Initially, ReSeed expected to mentor operators with limited experience. However, by demonstrating its ability to reliably fund deals, the firm attracted highly experienced professionals from private equity and top MBA programs who were previously too risk-averse to join an unproven platform.
Menlo Ventures is rebuilding by hiring former operators from companies like Splunk and Atlassian. The goal is to combine their "in the weeds" experience of running a company with the long-term vision and financial expertise of traditional investors.
Rather than competing in crowded auctions, elite private equity firms pursue a differentiated "executive new build" strategy. They partner with proven operators to build new companies from scratch to address a market need, creating proprietary deals that other firms cannot access.
The expectation for venture capitalists has shifted. Founders no longer just want finance professionals; they demand investors who have direct operational experience and have been "in the trenches" of building a company. This change reflects a move towards more hands-on, value-add investing.
Initially, a16z believed only former founder-CEOs could properly advise entrepreneurs. They later realized this was flawed. Many successful founders can't articulate how they succeeded and may not be interested in the investing skillset. The firm adjusted, realizing it's better to centralize operational advice (e.g., in books and specialist partners) rather than requiring it from every GP.
Red Ventures combines the long-term investment horizon of permanent capital with hands-on operational improvements, focusing on digital businesses. This unique structure allows them to build value without the pressure of a fixed exit timeline, fostering a culture of long-term thinking and deep operational expertise.
To maximize value creation, young private equity firm Teopo Capital made a strategic decision to hire a full-time operating partner dedicated to portfolio companies before building out a fundraising team. This signals a deep commitment to hands-on operational improvement as their core strategy.
Unlike venture-backed startups that chase lightning in a bottle (often ending in zero), private equity offers a different path. Operators can buy established, cash-flowing businesses and apply their growth skills in a less risky environment with shorter time horizons and a higher probability of a positive financial outcome.
A clever strategy for first-time fund managers is to raise smaller checks from a large number of operators and domain experts. While harder to execute, this turns the LP base into a powerful, built-in expert network for diligence and support, converting a fundraising challenge into a strategic asset.
D1 Capital avoids hiring experienced public market investors, preferring to recruit from private equity. PE professionals have strong analytical foundations but lack ingrained public market habits, making it easier to teach them D1's specific investment philosophy, despite a three-year ramp-up time.
ReSeed's model is a heavy lift upfront but creates a powerful, decentralized deal sourcing machine. By backing numerous scrappy, local experts, they have boots on the ground in many markets, unearthing opportunities that a single, centralized acquisitions team could never find.