The partners at Audere Capital discuss what can make and/or break the investor/founder relationship
Peter Ackerson I am Peter Ackerson, and I'm a general partner at Audere Capital.
Maggie Sprenger Hi, I'm Maggie Sprenger. I'm a general partner at Audere Capital.
Peter Ackerson Audere Capital is an early-stage venture company focused on investing in five areas of critical technology that are on the cusp of what we think will be a significant, multi-decade-long run of impact.
Maggie Sprenger We invest in early-stage technology companies focused on the intersection of national security and priority, deep tech, and VC, of course.
When we're looking at start-ups, of course, we're taking into consideration things like the TAM and the technologies. But part of the joy of working with early-stage companies is working very closely with founders. We definitely like to look for a founder who is going to be resilient and gritty. One of the things that I definitely know about founding an early-stage company is that invariably you're going to have to pivot, iterate, or come up with a totally different idea based on, you know, changing market conditions or something disruptive that's happened within the technology.
There's a great line from Josh Wolfe, who's founder at Lux Capital, and he says he looks for founders with chips on their shoulders because that means chips in pockets, and it always makes me laugh because I think it's really true. I think the founders that are driven by something so much greater than making money are the founders that succeed. Anyone can go start a company. It's a hard thing to do, but if you're just doing it for financial return, you're missing out on the major driver. So whether it's a mission or a motivator, whether it's an opportunity to prove yourself to people, these are the things that we want to get to the bottom of before we write that check.
Peter Ackerson I make a joke all the time that venture, in some ways, is sort of like Hollywood for less attractive people. Creative industries always work this way, right? You have collaboration, and you don't often know who's shady or who's unreliable or who's going to do things that you don't like until you're like two-thirds of the way through. Which is why for those who can survive the last five, ten, fifteen years, there's a huge advantage because you eventually find your people and the people that you know to avoid. I’ve been in moments where you have founders who just didn't know, right? And so they didn't raise capital from the right people and that doesn't even necessarily mean they raised capital and have on the board bad investors. Sometimes it simply means that they have very passive investors and they thought money is money and then they needed more support and they just couldn't get it. Other times, you know, they end up pivoting the business in some new direction, and they had a group of investors who were super useful in one context. And through no fault of anybody's, they’re no longer a fit for the investment strategy of their earlier investors. And that happens. And, you know, that's when you work through those issues.