A HoldCo leader with founder experience has an 'unfair advantage' in sourcing proprietary deals. Direct outreach from one founder to another builds a level of trust and rapport that purely financial buyers or junior associates cannot easily replicate.
In a non-control deal, an investor cannot fire management. Therefore, the primary diligence focus must shift from the business itself to the founder's character and the potential for a strong partnership, as this relationship is the ultimate determinant of success.
In high-stakes ABM plays, a peer-to-peer model is highly effective. A message from your CTO to their CTO, or your CFO to theirs, carries more weight and builds trust more rapidly than a salesperson's outreach. This executive engagement should be a core part of the ABM strategy.
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.
Top-performing, founder-led businesses often don't want to sell control. A non-control investment strategy allows access to this exclusive deal flow, tapping into the "founder alpha" from high skin-in-the-game leaders who consistently outperform hired CEOs.
Founders whose startups were acquired by large enterprises can become your most powerful internal champions. They understand the startup mentality, know how to navigate internal politics and procurement, and are often motivated to bring in better technology. Actively seek them out.
Over 80% of TA's investments are proprietary deals with founders who aren't actively selling. Their strategy focuses on convincing profitable, growing businesses to partner to accelerate growth, framing the decision as "partner with us" versus "do nothing." This requires a long-term, relationship-based sourcing model.
Startups can't compete with established leaders on credibility, but they have a unique advantage: access. Position your offer not as being "better," but as providing direct contact with the founder, contrasting it with the impersonal, multi-layered support of a large corporation.
The most potent source of new, truly cutting-edge investment opportunities isn't inbound emails or demo days, but rather the networks of the exceptional founders and scientists you've already backed. These individuals are at the frontier and can identify the next wave of talent.
QED Investors realized they were misusing their famous founder, Nigel Morris, by only bringing him in for the final call. They now strategically deploy him early in the process to open doors and build relationships with target companies, using his reputation as an asset for outreach, not just a closing tool.
To build immediate trust and demonstrate value, QED partners engage with founders by simulating a board-level conversation from the first meeting. This "pretend I'm your investor" approach showcases their expertise and builds rapport, proving their founder-friendliness rather than just promising it.