Investing Billions - E227: The Future of Venture: Ryan Hoover on Productizing VC
Episode Date: October 17, 2025What happens when one of tech’s best community builders turns his playbook on venture capital itself? Ryan Hoover — the founder of Product Hunt and Investor at Weekend Fund — joins me to unpack... how he’s reinventing early-stage investing. From building one of the internet’s biggest startup communities to managing a fund with 360+ LPs, Ryan shares the hard-won lessons on productizing VC, scaling systems as an introvert, and finding founders who hold true “earned secrets.” We dive into his journey from launching Product Hunt to building Weekend Fund’s third vehicle, how he thinks about portfolio construction, why weird ideas often win, and what it really takes to back the next generation of breakout founders. Whether you’re a founder, operator, or investor — this episode is packed with insights on scaling yourself, spotting alpha before it’s obvious, and turning community into competitive advantage.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
As I've gotten to know you recently, Ryan, I could see that you're a product genius
and that you basically think of everything as a product.
I love building products that can scale infinitely, that can provide value or help people while I'm sleeping.
A lot of what we're looking for is secrets.
We're looking for a founder with a secret.
What are they seeing that other people aren't?
So the question is, why is you're 140 IQ better than another person's 140 IQ?
And that's because of your lived experience.
You have this, you know, what Ben Horowitz called Earned Secrets in this specific domain that allows you similarly minded person as another very similarly smart minded person to have alpha in that trade that other people don't have.
Helping a founder when no one else would is, I think, meaningful and important.
The worst thing you could do is a founder is bringing on an investor who is net negative and word gets around.
Reputation matters.
So when we last chat, you mentioned that you were productizing LP intros.
What did you mean by that?
Yeah, I mean, productizing might be a little bit generous.
you know, as a fund manager, we're on our third fund raised, not only as a founder,
but also as a fund manager raised before. And it sucks. Fundraising is no fun for most people,
at least. And I have a lot of friends and a lot of people that I respect who are fundraising.
So, you know, what I'm doing is a couple things. One, have a newsletter. It's very basic newsletter,
but it reaches about 150 LPs, you know, maybe deploying, give or take, $50 million a year.
Some of these are small LPs. They're 10K LPs that can be helpful.
and value add in other ways.
Some of them are institutional LPs writing 2.5 plus $1 million checks.
So it's a newsletter and I just share what I'm investing in.
So I've been investing in funds casually, just personally, small checks to support people
and for many other reasons.
But it's just sharing what I'm investing in.
And so there's hopefully a little bit of a signal there if I'm spending my own money
and investing my own capital and sharing it with these people.
So you have 360 LPs.
Tell me about how you went about fundraising,
that LP base and tell me about the pros and cons of having such an LP base.
Yeah, it's a lot. So we're a small fund. We're 21 million dollars by design. We like being small.
It means we can write smaller checks and I can talk more about that if that's useful. But we
raise from many, many LPs. We first raise a majority of the fund from existing LPs.
So Fund 1 and Fund 2 LPs. Some of these are product intent investors from back in the day.
Some of these are people I've known for a long time. Some of them are institutions. And then we
raised the rest of it publicly. So our goal and strategy was we wanted to bring on an army of
operators and founders from salespeople to designers, you know, AI researchers. We want to bring
them on board into the fund as a sort of an extended part of the family of sorts. And so we
publicly launched the fund or maybe not launch, but we announced the fund publicly as a 506C
fund so that we could legally do that and took applications from LPs. Some of these LPs
wrote very small checks. It wasn't about the money.
We were already almost at our target
goal anyway. It was really about bringing them
on board and getting them to hopefully
support with the portfolio to, with
diligence, with, you know,
investor intros, deal flow, that thing.
A lot of people
might be thinking, oh, I'd love to
raise from 360 LPs. We get
all this value at. I'll just not work.
There's certainly downsize. Where are the downsides
of having 360 LPs?
It was
it was our first time raising from that many
We had almost 100 LPs in our last fund. So it wasn't like we started with nothing, but
over 350 LPs is quite a lot. So the risk was certainly one, we could have a problem. You know,
you never know when you take someone's capital. There always could be a problem with their
expectations. We took applications and transparently we wanted to accept capital from people
who really understood what they were getting into. We didn't want someone who was expecting
their money back in two years because that's just not realistic in early stage. So some of the
questions we asked were to assess that out and try to understand, are they experienced investing in
funds or early startups? And surprisingly, we've had very few issues. We had one LP, funny enough,
asked for their money back. This is maybe two years into the fund. And initially, like,
that's not how it works. You know, you can't just ask for your money back. But they had a good
excuse. They're going to become a monk. They're like, I'm going to be offline. I won't have
internet access in the future. And so we found a solution for them. And it was a relatively small
amount of money anyway. But yeah, we've had very few issues. Maybe one or two LPs had some
issues with capital calls. But yeah, overall it's been a net positive for the fund. So 360 LPs,
one month, a couple of capital call issues. But other than that, easy. I think about this,
the education aspect, the most interesting solution I've seen on that, there's a billion dollar
fintech fund. And if you're a family office or high net worth individual, they will not put you
as a first product into their 10-year fund.
They have a six-year fund,
and they essentially force you to go into the more liquid strategy
before you become a quaintiff's adventure.
So instead of having all these issues on the back end,
these downstream consequences,
they solve for this problem on the front of.
That's smart.
Yeah, in our case, if we're better or worse,
we were accepting smaller checks.
And so none of these people relied on us to, you know,
pay for their child's tuition, you know, in college.
And so, you know, that also leads to less headaches potentially in the future.
Having 2020 hindsight, how would you have changed that process of having all these LPs and what parameters or operational improvements would you have made to the process and to the relationship that you built with those LPs?
So I mentioned a couple of capital calls. We had a few issues there. Nothing severe, nothing that has prevented us from deploying kind of our strategy as we.
expected. However, there are some LPs that maybe just don't understand when you do commit to a fund,
you are committing to future capital calls and it's not optional. And so we've had one issue in
particular where, you know, it's fine. We worked through it, but we didn't have protections in our
LPA against that. So they technically legally could just stop, you know, committing capital,
even though we've allocated and reserve that capital for them. And so in the future, we'll look
into that and provide some some protections for ourselves. Nothing aggressive, but the fact that
we do need to deploy a strategy and we set out, you know, our fund strategy from the beginning
with an expectation that we'll have that capital in the future. We need to make sure we have
some sort of recourse to follow through on those commitments. As I've gotten to know you recently,
Ryan, I could see that you're a product genius and that you basically think of everything as a product,
whether it's literally starting product hunts, starting your fund. So talk to me about,
venture capital as a product, and what does it mean to have a product like a venture capital
fund? I'm an introvert. I like to be behind the computer. I love building products that can
scale infinitely that can provide value or help people while I'm sleeping. I've always just had that
kind of DNA. And so a lot of what we explored at Weekend Fund is a number of experiment. Most of them
are complete failures, to be quite honest. Could you get me a couple of us? Yeah. So we did one
experiment. And I wouldn't call it necessarily a product, but it's more of like a system. It was
called, We Can Build. And the thesis was there are so many people who want to build a company,
who have great ideas, very talented, and they're working on side projects. They might be employed
at a thing. Well, I guess we don't call them thing companies anymore, but back when we ran this
experiment, like a thing company is like a meta or Apple. And they might have these experiments
and side projects, but they don't have one, frankly, the conviction to take a leap and quit their
job and pursue it. And so long story short, we ran this, this experiment. It was basically
for side product builders, people who were already building something. And we did an eight week,
almost like mini accelerator. We didn't take any equity. We just worked with them in Slack and
did weekly meetups, or I should say syncs with the rest of the community, the people that we
brought on board. We had almost a thousand people apply and whittled it down to about five,
no, I'm sorry, 10 teams. And it was a failure in the sense that we ultimately,
didn't, our thesis was, okay, we'll eventually over these eight weeks see some founders and find
some founders that are compelling that are building, building venture scale companies and give them
the capital and support to quit their job and pursue it full time. And we ultimately didn't find
that. We realized that I think there was a selection bias towards people who maybe hadn't already
made that leap. They were working on a cyber project for some cases over a year. And there's probably
a reason why they hadn't left already or why they hadn't gotten traction. It wasn't necessarily
the conviction or support or advice from us per se that was missing. And so I think we selected
incorrectly. And we also realized, while this strategy could work with some different selection criteria,
it does require massive scale. And a lot of that is very difficult to productize. And so to do it
well, we'd have to bring on not 10 teams, but maybe 100 teams in the same amount of time. And
and so we ended up holding up that experiment. We learned a few things. But
But, you know, it was worth doing at least.
What are some other experiments that you've tried?
So some experience that have done really well, we built this tool called
Rolodexer.
And, you know, founders are always asked for intros.
It's whether it's recruiting or I'm a B2B company, I want to reach out and find people
at these companies.
This is my target list.
And the reality is a lot more people know, this is going to sound egotistical, I don't
mean it to, but a lot more people know me than people I know.
Yeah, it's just the nature of, uh,
I guess tech in some ways and to sort of my experience building productant.
And on Twitter, I have about 300,000 accounts.
Let's say half those people are active.
There's still a lot of people, 150,000 people, mostly tech.
And so we built a tool to search my Twitter followers.
And so when a company, the best use case is when a company is looking for introductions
to like an early design partner or an early customer, what we do is we ask, hey, what are
the companies you're looking to target?
Let's just make up one.
Let's say it's ramp.
Let's say I don't know anyone at ramp, but I can search for ramp and anyone who's
working at RAMP that follows me. And then I use that to DM them and make an introduction.
And the conversion rate's relatively high. It's much higher than email because there's a lot fewer.
When you get an email or I should say DM from someone that you actually follow, you're going to pay
attention. You're at least going to read it. You might say no, but the conversion rate, I'd say
30 to 50% of people accept an introduction from those at bound requests.
You're super connector. Maybe an introverted super connector, but a super connector,
still, what are some
first principles for how to become
an elite superconnector?
Oh.
In some ways, I don't feel like I am.
I guess my approach is a little different than some people.
The traditional way of doing venture
is going to a lot of events,
meaning a ton of founders,
and spending a lot of time in person.
And that's exceptional for
like extroverted people who really get,
you know, a lot of energy from that.
I would say my partner, Vedica,
she is more like that.
I wouldn't necessarily describe
is a pure extrovert. She's in San Francisco. She's meeting founders every day in person.
She's going to events. So she illustrates more of that approach or that mindset.
Me, I prefer and love being behind the computer. And I scale through social, through products that
we build. I do a lot of Zoom calls with founders. But they're, when it's first time meetings,
they're relatively quick because you can get a pretty good sense if there's time worth
investing to be quite transparent in like a 15 minute call, a 20 minute call,
sometimes. And so my approach has been a little bit different. It's a little bit more wide scale
and light touch, at least in the beginning before we start partnering up and working with founders
directly. I've given a lot of thoughts to us as in many ways, the value of my network is
the connections that you make. And I think there's a couple of first principles that I come up
with. One is every introduction you make is either a creative or value destructive. There's
no introduction. That's just literally a zero. So you're either providing value.
for both parties or not.
And there's a couple of first principles
and a couple things to avoid.
One is you have to look for intrinsic value
for both sides.
So taken to the extreme,
you might connect two CEOs
of public companies.
They have no way to collaborate.
That's a waste of both of their times,
even though on paper,
that looks interesting.
And the opposite is also
you could connect to first-year analysts
that actually have a lot of synergies in common.
That becomes super valuable.
And of course, the double opt-in.
I'm a huge believer in it,
People sometimes job me for doing it, but I think it's so critical for that.
And I think just policing that, it's this paradoxical traits in the superconnectors that are both very, very strict about who they introduced.
They must have value on both sides, but also have this desire to give and to help people.
It's a very small niche of people that are both like super picky and super empathetic towards others that tend to make the best superconnectors.
factors. Yeah. Something I sometimes do, this isn't specific to introductions all the time, but it might be a piece of information I share. Let's say with the founder. Sometimes what I'll say is like, here is a piece of information. I think it might be useful for you. No response needed. And they usually still respond, but I think it lowers the pressure of someone feeling like, oh, I got to like draft. I mean, even if it's 10 seconds, 20 seconds, everyone's inbox is super full. And if I give them permission to just hit instant archive, it's fine for me. It's fine for them. It's just a little bit lighter touch, I feel.
You're truly giving without the expectation of return.
You're taking that to extreme.
You're essentially preempting the need for it.
Yeah, they don't, in this particular case, the founder,
they don't owe me a reply.
Well, in this context, I think founders do owe investors replies in certain contexts.
But yeah, when you're sharing information,
that's a little bit more proactive.
It doesn't require them to take time of their day.
Because the way we approach is we don't bug founders unless we absolutely have to
for, let's say, legal or operational reasons.
We try to be somewhere in the middle.
We don't disappear and we don't bug them.
We try to be very proactive,
respond to every email, of course, and every investor, we usually respond and try to service
their ass, but we're trying not to be distracting because the worst thing you could do is the
founders bring on an investor who is net negative, and word gets around, reputation matters.
I think one of the underlying principles to some of the most value-added investors on the planet
is this concept from the beginning of infinity from David Deutsch, which is essentially
there's an infinite amount of innovation. You could always make something better. You could always
improve something. So they don't have the scarcity in terms of giving. For example, you're on your third
fund. Let's say I find you an anchor for your fourth fund. You're going to be happy about that.
But guess what? You might want another institutional investor on the fifth fund. And on the sixth
fund, you might want to start a credit fund. There's an infinite amount of value at I could give you
or somebody could theoretically give somebody else. So those people inherently do not have the
scarcity mindset. And paradoxically, as they give more value, they get reciprocity back and they have more
value to give. So it's this non-zero-sum perspective to not only connecting people, but also
value at at a higher level that's, I've seen almost every single, like, top superconnector and
top person that gives value at has this one principle that they believe in. Yeah. Yeah,
the Corley, who is C-O at Productant back in the day, she would, she would describe us like a piggy bank
and not in the sense of it's a transaction, but when you're supporting or working with the team
or work with people in general,
you're sort of depositing pennies or quarters
or whatever, like, currency you want to use.
And, you know, you want to fill up that piggy bank
is sort of the goal.
And I think this applies,
especially in venture and tech where it's a big,
big industry, but it's not at the same time.
It's like everybody kind of knows each other.
It feels like in some ways.
Tell me the secret in terms of using value ad to win deals.
Do you ever go in and provide a bunch of value at to win deals?
or is it always kind of it's inbound,
you decide you want to invest,
and then you're kind of value out on.
Yeah, the question's more around how we win deals.
Yeah, how you win deals.
Yeah.
You know, this is part of venture that I don't like talking about
because it makes, I just don't like sounding like I'm pumping my chest,
but I guess there's no other way to answer it.
I mean, venture and winning deals is partly, you know,
it's a combination of things.
It's one, it's accessed.
You can even see the company, of course.
Two, can you get a meeting with the founder?
And fortunately, I've built Productant.
Now it's been almost 12 years, but still going.
And roughly 100,000 makers of founders launch on Productant every year.
So it's still extremely active.
I don't know if I met a founder who doesn't know what Protiton is.
Many of them have launched on Productant before.
So at the very least, there's a relatively easy in to a conversation through that.
And I feel like a lot of founders at least have some respect because I've spent some time,
you know, chewing glass, as they say.
myself as a founder. And so that's, that's one part of it. And then when it comes to winning
deals, part of it is our fund strategy or rather our fund size, I should say. There's a lot of
people who, you know, this is our third funds. It's 21 million. It has grown from our first
funds, but our plan actually in our next fund is not to scale it all that much. And our goal is to
continue writing smaller checks. And I feel strongly that we're for us, and this isn't
applicable to every investor, of course, but for us, we feel like being a smaller investor,
being a lead and not getting stuck in that middle ground, we are not a lead, but you're also
having to write a 750K check, you know, to get meaningful economics. That's really tough. So when we meet
a founder, you know, in many cases, we're a small enough check where even if they're, you know,
tighten allocations, they can make room. And, and then when it comes to like winning those
deals, especially when it's like competitive or there's not much room, sometimes it's using
things like Roller Dexter saying, hey, tell us your BDB target customer list. Like, let's go make some
introductions like now. Some of its references. I would say most founders don't ask for references,
but occasionally they do. Or I should say maybe they are doing references and we just don't know it.
They just don't tell us. And so I like to think we have a pretty good reputation and we've supported
our portfolio well. And so it's all those things to kind of compound. There's no single
cookie cutter template, I would say, to win deals per se. But a lot of that's custom based on like the founder
in the context of the situation.
And when you're using Rolodexer,
which is people that follow you,
you're able to introduce them to that founder.
Are you doing that ahead of getting allocation?
And that's basically you're sampling your value add to the founders.
Sometimes.
Yeah.
Yeah, if it comes up in a conversation or it's,
we know that this is a priority for them,
then yeah, we'll make that offer.
And the honest truth is we normally don't have to show that type of proactive
support, like before you write a check.
And for us, to be honest, it's better for us to do that to secure an allocation and, you know, write the check and then do that if we're thinking of a sequence of events.
But, but yeah, occasionally we do that.
So tell me about your portfolio construction.
You're on your third fund now.
Certainly you've learned some lessons.
What have you evolved into in your third fund?
Yeah, we, so we want to keep playing the same game for the most part.
But that doesn't mean that we don't experiment, you know, with new ideas.
And the overall fund construction is going to remain the same.
same for our next fund roughly. So our average check size are $3.50, $21 million funds. We're
securing around 2 to 3% ownership. And while that is a small amount, it's meaningful for us
because we're ultimately chasing Decacorn outcomes. I mean, yes, that $1 billion outcome is great.
But today's, you know, yesterday's unicorns arguably are becoming tomorrow's decaorns. We're seeing
the scale of companies revenue growth
scale tremendously very quickly.
There's also a strong argument you made that,
I hate to say it,
AI is going to eat more into the services side of GDP.
It's just going to eat more of the market in general.
And we have seen just more and more large outcomes emerge.
And so, you know, we are playing the game
where we're looking for those big, you know,
life-changing companies.
Example that's like deals is one of our seed investment.
investments. And it was a $12 billion company at this point. We invested at 10 mil cap, almost a 400x
outcome for us. So we're looking for those types of companies. Obviously, most will not be that,
but you only need one of those to potentially return a 5x fund, 10x fund.
I've thought a lot about this. Like, why is yesterday's unicorn, today's Deca unicorn? Why is
anthropic raising out hundreds of billions of dollars? And I've thought about it in a simple way.
The market size is both getting bigger and companies are penetrating it deeper.
So if you think about Anthropic, it's coding tools and for every vertical.
So they're both getting large share of market and also going horizontal.
And that's why it's getting bigger.
Same with Palantir and same with some of these companies.
Even Tesla today, even public companies are now, it's not just a car, it's robots and all these things.
When I started 10 years ago, technology was kind of its own industry.
So there's like these tech companies and I start investing.
And now it's like technology is in everything.
And now it's like AI is in everything.
So the AI companies will dominate the entire entire ecosphere.
So I think there's this kind of contextualization on technology in general that's just growing by 10,100x,
which is why you have this kind of downstream consequences.
It's in my best interest to believe this, that, you know, there's a huge opportunity right now to invest.
But we haven't seen this big of a shift in the stack.
and the ingredients that we have to build companies
since, I mean, some people argue the world web.
In my lifetime in tech, it's mobile.
Mobile was like a huge shift
that birthed a lot of massive companies.
And also in some ways, not just massive companies,
but a shift in status, a shift in tech,
a shift in the tool set,
it just disrupted a lot of how we traditionally built companies.
And so it's exciting.
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You're also an LP in 30 funds yourself. Tell me about that. And more specifically,
How have you evolved your LP investing activity being a GP now on your third fund?
Yeah. So I've actually been investing in funds for maybe seven-ish years.
Now, my checks are small. I don't have a ton of liquidity. I'm also, as you can imagine,
very tech illiquid, heavy in my personal investment portfolio. That said, I don't necessarily
invest for the returns per se. I do invest in funds, I think will do well. But I'm ultimately
doing it to, one, support other fellow GPs.
Two, it's to get some perspective,
like read their updates, see how they're thinking about the market,
what strategies they're deploying.
And sometimes it's, this isn't the highest priority,
but it's deal flow occasionally.
This goes back to the fund strategy.
I would say like a collaborative investor
in terms of how we invest in our checks sizes are small enough
where we've invested in between rounds,
like after the seed or pre-seed round is closed.
So for that reason, I've invested about over 30 funds,
mostly smaller funds
most of what I invest in is like
sub $30 million fund size
and it's either a combination of
very narrowly focused specialized
funds or it's
funds that are generalists
but highly connected
and we think the highly
or I think the highly connected piece is very important
just because it's when you're a generalist
and you're investing broadly in some ways
you just need to see a lot
and be in the right places
to see those breakout companies
and spaces that maybe are just emerging
and not really, there's no blog post for it yet by a VC, for example.
I'm sure you've seen Menlo invested a billion dollars in anthropic rounds
into these crazy SVVs.
That was via SPV reportedly.
Have you thought about how do you get,
you build these deep relationships with the founders at the infancy,
how you get those kind of allocations, those SVVs as the companies grow?
Yeah.
So we have done some.
SVEs in later stage, like series AAB stage companies, and those have all been opportunistic.
There is a part of me which thinks, okay, we should maybe be more proactive and more outbound and
make that more of a priority for us. But the honest truth is our game is played more in the early
stage. That's where I think we'll have the best returns and where we're better suited as an
investor. So occasionally we will do more opportunistic SBVs, but it's not something that we've
pursued all that much in terms of our overall time spent and capital deployed.
Now, of course, you have like breakout companies in the portfolio and then doubling down
on those companies. We reserve the right to do an SPV in those companies if they're in the
fund and then we invite our LPs get first dibs. I feel like they are the ones that trusted
us to their capital and put it up to begin with. And so that's, they get, you know, first take.
And then we open it up from there, oftentimes bring in, well, we try to,
bring in like strategic angels, let's say, angel LPs effectively into these SBVs or angel
investors in spaces that may be irrelevant to what the founders need help in.
Let's say you have the next Anthropic in your round. You have Series A and Sequoia and obviously
Sequoia wants to take all of it. How do you deal with it? And do you have to rewin it?
Is there this assumption that you were there for me and from the beginning? This is like
something that I owe you from reciprocity and just double click on how you win those very
competitive deals.
So we haven't done a ton of SPVs, let's say, into other companies relative to like our pre-seed C-Stage investing.
A lot of it's just based on, okay, how have they actually helped us?
You know, a lot of venture is, it's relationship-driven.
As much as I love to productize things and, you know, scale myself, it is very much relationship-driven.
And so a lot of that is, you know, have they been helpful?
Do I feel like I owe them in some way?
Them is in myself and Vedica.
So as you mentioned, you like to productize yourself.
You're always thinking scaling, your thinking in systems. Give us some of your best practices
today. How are you scaling Ryan Hoover? And how are you 3xing, 5x in your productivity?
Part of it is, it's myself and Dedica. So we both are tag teaming and dividing and conquering
in many ways. We're also exploring, this is another experiment of sorts, but I think it's one
and I have high conviction that it will not fail or it will continue, which is essentially
our version of a Scouts program. We call them weekend partners. And the thesis,
perspective there is as one, yes, there are million scout funds out there. And there are
a lot of options for scouts or investors, let's say, to scout for other multi-stage funds or others.
We don't require exclusivity, meaning like we don't require someone to be like, okay, you can only
invest with us as a scout. We have some people who scout for multiple firms. And the reason why
that works for us is in part because we're small. We're a smaller check, we're earlier stage.
some of these scouts are also focused more in like series A plus.
So this is in some ways for them to, well, it's actually a double double benefit for them.
In some ways they can maybe deploy capital earlier than they otherwise would have and then also get, you know, access potentially even more so for their other, you know, deployments in later stage rounds.
We also have a strong perspective, right, I do, which is it's changing so quickly.
Tech is changing so fast.
And as smart as I think I might be, I only know a little bit.
I'm like a product person, community person, and having people who have experience and who are actually building products today in maybe their own company.
Like Connor, for example, is a weekend partner.
He's, you know, sort of mission control, hacker house in San Francisco.
He's in the current YC batch or I should say the next YC batch with an AI focused company.
And so he's scouting for us and supporting us.
And he's on the floor, you know, speaking with other founders, building in this this kind of emerging, changing tech ecosystem.
And so for that reason,
And that's one way we're thinking about how do we scale ourselves
and how do we see more and get different perspectives
beyond just like our own perspective.
And what are those structures typically have in terms of scouts?
And what's industry practice?
Yeah, it varies.
So you see some scouts get all the economics.
So let's just say there's 20 points carry in a fund.
They get all 20 points carry.
In some cases, there are scouts that get much, much less.
We do 25% of our care.
And so the economics are not as good as what you might get with like injuries and Horowitz or, you know, Sequoia.
But in many ways, they're not doing it all for the economics.
Yeah, that's a part of it.
But it's really to be, you know, part of our ecosystem and support us.
At least that's what I think.
And again, it's not exclusive.
And so they might be actually scouting and deploying checks of their own.
They might be fact, Tara is one of our weekend partners.
He has his own, he invests, he's invested 150 companies himself.
he's actively investing and essentially scouting with us as well.
And so it's sort of a no-brainer in some ways for people that want to partner and align with us.
One of the things I try to catch on the podcast to what makes really great investors
or what makes really great managers.
One thing that I've seen in people that scale systems, the most implicit thing is that
there's full transparency in their organizations.
In other words, you can't scale on non-transparent systems.
Is that a principle that you live by?
transparent systems, can give me an extreme example? So I got to meet Alex Ramose. I've
interviewed him multiple times and I walked around in his headquarters. He has these five floors.
And he's this huge organization. He scales everything. And he's putting out, I think he has
something like half a billion views on his content per year. And I basically asked, I'm like,
how is this possible? Like, how do you do this? And he said, every one of my employee or my key
employees have access to every one of my social networks.
I have zero privacy.
My text, my Instagram, he's like, what I give up is privacy and what I get in return
is scalability.
And I found this, you know, I'm not surprised that you answered the question very succinctly
on your venture partner program and on your scout program and things like that.
I see this as a principle and people that create these systems.
Is that something that you see?
Yeah, maybe an example.
It's a small example, but it touches on what you're referring to.
So every weekend partners in our Slack channel with us.
And when they're sharing deals, they don't DM us.
We actually encourage them to put it in the Slack channel.
And what they typically do is share, here's a company, here's why I'm excited,
here's how I know the founder, here's some other thoughts.
And of course, we'll respond, but we may have somebody else as a weekend partner
and say, oh, I, here's my thought on that space or here's, oh, I know this founder
or things like that.
And so it does create, just gives us more signal.
And also it's useful for everyone because part of the motivation for weekend partners and
for myself too is I want to see what other people are.
looking at. Like, I'm excited. Like, the reason why we invest is because we're excited about new
companies. And so even if they don't contribute, I think there's some value in, okay, I can,
I can see what flow and what deals are kind of coming through and maybe also learn from
my experience or Vedicus experience and share it when we share our perspective in those channels.
So, you know, we could do it a different way. We could have people DM us. And there's a lot of
reasons why I think that's the wrong approach for how we're structuring things. I was in person
I'm gathering with Lee Jacobs from Long-Turney Ventures.
And one of the things that you said that if you want to be very early,
you have to have huge misses and you have to invest in very weird things
that binary, a lot of times I just almost complete scams
or just do not end up happening.
Is that a principle that you believe is necessary in the pre-seed
that's investing in things that completely go to zero?
Yeah.
I mean, yeah, we've had some zeros.
It's the nature of the game.
and you can't not ultimately when you're investing this early.
I do like weird things.
And I like Lee.
I've known him for like maybe a decade now.
And he's been really supportive of us.
And I know some of the weird things they've invested in.
Some of the things that we've actually passed on,
they've invested in.
I'm sure they've done great.
But yeah, I appreciate his perspective.
And I also take, I always question myself
because it's really easy to get caught up in consensus things.
And not that consensus thinking is necessarily all that bad, or I should, let me rephrase it.
It's not that hot deals are bad.
Hot deals are often good, actually.
But if you're only looking at hot deals, then you're only playing the consensus game and you might do well, but you're going to miss some of those weird companies.
And it's actually the weird companies that no one backed that are going to give you the most status to.
Not that that's why I'm, you know, investing, but, you know, status and reputation and and helping a founder when no one else would is, I think, meaningful and important.
So, yeah, weird stuff is fun, especially weird consumer stuff.
Granted, we don't invest in that much consumer because I think it's really, really hard,
but I'm constantly wanting to find weird consumer products and companies because,
I mean, it's just so fun, fun to explore that from a human psychology and technology perspective.
I think it's exceptionally hard to generate alpha risk adjuster returns in venture in general
because everybody's so smart.
I had Abe Offman from Angelus and we went over his data.
of tens of thousands of companies and things like being a serial entrepreneur going to Harvard
or Stanford CS, that's priced in. There's no alpha there. You don't get an edge by investing
these consensus good things. Or today, I would argue, AI as well. But if you truly want, you have to
ask yourself, you have to step back and say, if I want non-consensus returns, you truly need to
do something that is seen as non-consensus by extremely smart people. And what are you giving
up? Sometimes that's structural alpha. So you have like secondary funds. You have
continuation vehicles. You have kind of another counterparty on your trade. Oftentimes,
it's doing things that are politically incorrect or are seen us crazy. That's also a source of
alpha. So it's like, what are you willing to give up that a bunch of other smart people are not
willing to do in order to generate that alpha? It's like one of these Peter Thiel questions are
much harder to answer than actually on the surface, it seems. So part of my feeling is
life experience or experience with a particular problem that a founder is solving
is like the best alpha that you can get.
And so an example is I mentioned deal earlier.
So we were investing the seed round.
Protent was a fully distributed team.
I'd be building that company before I met Alex for four or five years prior to that.
And I'd seen both the pros and cons of building a distributed and remote company.
I also had really strong conviction that this was going to be a growing trend.
And this is 2018, I had a strong conviction that it was going to be more of the norm.
This is obviously pre-COVID for a bunch of reasons, primarily because recruiting in San Francisco is expensive, very difficult to retain talent.
And just the nature, it felt like is inevitable that we're going to have to hire, you know, more than just outside, you know, five square mile, you know, radius.
And so based on my experience building product, that was, that was the reason why we invested and I invested in deal.
And a lot of, one of the reasons why we're building products, too, we're working on something I can't share yet, but an investor workflow tool that uses a lot of LLMs and third-party data enrichment sources.
It's been really fun and frustrating.
And as a result, by building and working on this, I've kind of gotten a better perspective of what LMs are capable of where the holes are, what problems emerge.
And the last thing I was saying is, this is also going back to the weekend partner's component.
Like Connors is one, he's building a company, his direct hands-on experience.
and we'll have perspective that other people won't.
And so I don't know, I'm a big believer if you can invest in things that you really understand.
Not that everything has to be something I have direct experience with.
A lot of companies are just outside of my own personal domain, just the nature of the numbers of the volume of that we're doing.
But it could be very helpful and provide a lot of insight.
Another way to reframe that is if you think of VCs, top VCs as 140 IQ plus people.
if you put a bunch of 140 IQ plus people in the room,
they'll come up with a consensus thesis.
So the question is, why is you're 140 IQ
better than another person's 140 IQ?
And that's because of your lived experience.
You have this, you know, what Ben Horwood's called Earned Secrets
in this specific domain that allows you similarly minded person
as another very similarly smart-minded person
to have alpha in that trade that other people don't have.
Yeah.
Yeah, it's a more concise way of putting it.
What would you like our listeners to know about you,
we can fund about anything else you'd like to share.
If anybody's founder, of course, or an investor, and, you know, we do invest broadly.
And so we invested everything from, you know, boring S&B tech to weird consumer stuff,
to everything in between.
A lot of what we're looking for is kind of going back to you said, secrets.
We're looking for a founder with a secret.
And one way to kind of concisely frame a lot of the ways that I look at venture, which is,
I want to back a founder that has a secret or has traction.
You know, if it's pre-launch, I would like to understand, like, what is a secret?
What are they seeing that other people aren't?
If it's post-launch, they have traction and I just still don't understand it.
Well, I'm going to look.
I'm going to try and understand what I don't get.
Because if there's true traction, then something's working.
And so obviously, yeah, always looking for interesting early stage precedes these stage founders.
I've been really obsessed about this concept of information diet.
I literally think about it as my diet, as important as it is what I eat, what I listen to.
and also most importantly, what do I not listen to, highly underrated, what to ignore?
What is your information diet?
What are some best practices?
Yeah, for better or worse, I'm on Twitter.
I have been for years.
It's been very useful professionally and personally, very inspiring, inspiring in some ways.
And so Twitter is a fire host, and a lot of it is serendipitous.
So that's certainly part of my information diet.
Obviously, not a unique one by any means.
a lot of the most interesting insights are from conversations though whether it's with a founder
maybe it's during a pitch or it's just with a founder a portfolio founder sharing what they've
learned or what challenges they're encountering and actually before venture before product
and I used to write a lot blog a lot and a lot of my blog quotes were inspired by just conversations
with smart people so I don't know I think conversations is in some ways maybe the ultimate
alpha in terms of information diet um it's
also harder to scale, of course. But, you know, it's the things that people either can't say publicly
or maybe haven't had the time to write about that other people don't have access to or very few people
have access to. I think also conversations are highly contextual to you. So it's like a podcast made
just for you on exactly what you're thinking about, exactly what you're worried about. It's like this
fully customized just in time information for what you're dealing with today. Yeah. It's like
It's like notebook LM, but like old school, like with real humans.
If you could go back in 2017 when you were just starting your first fund, which was $3 million, what one piece of advice would you give your younger Ryan then that would either accelerate your path or keep you from making mistakes?
In the beginning, I made zero investments, actually, before I raised a fund.
part of that was because I was building Productant.
And at the time, pre-2017, it wasn't socially acceptable to invest as a CEO or a founder.
It was like, oh, you're distracted.
You're not, you know, focusing on your company.
I raised the fund after Productant was acquired by Angel List.
I was still CEO at the time and ran Weekend Fund and Producton, you know, for many years after that together.
But, yeah, I made zero investments.
And so in the very beginning, I have very few data points.
I'd spoken to a million founders, I'd seen a gazillion launches, but it's very different
when you're thinking about it from, here's a cool product versus here's a great business.
Like, it's a very different muscle.
And so if I was to go back and tell myself, I think I would have emphasized that importance,
meaning sometimes I get excited back then, get way too excited about the product and almost
impart my own excitement on it and own vision, in a sense, versus thinking.
trying to learn from the founder and what is their actual plan?
Why are they building this company?
And what might this look like from like a business perspective?
Not just like a, oh, this is a cool product.
So that's probably the biggest shift or challenge, I suppose,
that I had to unlearn or revise in the early days.
The paradox there is that you have to see it as a steady state.
Like where is the founder today?
And if they're extremely self-driven and able to solve problems,
And ironically, that's who you want to help.
So you want to help the people that essentially need you the least.
And you want to avoid helping people that need you the most.
It's not something that people say out loud.
But it's one of the first principles, especially for a product turned, for a CEO turned D.C.,
that's one of the common mistakes that they make.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And you can feel really good about yourself when you're like, I just gave this person so many good insights and they're like nodding their head.
And what you kind of want is you want to give and take and you want to contribute, but you also want
the founder to be like, actually, no, I don't think that's right. And here's why. And then,
oh, actually, that's a good idea, but like, let's twist it and, like, modify it based on,
like, you want it to be more of a conversation, not, like, I'm not a lecturer. Like, and
if founder is, like, listening to everything I say, then I'm concerned. How much of being a
great C investor is about just finding the best product in business? And how much of it is
portfolio construction, just all these fun things that you have to learn on the job?
Fund construction matters as much as like I'd love to just like throw any check at anything that is interesting or exciting or promising.
You know, historically we've avoided writing very small checks where a $10 million outcome doesn't even return the fund.
And part of that's because the economics, part of it is because, you know, when we write those checks, it could actually conflict us out for maybe the right investment in the future.
We are rethinking some of that strategy to be quite honest as the market is changing.
we're seeing companies grow very fast and just an explosion of companies.
I think this is only going to to accelerate too with how quickly it takes,
with how little it takes to actually bring something to market.
But yeah, a lot of it relies on a construction that is realistic.
And what I mean by that is how many checks can you realistically deploy?
You have to kind of work backwards and say,
how many people do I even have time to meet that many people?
because you're not going to have a 10% conversion rate from, let's say, meeting to check writing.
If you do, you have the most ridiculous access and deal flow of all time.
And so part of it is thinking through that.
Part of us thinking through how many portfolio companies can you manage and support effectively.
And so for us, we're looking at about 50 companies or so per fund, which is quite a few,
but it's very manageable because, again, we're not a lead investor.
we are very responsive and in some cases proactive,
but we're not on boards.
We're not pinging the founder every week.
So we're able to scale ourselves.
And then that's also why we have products.
Every founder has access to rollerdexter,
the tool I mentioned earlier,
and they could use it to search by followers
and even their followers, too,
if they have a following.
And so that's one way for us to support and help
without requiring any of our time.
Well, Ryan, you've literally helped launch
hundreds of thousands of startups. I don't think I've ever met. Anybody that had that
feat, you've inspired me from afar. It's been great getting to know you and look forward to
continuing conversation live. Yeah. Thanks, David. Appreciate you having it.
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