Having two out of three is very good. Having aer, an important skill, lke b, having some virtuoso skill, perhaps, and then having a network. Then the percentage of the ownership, it seems extremely important as well. And then power and control. How did these things factor in? They're very tactical. They're very mechanical. I would say, actually, what what huristics can you tell us or what made the brilliant investors investments with those four variables? It's not a personality game any more. You'don'ly need to diligence it much beyond basic numbers its. No, i think you see two fundamentally different kinds of thing. An hedchvan
Huge interview today. "Power Law" author Sebastian Mallaby joins the show to break down some of the most important moments in VC history and his lessons from writing the book, including: the youth revolt (14:18), KP vs Sequoia (27:02), what makes a legendary VC (38:40), and more!
(0:00) Jason tees up today's interview with "Power Law" author Sebastian Mallaby
(1:42) Sebastian explains how and why he wrote a book on the history of VC
(13:13) Vanta - Get $1000 off your SOC 2 at https://vanta.com/twist
(14:18) The virtuous cycle of luck early in a VC career, youth revolt in startups, Zuckerberg spurning Sequoia
(26:02) Embroker - Use code TWIST to get an extra 10% off insurance at https://Embroker.com/twist
(27:02) Tom Perkins and the Kleiner Perkins rise and fall vs Sequoia's sustained dominance, KP's Genentech investment
(37:18) Harmonic - Get $4000 off at https://harmonic.ai/twist
(38:40) What characteristics make a legendary VC?
(56:29) Why are institutional LPs allocating more capital to VC, what happened with China's interest in the industry? Other investable industries other than software
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