Everyone knows the speed at which VC deals are being done has accelerated to a dizzying pace.

While this can be good for some Founders, it’s magnifying a flaw in the VC ecosystem.

A few thoughts on “Bad Pattern Recognition” and how it’s creating have and have-nots: 🧵👇
2/21: 14 years ago I hung up my operating hat to become a Venture Capitalist. Knowing nothing about investing, I sought out seasoned Investors so that I could learn from their experiences. Borrowing a degree sounded like a better strategy than earning one from scratch.
3/21: It shouldn't come as a surprise that much of the advice was generic and in the "no duh" camp. It started to feel like many Investors’ diligence processes consisted of evaluating startups on a laundry list of “generally true” criteria. Ticking the right boxes = Term Sheet.
4/21: Things I heard a lot:

Focus on how big a business could be if everything goes right. Invest in serial Founders because they succeed more than first time Founders. Large TAM has to be present to generate large outcomes. Answer the question "is the market ready now?".
5/21: On and on and on the genericized list went. My conclusion at the time was that making good investment decisions collapsed to an exercise in Pattern Recognition and was told this explicitly by many successful Investors. Invest, analyze, learn, repeat.
6/21: Fast forward 14 years and 150+ funded companies firmwide and I have a very different perspective about what it takes to be a great Investor.

One of the main pieces of advice I would give to the “younger me” is to do the necessary work to avoid bad pattern recognition.
7/21: While this sounds obvious, it's a concept that's worth internalizing. The key is to know when to trust previous patterns and when to ignore them which is anything but a simple task. Sometimes art needs to override science and intuition needs to override history.
8/21: I’ve backed many amazing companies over the past 14 years and can say with certainty that a few of the best suffered early on from bad pattern recognition. Funding became easier once they had enough evidence that their businesses were working, but this took time.
9/21: I’ve seen bad pattern recognition around “Location”:

Some Investors won’t fund a company outside of a major tech hub based on the pattern recognition that hiring talent as a company scales is much more challenging in all but a few cities.
10/21: I’ve seen bad pattern recognition around “Team”:

Some Investors won’t fund a first time Founder based on the pattern recognition that first time Founders have thin networks, they need help hiring talent and they don’t have experience raising capital.
11/21: I’ve seen bad pattern recognition around “Investor Signal”:

Some Investors won’t fund a startup when there are other startups in the space that have top tier investors on their cap tables based on the pattern recognition that these institutions crown the winners.
12/21: I’ve seen bad pattern recognition around “Competition”:

Some Investors won’t fund a startup when there are successful late-stage startups and incumbents in the space based on the pattern recognition that the opportunity is limited because momentum is real and winners win.
13/21: I’ve seen bad pattern recognition around “Failures”:

Some Investors won’t fund a startup in a space that’s produced marginal outcomes in the past based on the pattern recognition that outcomes are commonly a result of an industry’s structure.
14/21: In today’s environment, bad pattern recognition is increasing in frequency because most VCs have an endless pipeline of deals to work through but limited time to evaluate them. Speed matters and relying on historical “successful norms” is where triage typically starts.
15/21: The net effect is a “two things can be true at the same time” environment where some Founders are finding it easy to raise capital while others are finding it nigh impossible.

Fit the Pattern = Fast Process + Amazing Terms

Don’t Fit the Pattern = Triage Casualty
16/21: The challenge for everyone in the ecosystem is that the industry’s typical triage process does accomplish two important things. It massively reduces the volume of companies to diligence and it shifts the distribution of outcomes favorably.
17/21: The overuse of pattern recognition helps reduce Type 1 error (i.e. – Funding a business that ultimately fails) but it comes at the expense of increasing Type 2 error (i.e. – Not funding a business that would ultimately succeed with capital).
18/21: Today’s environment feels like cruel and unusual punishment for the diamonds in the rough that have great ideas but don’t fit the normative patterns that survive the industry’s typical triage process.

This sucks because every great opportunity deserves a shot.
19/21: There’s a similar situation unfolding in the public markets where 10 stocks have been responsible for ~25% of the current bull market’s return. It doesn’t mean there weren’t other stocks worth investing in. But finding them has been a challenging sorting exercise.
20/21: This leaves alpha on the table for investors who want to chase it. Figuring out how to spot great opportunities that depart from historical “successful norms” is one way that the next generation of investors will generate outsized returns.
21/21: Investors who do the work to understand opportunities holistically will have an edge because they’re playing a different game than everyone else.

Finding great non-consensus opportunities is hard and takes differentiated skills, but it can produce great results.

• • •

Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to force a refresh
 

Keep Current with Frank Rotman

Frank Rotman Profile picture

Stay in touch and get notified when new unrolls are available from this author!

Read all threads

This Thread may be Removed Anytime!

PDF

Twitter may remove this content at anytime! Save it as PDF for later use!

Try unrolling a thread yourself!

how to unroll video
  1. Follow @ThreadReaderApp to mention us!

  2. From a Twitter thread mention us with a keyword "unroll"
@threadreaderapp unroll

Practice here first or read more on our help page!

More from @fintechjunkie

22 Sep
1/4: Quick observation:

I'm seeing an acceleration of "Keeping up with the Joneses" behaviors in the startup ecosystem.

Founders want to grow crazy fast, raise lots of money, and issue press releases about their valuations so that they're "ahead of their peers".
2/4: VCs care about eye-popping rounds, markups, and backing the market-leading logos so that they're "ahead of their peers".

Systemically de-risking a business over time matters but is being brushed under the rug in favor of more immediate and easier to highlight achievements.
3/4: This isn't a surprise given the industry's reward system and the need to stand out.

For a startup, public vanity metrics help paint the narrative that it's winning. Winning attracts talent. And it's the talent that then helps materialize the narrative into reality.
Read 4 tweets
14 Sep
QED Investors has invested in 150+ startups over 14 years and consistently delivered outstanding results. Today, we announced a new $1B+ vehicle to continue on this journey.

In honor of this milestone, here are my 14 biggest insights from 14 years at QED: 👇🧵
2/29: Insight #1: It’s more important to be an average Investor in a target rich ecosystem than a great Investor chasing windmills. It’s been a great decade for #fintech which made our jobs easier.
3/29: Unseating profitable players is a great starting point. We’ve invested in 20 companies now valued at > $1B+ (with more right around the corner). Some are generating $1B+ of revenue and very profitable. Taking high margin revenue away from incumbents is a great strategy.
Read 29 tweets
14 Sep
@QEDInvestors has invested in 150+ startups over 14 years and consistently delivered outstanding results. Today, we announced a new $1B+ vehicle to continue on this journey.

In honor of this milestone, here are my 14 biggest insights from 14 years at QED: 🧵👇
2/29: Insight #1: It’s more important to be an average Investor in a target rich ecosystem than a great Investor chasing windmills. It’s been a great decade for #fintech which made our jobs easier.
3/29: Unseating profitable players is a great starting point. We’ve invested in 20 companies now valued at > $1B+ (with more right around the corner). Some are generating $1B+ of revenue and very profitable. Taking high margin revenue away from incumbents is a great strategy.
Read 29 tweets
2 Sep
The idea that each company has its own culture isn’t questioned. Most people claim that it’s important and a contributor to an organization’s success or failure.

But guess what? People struggle when asked to explain what culture is!

A framework and thoughts on the topic:
2/36: A truism of business is that it’s a near impossibility for a single person to accomplish a “big thing” alone. Well run organizations assign accountability for the “big thing” to a Leader who is tasked with focusing the collective energy of a team to deliver a solution.
3/36: Leaders exist to kink the curve on outcomes. Given the same task, a great Leader is able to deliver a high-quality solution with a greater probability than a poor Leader can. They do this by mastering the “big three” levers of strategy, resource allocation and culture.
Read 36 tweets
23 Aug
Do you want to know a secret about Board meetings?

The secret: They aren’t unique!

Seasoned Board Members discover that Board meetings fall into very distinct categories.

What follows is a classification framework and a few insightful nuggets (including a soundtrack).
2/39: I used to think that Board meetings were mysterious gatherings of powerful people in smoky rooms where fights would break out and massive company-making or breaking decisions were made.
3/39: I imagined that as a Board member I’d dramatically swipe everything off a massive table to make room for a giant map that I would use to brilliantly explain the master plan.
Read 39 tweets
19 Aug
Consumers are rational most of the time. They usually make decisions based on simple dimensions like price and functionality.

But we’ve entered a new era in which many consumers are making decisions based on “Beyond The Rational” criteria. Unpacked: 🧵👇
2/19: A good test that I’ve used to assess whether a company’s product is set up to naturally gain market share is to ask and answer the question:

“If a rational consumer were faced with perfect information would they pick your product?”
3/19: If the answer to this question is “yes”, then growing market share is typically correlated to growing awareness.

If the answer to this question is “no”, then the company will most likely struggle to attract and retain customers over time.
Read 19 tweets

Did Thread Reader help you today?

Support us! We are indie developers!


This site is made by just two indie developers on a laptop doing marketing, support and development! Read more about the story.

Become a Premium Member ($3/month or $30/year) and get exclusive features!

Become Premium

Too expensive? Make a small donation by buying us coffee ($5) or help with server cost ($10)

Donate via Paypal Become our Patreon

Thank you for your support!

Follow Us on Twitter!

:(