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| Photo: TechCrunch |
General Catalyst is
diving more seriously into the business of funding seed-stage startups. To wit,
the venture firm is announcing today that it plans to invest at least $25
million each year in nascent teams that “can’t be too early” for the firm to
see, according to Katherine Boyle, an investor with the firm who will be
spearheading the effort with two other colleagues: Niko Bonatsos and Peter Boyce,
who co-founded and continues to help oversee Rough Draft Ventures, a
student-focused program fueled by General Catalyst.
We talked with the
three on Friday morning to find out why their 19-year-old firm — which has
sometimes invested in seed-stage startups in the past — felt the need to
formalize its efforts with this new initiative, whose capital will come from
the firm’s $1.4 billion ninth fund (closed in March of last year).
They said the decision
arose from feedback they’ve received in recent years, including that it can
take too long for decisions to get made in the earliest stages of a startup’s
life; that many seed-stage and angel investors are now looking for some
traction before they’ll write a check; and that fundraising is stressful and distracting.
GC’s solution to all
three is to address them by promising founders a quick decision; by promising
to work with founders who have “clarity of vision” if not actually proof of
concept yet; and by assuring founders whose companies take off that it can
continue to support them financially, thanks to its sizable fund.
As Boyle explains it,
the idea is to write initial checks of between $500,000 and $2 million to
start, to respond within 48 hours of a meeting (though they won’t skip
reference checks) and to invest in anywhere from 25 to 35 startups each year,
though Boyce suggests they can easily invest more, given the right
opportunities. “This isn’t spray and pray,” adds Bonatsos. “We come in and
we’re significant investors. The idea is to invest more in future rounds.”
Naturally, it’s not a
novel concept, a giant firm investing in seed-stage companies. Plenty of
heavyweight firms have done this in the past, including Greylock, which
garnered attention by giving Reid Hoffman $20 million to invest in seed-stage
funds back in 2010.
Andreessen Horowitz
and Sequoia Capital are also among other very big firms known to invest in
seed-stage companies, though firm founder Marc Andreessen expressed some
ambivalence about the trend in conversation with us back in 2013. His concern
at the time — and it’s one that venture firms, including his own, have since
grown more comfortable with — was the potential for conflicts of interest.
Seemingly, the
possibility isn’t keeping the General Catalyst
team awake at night. “Historically, this hasn’t been an issue,” says
Bonatsos. “Of course, business models evolve and conflicts can emerge [as
portfolio companies begin to compete with one another]. But we go into these
conversations with an open mind. Also, sometimes, what may look from the
outside like a conflict isn’t, because startups are targeting other geographies
or different types of customers.”
Neither is General
Catalyst apparently concerned with signaling risk, or the risk generated when a
startup accepts seed funding from a top-tier VC and that VC doesn’t go on to
lead, or even participate, in its Series A round. As Sequoia partner Bryan
Schreier told us about Sequoia’s thinking as it launched its own $180 million
seed-stage fund last year, the mere association with certain hands-on firms
helps more than it hinders. “We’ve pulled data on this and a company that has
raised seed funding from Sequoia is three times more likely to raise a venture
round — no matter what.”
One difference between
GC and numerous other firms that pursue seed-stage deals: it does not have a
formal “scouting” program, wherein it works with operators in its portfolio who
seek out deals on its behalf and are rewarded financially for the work.
“We don’t have that at
the moment,” says Bonatsos, noting that “things may change in the future.”
The seed team is also
eschewing the “generalist” approach that many firms seem to embrace, with
Bonatsos, Boyle and Boyce telling us they have distinct, if sometimes
overlapping, areas of expertise and interest.
Boyle, for example,
invests in heavily regulated industries, with a particular penchant for
startups focused on defense tech and that sell to the government. Bonatsos has
long focused on consumer deals, though he said he’s also interested in
“frontier stuff” and startups that are trying to create new industries. As for
his part, Boyce is most interested these days in consumer financial services
and design.
Ultimately, says the
Bonatsos, the three mostly “want to be inspired.”
Adds Boyce, “We work
with both first-time and experienced founders all the time. It’s less about
experience and traction, and more about founders who have a point of view and
can attract talent — founders who we think can get to the IPO and beyond.”

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