missed from the boardroom.
In emerging markets, founders are highly entrepreneurial but often lack long-term focus. A signed five-year plan is not enough. Investors must remain highly engaged to continually reinforce the strategy and prevent founders from pursuing distracting side projects that derail growth.
The seed investing landscape isn't just expanding; it's actively replacing its previous generation. Legacy boutique seed firms are being squeezed by large multistage funds and new emerging managers, implying a VC's relevance has a 10-15 year cycle before a new cohort takes over.
Specialized seed-stage VC is an incredibly difficult asset class to sustain. Firms that succeed often 'graduate' to raising larger growth funds, abandoning their seed focus. Those that don't adapt to new founder archetypes and technologies fall by the wayside, leaving few persistent, specialized players.
With 65% of today's winning companies being less than three years old, VCs are focusing their attention on these newer, high-growth AI startups. Older, non-rocketship portfolio companies are being ignored, a stark shift from previous cycles where investors would try to fix them.
The focus on AI among institutional investors is so absolute that promising non-AI companies risk "dying of neglect" and being unable to secure follow-on funding. This creates a potential opportunity gap for angel investors to fund valuable businesses in overlooked sectors.
Multi-stage venture funds often approach seed investing as a way to buy 'option value'. They build a large basket of seed-stage companies with the primary goal of securing the right to double down on the few that break out, rather than forming deep partnerships with each one.
Do not assume senior investors from larger funds will enforce founder accountability. Early-stage investors, who possess deep historical context and trust, have a unique responsibility to continue having direct, uncomfortable performance conversations, regardless of who else is on the cap table.