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In VCU's investment process, the entire team participates in underwriting and meets managers. This shared ownership model encourages bolder, higher-conviction bets because the responsibility is collective, reducing the fear of individual failure and career risk for junior members.

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To ensure alignment, VCU provides its investment memo to a manager before committing capital. This allows the manager to correct misunderstandings and confirms a shared understanding of the strategy and KPIs, making difficult future discussions more objective and data-driven.

A successful early-stage strategy involves actively maximizing specific risks—product, market, and timing—to pursue transformative ideas. Conversely, risks related to capital efficiency and team quality should be minimized. This framework pushes a firm to take big, non-obvious swings instead of settling for safer, incremental bets.

Great investment ideas are often idiosyncratic and contrary to conventional wisdom. A committee structure, which inherently seeks consensus and avoids career risk, is structurally incapable of approving such unconventional bets. To achieve superior results, talented investors must be freed from bureaucratic constraints that favor conformity.

Large, contrarian investments feel like career risk to partners in a traditional VC firm, leading to bureaucracy and diluted conviction. Founder-led firms with small, centralized decision-making teams can operate with more decisiveness, enabling them to make the bold, potentially firm-defining bets that consensus-driven partnerships would avoid.

Bessemer's investment process favors individual partner conviction over group consensus. A partner can "pound the table" for a deal (the "gold nugget") without the risk of another partner vetoing it (the "blackball" model). This fosters ownership and bold bets, with performance as the ultimate accountability.

To avoid becoming an "asset accumulation business," SLR Capital requires all employees to invest a significant part of their compensation back into the firm's funds. This forces everyone to act as a principal and ask, "Would I personally own this loan?" creating a powerful filter against risky deals.

Benchmark's unconventional structure, where all partners have equal equity and power, aligns incentives for collaboration. Instead of the 'sharp elbow' culture of hierarchical firms, this model ensures senior partners are motivated to mentor and support junior members, as everyone shares equally in their success.

To foster contrarian thinking and prevent groupthink, Lux Capital allows each investment partner one "silver bullet" per fund. This enables a partner with deep conviction to make an investment even without team consensus, mitigating the risk of missing a brilliant, non-obvious opportunity.

TA Associates uses a hybrid investment committee. A central group reviews deals but delegates final approval to a small team of four partners (two from the deal team, two from the committee) who conduct deep, in-person diligence. This decentralizes decision-making to those closest to the information.

The Rainmaking startup studio had founders vest their personal equity into a shared holding company. This created an "insurance" policy where one founder's success benefited the entire group, allowing them to pursue passion projects while mitigating the financial risk of individual failure.