New investors should prioritize building a network that aligns with their fund's specific investment thesis. Generic networking is inefficient; focus on cultivating relationships with individuals who fit the fund's "ideal customer profile" to generate high-quality deal flow, as 80% of funded deals can come from this source.

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The goal of networking shouldn't be to find your next customer. Instead, strategically identify and connect with potential referral partners. One such partner can become a center of influence, introducing you to hundreds of ideal customers, far outweighing the value of a single transaction.

A broad, all-encompassing message like 'I can work with anyone' is ineffective because it makes it impossible for others to provide valuable referrals. To succeed in networking, you must be hyper-clear on exactly who your perfect client and perfect referral partner are.

While every VC has a network, true sourcing edge comes from building a brand and belief system that resonates deeply with founders. This makes founders proactively seek you out, creating a high-quality inbound channel with deals that competitors aren't seeing, allowing a small fund to punch above its weight.

A VC's network is a depreciating asset, not a permanent one. Connections from previous roles become stale within 3-5 years as new talent nodes emerge. This necessitates building a continuous, proactive engine for refreshing and expanding your network, rather than relying on past relationships.

VCs who spin out of tech giants like Airbnb have a powerful initial network. However, this edge typically expires after their third fund as original colleagues move on, forcing them to build a more durable, independent network to source deals.

Don't leave networking to chance. Proactively identify and maintain a written list of at least 20 people in your network who naturally enjoy introducing others. Pairing this list with your target prospect list creates a repeatable, machine-like process for generating warm introductions.

To win highly sought-after deals, growth investors must build relationships years in advance. This involves providing tangible help with hiring, customer introductions, and strategic advice, effectively acting as an investor long before deploying capital.

The initial capital for a new fund-of-funds doesn't come from cold outreach to institutions. The process mirrors an emerging VC's first fundraise, relying on a personal network of operators, VCs, and high-net-worth individuals who already believe in the founder. The strategy is to work the existing network outward, not pitch institutions from day one.

Most VCs "gather" by networking broadly. QED advocates for "hunting": identifying a single, high-conviction company and relentlessly pursuing an investment. This shifts the mindset from passively waiting for inbound leads to proactively targeting the absolute best opportunities long before a formal fundraise begins.

Instead of generic networking, founder Janice Omadeke prepared for her accelerator by creating hyper-specific lists of target mentors. She cross-referenced sponsors and partners with HR leaders at "best places to work," enabling her to make targeted, intelligent asks and maximize every networking opportunity.