Avi Eyal is Co-Founder and Managing Partner of Entrée Capital, an early-stage VC fund with a portfolio including the likes of Monday.com, Stripe, Coupang, PillPack, and Snap. From their $15M investment into Monday, Entrée distributed a whopping $1.5BN, one of their $45M funds is a whopping 37x DPI. Avi is one of the greatest venture investors you might not have heard about.
In Today's Episode with Avi Eyal We Discuss:
1. The Biggest BS "Rules" in Venture Capital:
- Why does Avi believe that it is BS for every deal to need to be a homerun and return the fund?
- Why does Avi believe that signalling is real and it is BS to suggest otherwise?
- Why does Avi believe that it is BS that ownership is crucial to make mega venture returns?
- Why does Avi believe that you do not have to win every deal to be one of the best in venture?
- Why should venture investors not manage the positions of their companies when they go public? Why is it BS to think they have asymmetric information when the company goes public?
2. What Makes the Best Founders:
- Does Avi prefer first or second time entrepreneurs? Why?
- Would Avi rather back a founder that is an expert in a market or one that is new to a market and has the naivety to not know what is hard?
- Are the best CEOs the best fundraisers?
- How does Avi rank the following when investing; team, market, traction and technology?
- When Avi has misread a founder, what was it that he missed?
3. The Biggest Hits and Biggest Misses:
- Monday: How did Entrée build such a large position in Monday over time? How did a Series A lead dropping out leading to a $1.5BN gain for Entree?
- Stripe: Entrée has now 50% of his Stripe position. Why? What is the three step process for Avi in selling positions? How does he know when to and what is the right amount?
- PillPack: Entrée made $15M from PillPack's exit. What did that teach Avi about ownership?
- Cazoo: How was Entrée the only one to make money from Cazoo? How did Entrée's sell strategy help him make millions when everyone else did not sell?