Are softbank actually the biggest idiots in VC? It almost seems like everything they invest in is a handshake deal built on "just trust me bro" numbers.
I have brought this up in another comment, but my experience in the VC world is that it operates too heavily based on 4 types of "trust":
1) Institutional trust (Stanford, Harvard, MIT, "ex-FAANG", "ex-McKinsey", etc.),
2) Social trust (someone you know that has already established one of the three other kinds of trust),
3) Serial trust ("3-exits", "former CEO/CTO/VP of..."), and
4) Transitive trust ("Sequoia invested in X; I trust Sequoia; therefore, I should invest in X")
In many cases, this trust makes perfect sense. But it seems that in more than a handful of high profile cases, these types of investments based on trust has superseded basic due diligence, skepticism, and common sense.
I've always had this background thought that it would be a fun job to do "due diligence" on behalf of VCs. I remember being on the receiving end of some of that work, and I wasn't all that impressed.
Do today's VCs take technical due diligence seriously? If not, why not?
I think the issue is in the last few years hot startups would just say sorry we are going with another firm. There was so much money flying around it was similar to home buyers buying houses with all cash offers and waiving inspections.
VCs don't invest their own money. VCs are paid a percentage of the money they invest in startups. As a result VCs only care about the quality of the investment they make insofar it helps them raise more money in the future. Because more money = more fees.
VCs care about technology sometimes, but not always. If a startup doesn't grow because their tech is bad that's something VCs care a lot about. If a startup grows fast with snake oil tech (e.g. crypto, theranos, wework) VCs will happily throw more money at them.
My understanding is that VCs with healthcare experience didn't invest in Theranos. Holmes' family was well connected, and they invested in a family friend.
> Do today's VCs take technical due diligence seriously? If not, why not?
Because they're worried they'll miss the boat. Maybe less true in these not-quite-so-booming economic times but not so long ago VCs were literally competing to get in on rounds of funding for hyped up startups. The fact that the hype often never amounted to anything didn't seem to matter, if so-and-so was investing then you wanted to be in on that too or you'll look bad.
In many cases, there's a fine line between "technical" DD and just "DD".
Case in point is the JPMC acquisition of Frank and Frank's CEO Charlie Javice.
Turns out all of the user numbers were made up. A technical DD would have easily surfaced this even though the user numbers and volume is business related.
For the enterprise saas business we built, vc duedil was talking to customers, both directly via our introductions and backchanneled via their network.
For the technical aspects, our vcs didn't / don't care. That's our job to figure out, and if we don't, they fire founders.
I'm honestly not sure how you would seriously audit chat app numbers, and I suspect and hope Abraham Shafi is going to prison. For most businesses, if you have to seriously audit things like that, you probably shouldn't be investing. A company inflating their numbers by 20x will be pretty hard to detect, and our safeguard as an industry is that's fraud, and people go to prison for committing fraud.
- Look at the application logs
- Look at the emails and reach out to a sub-sample of them to determine if they are real users
- Look at the network traffic/volume numbers
- Look at the architecture to see if it could actually support that volume
- Look at the pattern of content in a random sampling to see if it's just "Lorem Ipsum" or actual, real content
Just some heuristics I'd use off the top of my head. I've had to do some technical DD in the past and there are always ways of determining legitimacy of claims.
They do but it’s a matter of time
constraints. Pace. Deal flow. Take too long to scrutinise a good thing and it’ll be snapped up from under you. The group that poached might have even less time to do proper due diligence. VCs tap expertise for due diligence in all sorts of mostly-informal ways. But for proper, compensated investigations there’s almost never enough time to build a case you’d stake your reputation on
Same here, I had some of the most fun checking out potential investors in my last company. I'd certainly enjoy also checking Startups, but really just any sort of tech-related due-diligence would be awesome.
> 3) Serial trust ("3-exits", "former CEO/CTO/VP of..."), and
Serial trust is especially interesting for me.
Someone could have founded 3 companies that weren't good investments (possibly all lost money), and VCs will throw money at that person before they try someone new.
Transitive trust is also interesting. The majority of "rockstar VCs" made one good investment. Not really possible to rule out luck... And the majority of the people there now had nothing to due with that decision way back when.
I've been acquainted with a CEO/founder who -- for all intents and purposes -- was just not that bright but he came from a fairly well off family and his LinkedIn tagline proudly had "3-time exit" even though those exits didn't yield any significant (if any) financial gain for him personally.
You could be onto something here... what you have enumerated seem to be examples of various forms of "Social Proof" (for lack of a better way of saying/defining it).
It would be interesting, highly interesting, I think, to try and enumerate all of the possible forms of Social Proof.
You've definitely nailed 4 of them -- but are there others? What if we broaden our search outside of the VC world?
Whatever the case, whether we call this "Social Proof", "Trust as it manifests in the world of VC", or some other name/nomenclature -- I think you're definitely onto something here...
It's sort of like what you've said could be the summary/abstract of a Ph.D. paper. That is, I think there's some more knowledge to be gained by exploring this set of ideas further, perhaps in writing, perhaps in blog article, I don't know...
But I do know that you're definitely on to something...
I would love to see more exploration of what you've just said...
Actually, when I think about it some more -- perhaps the broader topic area here is not necessarily that about "trust" or "social proofs" -- maybe it's about "Credibility" -- what causes a person or organization or business or business idea -- to have credibility (or apparent credibility as some cases may be) -- especially when large amounts of money, large financial transactions, large investments -- are at stake?
Well, I don't know... but again, I reiterate that I think you're on to something with your observations...
“ I think you're on to something with your observations...”
The parent described 4 of the common heuristics of how we develop trust.
I work in cybersecurity, so I tend to mentally put a “how could these heuristics be abused to get a well intentioned employee/customer to misplace their trust in a scammer?” scenario.
When it comes to society, I have been trying to empathize with those poor souls who fell for QAnon, Stop the Steal, Flat Eartherism, and dozens of other farcical claims that millions of people have adopted, despite some of those people being extremely bright.
Your parent is not really “onto something”; they are just enumerating a few heuristics that marketers, salespeople, people of influence, scammers/conmen have known for millennia.
So, you're telling me that there are no "Old Boy" networks in existence?
And you're telling me that these networks don't exist because people went to the same school or worked for the same company?
?
???
Also -- everyone knows that Stop the Steal was instigated by QAnon supporters while engaging in Flat Eartherism. A bunch of cybersecurity specialists played a role too, while simultaneously being supported by some of the brightest and dumbest minds out there -- or at least CNN tells me so. They also told me that there are no agenda driven AI chatbots on Hacker News.
I've been trying to empathize with all of them -- that whole group -- and all of the millions, if not tens of millions of people who fell for all of it (including but not limited to scammers, conmen, fake AI bots, people of influence, marketers, fake AI bots, salespeople, and people of influence (did I mention fake AI bots?))... but I've been trying to sympathize with them -- all of them...
In conclusion, I must quote to you my favorite line from "Billy Madison":
"Mr. Madison, what you've just said is one of the most insanely idiotic things I have ever heard. At no point in your rambling, incoherent response were you even close to anything that could be considered a rational thought. Everyone in this room is now dumber for having listened to it. I award you no points, and may God have mercy on your soul."
Your comment, on the other hand, was pretty intelligent...
Do you treat other people as NPCs in real life, as well?
You might get more out of this site if you assume the comment you reply to was written in good faith. It’s such a good idea that the HN maintainers put it in the site rules.
Yes, it's referring specific to a "large quantity" aspect of it. If you achieve some X, and then achieve X again, and again, people will trust you to achieve X again.
Of course, that leads to people faking past successful startups. There are plenty of successful serial entrepreneurs out there that sold stuff for pennies to their family or something like that.
Having recently completed fundraising for a pre-seed, it's wild to me that I had VCs spending multiple weeks sometimes on "due diligence" for an idea-stage product, yet there are many examples of just yolo huge investments. It's who you know or what hype is around you in these cases I suppose.
A company in pre-seed phase has no history, so some of the other indicators of promise/trust don’t yet exist. It makes more sense for the first investor in a new company to spend some time to investigate the founders and/or the idea or market.
That, however, doesn’t mean that later or faster investment rounds are any more informed.
Softbank had a strategy of deploying a lot of capital very quickly. That is, taking many more bets than traditional “high conviction” VCs. High transaction costs (including time to close) as a consequence of deep diligence would have broken this model.
It doesn’t look like this strategy worked out well for them.
LOL I personally know an asshat VP at SoftBank — "just trust me bruh" !
In early 2017, while being ousted from another banking system, he advised me to invest in a Retail Mall Holdings company, instead of Bitcoin (because the latter is "idiotic").
I did NOT take his advice. See CBL's returns verse BTC's.
>Masayoshi Son. He had for many years the distinction of being the person who had lost the most money in history (more than $59bn[38] during the dot com crash of 2000 alone, when his SoftBank shares plummeted),[39] a feat surpassed by Elon Musk[40][41][42] in the following decades.