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What Family Offices Should Look for in a Venture Capital Growth FundWhat Family Offices Should Look for in a Venture Capital Growth Fund

Size often matters, but not in the way many might think.

Mitzi Perdue

November 3, 2021

3 Min Read
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You know the old business advice, “Find a hole and fill it”, right? Brian Smiga, co-founder and managing partner with Alpha Partners, knows of “a $20-billion-per-year hole,” and he has a potentially lucrative way for clients to fill it: pre-IPO private technology investing.

“A lot of families would like to be involved in the private technology investing world,” begins Smiga. “They know that if they don’t participate, they are leaving money on the table. However, they may also know that 70% of all start-ups fail between years two through five and 75% of venture-backed companies never return cash to investors.”

Smiga goes on to add, “Some family offices who have tried it have gotten kicked in the teeth. They may want to get back in, but they’re looking for a safer way to get into private technology investing.”

His answer is, your clients may find that their best strategy is to invest in venture capital growth funds. He particularly recommends the smaller growth funds.

Venture Capital Growth Funds

What he means by “smaller venture capital growth funds” are those with less than $1 billion under management. In his view, these create an outsized return.

 “Out of the roughly 2,000 venture capital firms today managing a combined $548 billion assets under management, 1,300 have less than $100 million in assets under management. And yet, eight out of 10 unicorns in the past 10 years have come from these smaller funds. The venture growth funds then cherry-pick the best of these companies at the middle-stage rounds, like Series B, C and D when the companies have established leadership and fundamentals.”

Related:It’s Getting Easier to Invest in Alternatives

How Do You Get In?

There are many venture funds. How does Smiga recommend you choose among them? His suggestions are:

  1. Do a Google search on venture growth funds with less than $1 billion under management. “These regularly outperform the larger funds,” he states.

  2. Look for ones that align with your expertise. Are you in agriculture? Social media? Education? Medicine? Pharma? “Pick a venture fund where you know the terrain. You want to invest in things that you understand. You’ll also find that in the act of partnering with a VC fund, they’re likely to provide you with priceless networking opportunities to deals, and with other experts with similar interests.”

  3. Pick ones that are geographically convenient for you. “If you live in an area away from the big investment centers, you can add a lot of value to the fund because the VC is likely to value the additional connections you can offer.”

  4. Understand your risk tolerance and time horizon. Funds investing in pre-seed Series A companies tend to have a model that invests in many companies with the understanding that one or two investments will return 50x–100x. Oftentimes, these funds also take 10 years to return capital. On the other hand, later stage growth funds, similar to Alpha Partners, look to deliver a consistent track record of return of capital over a shorter time horizon. These funds look for investments that return between 5x and 10x over a five-year time frame.

  5. Choose VC firms that allow you to partner with them and to co-invest with them through SPVs. “This can be highly profitable, when you’ve chosen the right ones. Typical returns are greater than 20% IRR.”

  6. Research and interview several funds. “If it were my money, I would study and interview at least 20 VC firms, and then I’d pick two to invest in, after much diligence.”

Smiga has an additional reason to like VC growth funds. “They can make money for you, but at the same time, they are making the world a better place. To take Alpha as an example, our companies have lowered the cost of health care by using telemedicine, encouraged adult education through online courses, and have lowered the cost and congestion that comes with urban transportation.”

Smiga loves the whole field of VC investments. For him it’s a perfect example of how investors can outperform while doing good.

Mitzi Perdue is the widow of the poultry magnate Frank Perdue. She’s the author of How To Make Your Family Business Last and 52 Tips for Combating Human Trafficking. Contact her at www.MitziPerdue.com.  

About the Author

Mitzi Perdue

Mitzi is a businesswoman, author and a master story teller. She holds degrees from Harvard University and George Washington University, is a past president of the 35,000 member American Agri-Women and was one of the U.S. Delegates to the United Nations Conference on Women in Nairobi. She currently writes for the Academy of Women’s Health, and GEN, Genetic Engineering & Biotechnology News.

Most recently, she’s authored Tough Man, Tender Chicken: Business and Life Lessons from Frank Perdue. The book made #5 on Amazon’s Business Biographies, out of a field of 20,000. She’s also the author of, I Didn’t Bargain for This, her story of growing up as a hotel heiress.

A woman of many talents, she also programmed a computer app, B Healthy U, designed to help people track the interactions of lifestyle factors that influence their energy, sleep, hunger, mood, and ability to handle stress. In addition to being a programmer and software developer, Mitzi is also an artist and designer of EveningEggs™ handbags.

In addition, Mitzi the author of more than 1600 newspaper and magazine articles on family businesses, food, agriculture, the environment, philanthropy, biotechnology, genetic engineering, and women’s health.

She was a syndicated columnist for 22 years, and her weekly environmental columns were distributed first by California’s Capitol News and later, by Scripps Howard News Service, to roughly 420 newspapers. For two years she was a Commissioner on the National Commission on Libraries and Information Science.

Mitzi also produced and hosted more than 400 half hour interview shows, Mitzi’s Country Magazine on KXTV, the CBS affiliate in Sacramento, California. In addition, she hosted and produced more than 300 editions of Mitzi’s Country Comments, which was syndicated to 76 stations. Her radio series, Tips from the Farmer to You, was broadcast weekly for two years on the Coast to Coast Radio Network.