Divesh Makan, Adviser to Facebook VIPs, Got in EarlyDivesh Makan, Adviser to Facebook VIPs, Got in Early
February 2, 2012
![Divesh Makan, Adviser to Facebook VIPs, Got in Early Divesh Makan, Adviser to Facebook VIPs, Got in Early](https://eu-images.contentstack.com/v3/assets/bltabaa95ef14172c61/blt354fa33723b0b930/673483aceb2e4d1ffc4ada5d/facebook-150x150.png?width=1280&auto=webp&quality=95&format=jpg&disable=upscale)
Makan got his foot in the door at Facebook back in 2006, when it was still just a bunch of guys in t-shirts trying to make their big new idea work. He managed to impress at least one of the start up’s executives with “forward-thinking ideas on taxes and estate planning,” says the article
Facebook, which filed paperwork for the offering Wednesday, seeks to raise $10 billion in the IPO, according to a separate WSJ article, which could make it the largest tech offering since Google debuted in 2004. IPO documents put the social network’s value at between $75 and $100 billion. Zuckerberg alone stands to make tens of billions of dollars from the deal, according to some press reports.
Mr. Makan works with executives at a number of tech upstarts, and his M.O. is to come calling when they’re still messing around in someone’s basement, says the WSJ.
“Mr. Makan targets up-and-coming technology entrepreneurs ‘while they’re still eating ramen noodles and can hardly afford apartments but they’re building something great,’ said client Kevin Hartz, chief executive of Eventbrite, an online ticketing platform for sports, music and other special events.”
Makan often invest alongside his clients in early-stage companies, says the article. Iconiq also typically steers its clients to other managers of stocks, bonds, hedge funds and private equity.