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In early-stage investing, the quality of the founder can be more important than the initial business concept. A strong founder is seen as someone who will eventually find success, even if the first idea requires a pivot.
Extensive diligence on a seed-stage company's market or product is often wasted effort. The majority of successful seed investments pivot to a completely different business model, making the founding team's quality and resilience the most crucial factor to evaluate.
Precursor Ventures makes "directional people bets" by investing smaller checks ($150-250K) in top-tier founders to fund their search for a viable business concept. This strategy prioritizes founder quality over the initial idea, recognizing that great founders can pivot to find product-market fit.
Beyond vision, the most exceptional founders can convince top talent to take pay cuts, persuade investors to fund them, and sign initial customers against all odds. This ability to conjure key resources is a primary indicator of success for early-stage investors to identify.
Since startups lack infinite time and money, an investor's key diligence question is whether the team can learn and iterate fast enough to find a valuable solution before resources run out. This 'learning velocity' is more important than initial traction or a perfect starting plan.
When meeting Cursor's founder, the investor felt an "electric energy" even as the founder was pivoting away from his original idea. This highlights that for elite early-stage investors, the founder's intrinsic drive and potential are the constant to bet on, as ideas will inevitably change.
The most investable founders possess a rare, magnetic ability to conjure essential resources. They can convince top talent to take pay cuts, persuade investors to fund an unproven vision, and acquire their first crucial customers against all odds. This trifecta of materializing labor, capital, and customers is a powerful leading indicator of success.
A truly exceptional founder is a talent magnet who will relentlessly iterate until they find a winning model. Rejecting a partnership based on a weak initial idea is a mistake; the founder's talent is the real asset. They will likely pivot to a much bigger opportunity.
Lonsdale recounts passing on brilliant founders with seemingly terrible ideas, only to watch them pivot and build billion-dollar companies like Cursor. The lesson for early-stage investors is to prioritize backing exceptional, world-class talent, even if their initial concept seems flawed, as they possess the ability to find a winning strategy.
A founder deep in the idea maze can articulate not just their current path, but also the alternatives they considered and why they were rejected. This demonstrates a profound understanding of their domain and problem space.
The quality of the founder is the single most important variable. A great founder with a mediocre plan will outperform a mediocre founder with a great plan. The best investment strategy is to back exceptional people and give them leeway, as they will create upside that breaks all precedents.