The a16z Show - Is Non-Consensus Investing Overrated?

Episode Date: September 4, 2025

Is non-consensus investing overrated—or the secret to venture returns?a16z General Partner Erik Torenberg is joined by Martín Casado (General Partner, a16z) and Leo Polovets (General Partner, Humba... Ventures) to unpack the debate that lit up venture Twitter/X: should founders and VCs chase consensus, or run from it?They explore what “consensus” really means in practice, how market efficiency shapes venture outcomes, why most companies fail from indigestion, not starvation, and the risks founders face when they’re too far outside consensus. Timecodes: 00:00 Introduction 01:04 Defining Consensus and Market Efficiency06:30 The Role of Hot Rounds and Market Signals10:25 Founder Perspective: Risks of Non-Consensus13:19 Investor Perspective: Indigestion vs. Starvation18:28 Market Cycles & Sector Hype23:55 The Evolution of Venture Market Efficiency26:29 Case Studies & Personal Anecdotes33:02 Fund Size, Ownership, and the Impact on Strategy51:40 The Future of Venture: Multi-Stage vs. Seed Funds Resources: Find Leo on X: https://x.com/lpolovetsFind Martin on X: https://x.com/martin_casado Stay Updated: Let us know what you think: https://ratethispodcast.com/a16zFind a16z on Twitter: https://twitter.com/a16zFind a16z on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/a16zSubscribe on your favorite podcast app: https://a16z.simplecast.com/Follow our host: https://x.com/eriktorenbergPlease note that the content here is for informational purposes only; should NOT be taken as legal, business, tax, or investment advice or be used to evaluate any investment or security; and is not directed at any investors or potential investors in any a16z fund. a16z and its affiliates may maintain investments in the companies discussed. For more details please see a16z.com/disclosures. Stay Updated:Find a16z on YouTube: YouTubeFind a16z on XFind a16z on LinkedInListen to the a16z Show on SpotifyListen to the a16z Show on Apple PodcastsFollow our host: https://twitter.com/eriktorenberg Please note that the content here is for informational purposes only; should NOT be taken as legal, business, tax, or investment advice or be used to evaluate any investment or security; and is not directed at any investors or potential investors in any a16z fund. a16z and its affiliates may maintain investments in the companies discussed. For more details please see a16z.com/disclosures. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 It's dangerous to do non-consensus investing. Like, that's a dangerous idea. If you're alone in your view, you may just be missing something. Eventually, you have to get to consensus. If you're dependent on capital markets, it's very hard to keep the company alive if nobody wants to fund it. Peter Till once had a line, which was like, the faster and higher the upround, the more you should invest because it's working. Most companies fail from indigestion, not starvation. Is non-consensus investing overrated or is it still the secret to venture returns?
Starting point is 00:00:35 Today on the podcast, I'm joined by A16Z general partner, Marcin Casado, and Leo Polovitz from Humber Ventures to unpack a debate that lit up Venture X. Should founders and VCs chase consensus or run from it? They explore with consensus even means and practice, how market efficiencies shape venture outcomes, the dangers for founders for being too far outside of consensus, and why some of the biggest winners in tech history, looked non-consensus at first. Let's get into it. So, Martin, it looks like you've helped spark a little bit of an existential crisis on venture Twitter.
Starting point is 00:01:09 I thought we'd all come here to talk about it. Great. Super. I was doing. I'm excited to be here. What do we recap, Martin, from your perspective. What were you saying in that tweet? What were you trying to say in that tweet? Then we can get into the great back and forth that you and Neo had and get into the conversation. So let me paraphrase the tweet. The paraphrase version of the tweet is,
Starting point is 00:01:27 It's dangerous to do non-consensus investing. Like, that's a dangerous idea. The impetus of the tweet, which, by the way, wasn't well thought out, which I think a lot of the viral tweets happened to be not well-thought-out is, you know, I've been an investor for 10 years. I've done almost 200 investments, either as like running the fund or being directly involved. And it seems being blinkered to how VCs view companies is actually quite dangerous because you're so dependent on follow-on capital.
Starting point is 00:02:00 And actually, it reminds me a lot of being an academic. I used to write a lot of papers. And, like, you do all of this great research, but when you wrote the paper, if you didn't actually think about how the program committee would view it, like it wouldn't get accepted, right? It felt very similar to that. And so that was the origins, but I want to be very clear.
Starting point is 00:02:17 I did not say, and I would never say, consensus investing is a good idea. I'm just saying not being aware of consensus is a bad idea. And I think the last thing I'll say on this, I think that my underlying belief is early markets are actually pretty darn efficient, a lot more efficient than people realize. And so if you're alone in your view, you may just be missing something. Leo, we're stoked to have you join us as a friend, fellow venture nerd.
Starting point is 00:02:45 What was your reaction? Yeah, I mean, I actually agree with a lot of what Martin just said, which is eventually you have to get to consensus, whether it's when you're investing or later, because otherwise if you're dependent on capital markets, it's very hard to keep the company alive if nobody wants to fund it. I would say like for me, and maybe we invests like a tick earlier, more like towards pre-seed and seed and seed, but for me, a lot of my best investments have been more on the
Starting point is 00:03:07 non-consensus side. Not in terms of I had some crazy good insight and nobody else had it and like I'm just brilliant, but more like these companies often struggled in the early days because before there's proof points, it's not obvious that it'll be a good idea. And then once they get good, the valuation skyrocketed so fast that like you could still get good multiples, but they're just much lower than an early. stages. Yeah. And then there was sort of broader commentary on looking at a list of big winners over the last 15, 20 years, and say, hey, what was consensus, which were consensus, which were
Starting point is 00:03:37 non-consensus? And then, Martin, what were kind of your reactions to that sort of broader commentary? Well, listen, I mean, again, it wasn't meant to be a technical tweet where, like, the wording was exact. And so, like, on the face of it, it's almost like an ill-defined statement because we don't know what consensus means, right? And so then everybody picks apart the consensus. But here's my reaction to the list of like the Airbnbs and this and that, which is, I think we need to be very careful not to conflate a company having a hard round with market consensus, right? Like, if you look at the list like Keith Rebois put out, which is great, and I love Keith, I mean, these are like MIT founders, known spaces. Like, I'll bet if you took like the median
Starting point is 00:04:26 value of their raises over the life cycle of the company. I'll bet they're way above market. Many of the companies were YC companies. And so I just think it's so easy to like come up with these anecdotal, oh, this one company had a tough raise. When that's definitely not within the spirit of what I was trying to say, which is markets are actually quite efficient. If the market's efficient and it's a good company, the price is going to be high. And if you don't recognize that, then you're probably beating yourself as opposed to the market, right? And so like it really comes down to,
Starting point is 00:04:59 you shouldn't be looking for good deals with respect to other investors. You should be looking for good companies and price shouldn't sway you from that. I mean, that's really at the heart of this. And so I just don't think that list, unless you actually run the numbers, which we haven't done,
Starting point is 00:05:13 I just don't think it demonstrates that the idea that consensus is important is wrong at all. Yeah, and I think there are a few quibbles I had with some of the names on that list. Like some people put Andrill, and it certainly was a controversial investment, but, you know, Palmer Lucky, you know. I mean, second-time founder, billion-dollar exit, Trey, who's phenomenal, you know, this is in the shadow of Elon who shows that you can already create these defense tech companies. I mean, if that's our definition of non-consensus, it just shows how insular we are as a community. I mean, it's almost an indictment of us that we even make this list.
Starting point is 00:05:48 And wasn't the seed round at like 100 or something? Like, there was a very expensive early round. Every round was super expensive. I'm not sure an ex-unicorn founder would ever be non-consensus, really. Yeah, it is interesting because there's also sort of, you know, there are rounds that are maybe non-consensus at 10 million or something, but then become super hot rounds at 50 or 100, and then become 10 billion-dollar companies or 100-billion-dollar companies. And even if you invested at that consensus round, you 10x or 100-xed. And so it's sort of in the face of, hey, if it's a hot deal, that must mean it's not good. Peter Till once had a line, which was like the faster and higher the upround, the more you should invest because it's like working.
Starting point is 00:06:30 Yeah. I would love to do a correlation. Actually, Leo and I had, I thought, a very interesting discussion. I'm trying to figure out how you'd actually measure this, how you'd actually throw some data at it. We actually have an analyst working on it now. Like, the data isn't ready. So I have a new one. Actually, I want to test this with you, Leo on a good thing to test. So I'll bet the best prediction of a, the best correlate of a high upper upper.
Starting point is 00:06:49 round outside of the business is the fact that the previous round was hot. I think that's probably true. And if that's the case, it would suggest that the market's actually pretty efficient because it's almost inductive that like the previous round knew that the next round was going to be hot. So I do agree with that. I think the question for me is like, where is there more opportunity? Right.
Starting point is 00:07:12 Because if the five hot companies keep having great rounds and then there's like 10,000 not hot companies, but 100 of them will become hot over time. Even though the odds of becoming hot or low, most of the hot companies end up coming from the not hot patch, right? Right. So the question comes down to, is it easier to spot the company nobody sees or get into the company that's obviously good? And maybe even further than that, which is to what extent do even high price rounds underpriced hot deals? because if I'm right, if the view is correct that hot deals are hot because they're good companies, not like actually the market is very efficient. And that drives the most of returns.
Starting point is 00:07:59 Then I think the next obvious question is, well, if that's the case, then the market isn't that efficient because it's underpriced the company, right? The majority of returns are in high price rounds and the market has underpriced it. But I think risk adjusted, that's not necessarily. true, which is it could be still price right because there's still chances it goes to zero. So I guess my sense is
Starting point is 00:08:24 until we run the numbers, we're not going to quite know the answer, but I think a lot of these theories prove out pretty anecdotally. And I think maybe that's the problem. There's kind of an anecdote for every theory. Yeah. I think the basket analysis is probably the most interesting one area of like
Starting point is 00:08:41 not how did this one company do, but how did this portfolio of companies that raise like really quick follow on or had like 10 term sheets at the Series A, like how it does end up doing over time. There are even cases in my portfolio where a super hot company from an investor standpoint, so many term sheets, the business didn't work out at the level that you would kind of expect, but the outcome was still really good. And so in some level, even independent of the productive asset, like human opinion about
Starting point is 00:09:14 it matters. So there's almost two ways you can slice this conversation. One of them is like the asset is what's productive and produces the value, right? And the market will determine if that's valuable or not. So that's kind of this productive asset view. And that's kind of the one that I hold, which I think that actually investors are very smart. I think that they know which companies are good and then they pay for those. That's kind of my view.
Starting point is 00:09:37 But that's a productive asset view. But there's another view, which is independent of whether the company is good or not, there are things that people think are good. And so you're almost like playing to like the human perception of the company, independent of the other than business. And I would say, again, anecdotally, until we run the numbers we want to know, that also seems to be a bit true. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:09:58 So I've been an venture for like 12, 13 years now. I've definitely seen this in sectors where like sectors fall in and out of favor. Right. We have like e-commerce was hot and then it was dead. And then like dollar shape club got acquired and it was hot again. And it's like e-commerce. I think the fundamentals didn't change that much year to year. but like the valuations and the like appetite for investing and maybe starting companies changed a lot year to year.
Starting point is 00:10:19 And so that to me sort of an indicator. Like it's not just the fundamentals. There are all these other like forces as you mentioned. Yeah, totally. One other part to your tweet, Martine that I think was underappreciated was sort of the risks of founders of being seen as non-consensus in the same way that because founders need to raise money. And they need to raise follow on funding within 18 to 24 months, sometimes even sooner. And so if everyone's passing on you, people are bragging about how other investors
Starting point is 00:10:47 don't want to do your deal, that's not going to be super helpful to you in your next round. I actually think the most interesting aspect of the tweet was like the sociological study that followed of like how different people interpret it. Right? Like the tweet itself was pretty banal, right?
Starting point is 00:11:00 It's just kind of non-statement. It's almost tautological. But like different constituencies viewed it very differently. So like I would say relatively inexperienced investors kind of used it as an opportunity to be like, oh, Andresen Hort's consensus invests, which anybody that knows anything about our investment knows it's just totally not true. Even my own portfolio, many of the top deals I've done,
Starting point is 00:11:20 nobody else was in the deal, et cetera, right? So, like, this is a statement about consensus investing. So that was one cohort. There was another cohort like Leo and Keith, who have a lot of data, and they've had a lot of really interesting things to say, and that ended up in great discussion. I think there's still a lot more to do there. But most of the founders, and I got a bazillion DMs, We're like, you're totally right. So the founders clearly feel this tension that it's dangerous to be non-consensus because they have to cater to VCs
Starting point is 00:11:53 and they know it and they see the pattern match responses. They deal with this all of the time. And so from a founder perspective, it's like you almost have to be non-consensus to have alpha at the actual product market, but you have to look consensus when you're raising. And I think that's actually probably right. I think this is probably one area where I differ a bit.
Starting point is 00:12:12 I think there's benefits to being non-consensus because from the company side, I think when the money is hard to raise, you tend to be more frugal with it. And then also if the next round is less certain, like I think there's less of a sort of like it can crumble at any moment aspect, right? Because I think when it is hot and you're raising subsequent rounds very quickly, unless the assumption of things will go perfectly, if anything slows down, it's like, now you can't raise any more capital all of a sudden, right? And I think if you're in the mentality of growing quickly and spending, I think that's pretty hard. On the flip side, if you're not consensus, it tends to be like, you tend to be more cash efficient,
Starting point is 00:12:44 tend to be more frugal out of necessity. I think the other side depends on the form of like consensusness, but sometimes there's also like much softer diligence. Like I think the kind of the worst form of consensus I've seen is like, oh, Sequeira and recented this round, like, let me just do a 2X markup in two weeks because I want to be in the same company. And then like, there's no diligence there. It's just like, oh, this is hot. Let me do it. But I think then maybe we're looking like, is it actually a good business?
Starting point is 00:13:08 Like Sequoia and Andrescent, like, we all make good investments and bad investments. And so it's like maybe this is one of the bad ones and you're just marking it up because you want to be in the hot deal. And like that ends up not being good for anyone. I think this is a tremendously important and good point. I tend to believe now that most companies fail from indigestion, not starvation, which is they just raise too much money too easily. They don't listen to the actual market, which is the customer base. and as a result, they just have a bunch of bad practices and end up running out of money.
Starting point is 00:13:41 And I think that there's a lot, too. That I actually think in 2021, if you just did a study of that cohort, the companies that had these billion-dollar bees, if you remember that time, was totally crazy. I'll bet that that's probably one of the biggest wipeouts of capital. So I definitely think, like, consensus investing is definitely very dangerous
Starting point is 00:13:59 and only leaning together as a founder is definitely dangerous. But I also think the flip side is true, which is you're totally blinkered to it. I think your life is pretty tough. And so there's a broad question as to like, of the companies that do win, how many of them are sort of competitive rounds versus not competitive rounds? And sort of what is the duration between them being non-competitive rounds and then becoming non-competitive and what percentage are really able to?
Starting point is 00:14:26 And one question I have is like, is the market getting more efficient over time? A lot more investors. We should be getting smarter as an asset class on how to evaluate these companies. a lot more capital, are we getting better? And if so, what does that mean? Oh, I'd love to hear Leo's view on this. It's something I've been thinking about for a while. My take would be that for non-consensus companies,
Starting point is 00:14:46 it's getting more efficient because the more investors there are, the more likely you are to find at least one or two that like what you're doing. I think for the consensus companies, it's starting to get more inefficient, right? Which is like when you have 10 term sheets, you get, you know, 5X the market, like what maybe the fair value should be. And then like it's great for the founder
Starting point is 00:15:04 and maybe against a little bit more of a house of cars if things go south at all. But it's also like, it's not necessarily great for investors, right? Because you might have to pay two, three, four X over like the actual intrinsic value of a company or like the likely future value of a company in order to get in. But that would be actually, but that would be actually efficient, right?
Starting point is 00:15:24 It's just the price is actually approaching the return profile. From a market standpoint, that'd be efficient. I mean, it sucks from an investor standpoint because prices go up. Yeah, that's what I'm saying, right? Like, for founders, it's getting hyper-efficient or maybe, like, you know, like, there's such an imbalance for, like, the really hot companies that, you know, maybe your price gets bit up way past where it should be.
Starting point is 00:15:45 And similarly, like, for non-consensus companies, it's the opposite. Where, like, there's not enough investors, so your price is lower than it should be, perhaps, right? But I think there's, like, for me, like, those two are kind of opposite ends of the spectrum. Yeah, this is a great, this is a great question. I totally agree. This is a great question. So I think we can all acknowledge that there's a failure mode where the consensus gets bubbly and then companies raise too much capital and then there's a bunch of wipeouts, right? So that has always happened.
Starting point is 00:16:17 That will always happen. So that's just part of the market. I think we can also all agree that there's parts of the market where there's probably unnecessary pessimism. Like, so for example, right now during this AI craze, like, you know, you. In my area of traditional infra, or of infra, a lot of the traditional companies that, you know, two years ago would be great.
Starting point is 00:16:40 I can't even raise right now just because they're not in the sweet spot. And so I think that will always be an aspect of the market too. But in general, for the mean investment, I do feel like the market over time has gotten a lot more efficient, meaning, you know, we can deploy more dollars with more regularity and the price is converging on what will ultimately be a fair price. You know, this is acknowledging both of these failure modes that I've decided this.
Starting point is 00:17:16 Yeah. I mean, we're seeing one right now. I mean, it's the reality. I mean, AI, you know, there's AI companies that clearly are raising, you know, speculative money where nobody even really understands the business model. And there's great companies that can't get investment. So we're seeing this right now. But I will still say the reality is
Starting point is 00:17:34 is Open AI has grown tremendously. And Anthropic has grown tremendously. And cursor has grown tremendously. And so, like, there is some underlying market signals to fuel the chaos. Yeah. I think part of it's, like, if you ever look at vintage year data for venture funds,
Starting point is 00:17:53 it's probably a good way to see if, you know, how consensus and not consensus do overtime. Because when you look at, like, the dollar, dot-com bubble years. Like, I think the median fund was terrible. And I think it's just like, hey, everyone overpaid and then the companies weren't worth that. And so, like, you know, even though everything was high, like it didn't do well, and then a lot of the funds didn't do well. And if you look at like the Airbnb, you know, Uber, like 2010-ish era, it's kind of the opposite
Starting point is 00:18:15 area. Or like, I think the top quartel funds like crush it. And it's because the market was pessimistic. And so if you're willing to invest and like you had a different opinion, you did really well. And now it's probably kind of somewhere in the middle. I mean, maybe I'll just go through like kind of my own startup just as kind of a single anecdote to friend the conversation a little bit, right? So, you know, I did my PhD at Stanford. I was a classic, you know, take the research to a startup.
Starting point is 00:18:45 You know, we had so many term sheets before we had any idea of what we were doing, you know, and it was like the hottest thing ever. And it was great. And so we did a seed fund. Actually, Andy Radcliffe, you know, benchmark Annie Radcliffe, joined my board. And, you know, we rose at the time,
Starting point is 00:19:01 which would have been a super, super high-priced kind of seat round, which is 10 million post. This is in 2007. You know, then the market tanked in 2008, and we still didn't know what we were doing. And, you know, it was just a bunch of researchers. And so we couldn't raise any money at all. I mean, Sequoia very famously, you know,
Starting point is 00:19:23 gave us a black eye. And, you know, we couldn't raise. And then, you know, as we started to come out of the recession, Andresen Horowitz's NEA light speed, a few got very interested. And then we had a pretty hot round again. We went and Jason, it was actually over the market price, even though the business wasn't quite working, but it was signs of life.
Starting point is 00:19:50 Then we had an incredibly hot round because it started working. And then when we actually sold the company, I mean, you know, it returned to fund, And it was one of the highest acquisitions on multiples of revenue at the time in enterprise software. And so you kind of asked the question, was the initial flurry of interest warranted or not?
Starting point is 00:20:10 Because it turns out, like, we were probably a month from going bankrupt. And we actually didn't know what we were doing. And the company definitely wasn't working. And actually, what we had pitched at that time didn't make any sense. Like, we were like, we're going to change, you know, switch hard
Starting point is 00:20:26 which didn't make any sense. And so there's one view that's like the market was over exuberant. You were lucky. There's another view that says actually the initial conditions were there to do it. I just feel like if you run the data, it just seems that the companies that have good outcomes did have sufficient interest along the way because there are enough signals to do it.
Starting point is 00:20:46 I think at least on my side, for a lot of the preseeds and seeds I've done, I went back. I think over my top like 10 investments, maybe six or seven or eight, took them months to raise a seed around. And, you know, like a lot of times, like a lot of passes, like they were all, you know, down to the wire. But then they ended up doing better over time. I think that transition from like non-consensus to consensus ended up being really important. Because if you never transition, it's really hard, right?
Starting point is 00:21:12 And if you're always, you know, if you're always consensus, that's great for you. But like one thing I noticed that was interesting is a lot of the companies that struggled, obviously some of them just go to zero, right? Because they struggled because the business isn't that great. people recognize it. But the ones that did well, a lot of times the gap between like the seed and a or the A and B was literally like 20x or 50x, right? And so I think part of it's like as an investor, you can still get good returns at like the series A or B in those companies, but it's just, I think it's so different to invest at the seed where there's like a thousand X versus like the A
Starting point is 00:21:48 at a billion where now maybe there's still like a 10x or 20x but just very different. So I've got a question for you, Leo, because I think that you play a bit of a different game than we do, which is, so if you have a seed, which is, let's call it non-consensus, and again, we're using this very vague definition of a consensus. But like, you know, they're having a tough time raising. You're the only person putting money in. Do you have a theory on how it will be consensus, or is your belief that the underlying productive asset is going to do very well, and that by definition is consensus? do you see the question? So the question is, is that this is just true belief in the underlying business like the ultimate I mean,
Starting point is 00:22:27 the ultimate sign of success is just the business is really working. So are you like, for the next raise, the business will definitely be working or do you have some other theory on what will attract the investors? I'd say it's off on the latter.
Starting point is 00:22:43 I would say, and especially true these days because I'm investing more in deep tech companies. And so it's seed. It's very rare to see like, oh, there's an asset that's going to be working here at the series A, because usually the asset's still going to be, like, being developed at the series A or maybe series B.
Starting point is 00:22:57 I think what I'm looking for is, like, there's maybe not enough here for somebody to write a five or ten or $20 million check, but the company has milestones that I think if they hit them, then it would become sort of consensus enough to merit a check of that size. And then I'm basically trying to evaluate, like, okay, the company has these milestones, do I think they could hit them or not? And also, if they hit them, are they compelling enough?
Starting point is 00:23:20 But I think that's sort of the big, you know, investment wager. Yeah. Yeah. So in this case, you do think about like what the follow-on thing is going to want to see. You have reached a conclusion for the current round that is non-consensus. Yeah. And I would say like the consensus piece is part of it in that I definitely meet companies where they're like, we're raising three right now.
Starting point is 00:23:43 It'll help us do these milestones. And then we think we can raise 10. And then there's other ones where, you know, it's like, like we're raising three now, we're going to hit these milestones, and then we want to raise like a $50 to $100 million Series A. And that's actually a much harder bet, right? Because you're saying, like, you have to assume they're going to be consensus by the time the next, they raise an next round and it's going to be like a top 5% Series A.
Starting point is 00:24:04 And that's a hard bet to take. For the companies where the capital needs are more modest or they have like a more trunch roadmap planned, I think it's a little bit easier to, you know, to predict like, hey, would these milestones be enough to raise 10? Like a lot of times that I don't know if it'll be enough to raise 100. it's like probably not. But 10 feels like pretty feasible if you do the things
Starting point is 00:24:21 you think you're going to do with this three. As your kind of view on this shifted in the last, like do you find this AI wave to be different than previous waves or are fairly similar? Probably a bad person to ask. Actually, I haven't invested much in AI because of the deep tech angle.
Starting point is 00:24:38 So maybe like 10, 15% of my companies are pure AI. Others obviously use it in some way, but that's not the product. How about DeepTech then? I think that's also, you know, like pretty different than what we were all investing in five years ago. So maybe on the AI side, and I'll touch deep tech next, I think AI is interesting to me because on the one hand, I've never seen faster growth. Like people talked about the like triple, triple, double, double, double thing for a while of getting from a millionaire to 105 years.
Starting point is 00:25:09 And that seems so antiquated now, right? Like the bus companies are doing like one or two years. I think in the flip side, the kind of the endurance, like how long those companies endure and last and grow feels like much more of a question mark. Because in the triple, triple, triple, double, double, double,
Starting point is 00:25:24 area, like, if you hit 100 million ARR and there was no one close to you, probably just keep growing. And now it feels like you could hit 100 and then you drop to 50 because someone else came out with a better product. So, you know, I think there's like, the growth is amazing and then the modes are weaker. And so I think there's a counterbalance there.
Starting point is 00:25:40 And I'm not sure I'd evaluate it because I've invested that much of that stuff. I agree, yeah. On the deep tech side, I definitely see areas with a lot of hype from time to time. Like, for example, we invest in defense a lot three, four years ago. And then we kept looking. We're basically paused for a year and a half or two because after the Ukraine and Israel, you know, prices just went up like two, three, four times.
Starting point is 00:26:00 But the company fundamentals didn't change. And then it started being an opportunity cost of like, should I invest in this defense company at 40 when there's this really great, you know, energy company at 15. And so I think defense. was kind of like that. I think bio has had a lot of ups and downs. I think in robotics, like,
Starting point is 00:26:17 humanoids are probably, like, one of the most hyped areas where the valuations just get crazy before there's any revenue. Sorry, I think that, actually, I feel like it kind of lost a thread in the original question, but... No, this is great. I mean, I was honestly just wondering,
Starting point is 00:26:31 like, how you thought about this current wave. You did a great survey of a set of the waves. I actually agree. I would say, like, for the consensus areas, like, humanoids, like, we end up not explicitly, but implicitly avoiding them because once you have a few companies that are raised, like, hundreds of millions,
Starting point is 00:26:45 whether they end up being great outcomes or not, I think it's pretty hard for someone to start something new with, like, you know, near zero resources and team. Yeah. You know, it's interesting when you do the humanoid. So I think there's all sorts of types of investing, and they're all pretty valid. One type of investing is humanoid are clearly interesting. Big companies are clearly interested in it.
Starting point is 00:27:07 So why don't you back a bunch of good teams, and worst case, they get acquired? and I think that's totally legitimate, but that's not how I think at all. For me, like the company has to make sense as a standalone business at scale. So things like human noise are tough for that just because the unit economics right now
Starting point is 00:27:28 are just so unknown. Like competing with a human body is a very, very hard thing to do. And then, of course, you can be like, okay, well, you know, we'll put it where human beings can't go like a car factory, but then all of a sudden now, you know, you're building a manufacturing company, you know, so you verticalize heavily,
Starting point is 00:27:47 and the company has to look at kind of whatever sector that the robot's going into and it's more constrained and I don't understand a competitive set and, you know, yada, yada, yada. So I just feel like from my standpoint, the idea that this is very buzzy and hot, you know, in the industry for big companies and it may have an M&A, I don't know how to invest that way. I just don't know how to handicap that. And so the way that I tend to view these things, I mean, like for AI, for better or for worse, like you actually have great unit economics.
Starting point is 00:28:16 I mean, you know, everybody knows kind of like, when we always talk about the open AIs and the Anthropics, but do we talk like the 11 labs, for example, or mid-jurney? I mean, these are just famously model companies where the unit economics are great, they grow, you know, very quickly. And so I understand that. But, you know, I think there's kind of been this weird,
Starting point is 00:28:37 and this happens, you know, a lot where people take the example of these model companies and they apply it to totally different spaces where you don't have the proof points, you don't have the economic case, and they kind of apply it. And that's the one thing I don't know how to do. So certainly I don't believe, you know, we should all just follow like the common consensus
Starting point is 00:28:57 around areas to invest in. But I do think that, like, there's going to be a pool of capital and it's going to want companies to look a certain way. And if you don't consider that when you're investing, I think life will be a lot more difficult. Yeah, I agree. I'm sort of an aside here on the humanized stuff. I think what I've seen over the last 10, 15 years is if the market is big enough, it really distorts like VC investing.
Starting point is 00:29:20 Because everyone, you know, it used to be that you'd look at a market, you're like, oh, it's a two billion of your market. If there's a 1% chance they could capture it, they'll be worth this much. So true. So let me justify a seed price. If the market's like $5 trillion of human labor or something, like any price makes sense, right? But then I think that really distorts of how much value is there. The most boneheaded partner meetings were like, well, yes, it is cold fusion,
Starting point is 00:29:43 but this is the largest market ever. So on the off chance, it works. I'm like, this is an engineering, man. This is like laws of physics. I'm not sure that, like, you know, a good software founder is going to bend the laws of physics. But, yeah, I think I totally agree. I also feel like, I don't want to harp on this too much, but, like, unit economics is so.
Starting point is 00:30:06 important. I mean, like, what is the story for autonomous vehicles, right? The story for autonomous vehicles is that even after the industry has put $100 billion in it, 100 billion, the unit economics are still, you know, let's call it on par with Uber. Let's just call it that, right? And so, does that make sense for venture investment? It's really, really hard to build a standalone business with those types of economics. I mean, Google can do it, sure. And Tesla can do it, sure, but can startup X do it? No. And so you're either playing for, this is a great company that got acquired, which a lot of that happened and people made good money, but like that's again, that's not saying that, you know, the startup, or you're building
Starting point is 00:30:52 picks and shovels, like applied intuition where you're like you're building software for this market. But I do think that a lot of investment dollars do follow these spaces where there really is no thesis on the ultimate unit economics. And I think you're exactly right. just think that there's this kind of market tam sloppiness that says, well, if the market's infitted it, then the expected payout is high. Also infinite. That's also infinite. That's also invented it exactly right.
Starting point is 00:31:19 When I look at my portfolio, I see both, there were some, you know, of the winners, you know, pave and scale were non-consensus, non-competitive, you know, unproven but very talented founders. And then on the more consensus competitive, Jack Altman. and Kasser were... How is scale non-consensus? At seed. You know, Alexander Wang was 18.
Starting point is 00:31:46 It's a total known space. He's phenomenal. The A was done by Volpe, who's amazing. I mean, I just feel like this is a very narrow definition of non-consensus. Sure. For nearly most of the rounds, it was competitive. So, yeah, I can agree. I agree. I mean, Dan Levine, Dan Levine was, I mean, come on. These are like the best investors in the world.
Starting point is 00:32:12 I just mean to say that, I brought the example to say that casters round was almost an order of magnitude more expensive. And I think what people have been late to really internalize and what A's and Z was super early to internalize was just the outcomes are order of magnitude bigger, maybe two orders of magnitude bigger. And so you can get seed like returns at, you know, order of magnitude or even two orders of magnitude more expensive. I mean, remember YouTube, Instagram, we're considered, you know, very expensive acquisitions at, you know, just a few billion dollars. And, you know, in a few years, we're going to have more trillion-dollar companies. And so once we truly internalize sort of the outcome expansion on the order of magnitude, I think it makes sense to Leo's earlier point that then it would beg the argument of like, okay, but can you have, you know, 1,000 X like returns at not just what we used to consider seed-like pricing, but maybe at Series A or maybe even Series B. Well, this is a very interesting question. because you actually do run into fund mechanics
Starting point is 00:33:08 as an actual, you know, price modulator in this discussion, right? So you're exactly right. So, again, I'll go back to my company. So my company is acquired for $1.2 billion. We had, let's call it, you know, less than $10 million in ARR, right? So does that make any sense? And a lot of people are like, this is totally crazy. This makes no sense.
Starting point is 00:33:28 Except for what I left, you know, the run rate of the three and a half years later, like the run rate was, you know, $600 million within VMR. who acquired the company, and then right now, let's call it $2 billion, right? It was actually at one point in time, I think it was 40% of the growth of VMware, like the business unit that I ran,
Starting point is 00:33:43 that was part of the acquisition. So clearly it made sense to VMware. So as a result, you should say all the check sizes should be high for the winners because the outcome was so good, and this actually returned a lot of money to a lot of investors. The problem with that is,
Starting point is 00:34:02 I just think that that would mean fund sizes would be too low. large and you'd have to unlock different pools of capital, which, by the way, did start to happen during the SoftBank and the Tiger and the Code 2 era. So you could argue that all of their theseses were correct, right? Like SoftBank was actually right and Tiger was right. And it was actually a macro issue that caused all the pullback and that's going to come back again. I mean, it's, I think, a very legitimate thesis. But I really feel the reason that prices don't continue to go up is more just access to LP capital.
Starting point is 00:34:39 So, Leo, I just, let me just try to make this a bit more concrete, which is, I think what Eric said is correct, which is the outcomes are so big, it suggests that high prices, like, the prices are too low that we actually pay. I think the prices, you know, the fact that we get the returns we do, suggest the prices are too low. So the question is, is why are the prices too low? And I think the answer is, is like, we just don't have the dollars to place all of those bets.
Starting point is 00:35:02 And a number of people have actually questioned exactly this very famously. SoftBank questioned this. Tiger questioned this. And so they raised these insight questions. They raised these huge funds and they've deployed a lot of capital. And those experiments had very mixed success. But it's not obvious to me that the reason they had mixed success is because the prices were too high. I mean, there's a lot of reasons why those could not have urged, including kind of macro cycles
Starting point is 00:35:30 and also the fact that none of them were Silicon Valley Insights. none of them were, you know, traditional early stage investors, et cetera. So there's a very reasonable question, which is, you know, maybe someone should just go run the Tiger strategy again, but as a Silicon Valley insider. Well, in some ways, you know, there's the failure cases to some degree, but in some way, you know, I mean, thrive, raise bigger funds, founders fund raised bigger funds.
Starting point is 00:35:52 We raise bigger funds. The winners are also, you know, multi-state raised bigger funds. It just could be that, this is just the market being efficient. Like, like actually the reason that, more money is going into this and the funds are getting larger is because the opportunity set is larger and this is just a market working its way out. But Leo, you're very quiet. This is actually pretty controversial statement. So I want to make sure that like, I guess, I'm not sure what you mean by we should be paying more. Do you mean that, like, you think the current prices are still,
Starting point is 00:36:25 like, well below where they should be? And I guess if so, like, I'm riffing off of Eric's statement, which I thought was right, which is venture capital has been a top returning asset class and you can look at individual investments. If you just take the top 10 percentile of funds, you know, they return so much money. So there is an argument that even with these high prices, they're still underpriced. And put it differently, Leo, it's like a seed fund may say, oh, I'm not going to invest in something at 50 post or 100 posts because I don't think there's a thousand X. potential, I don't think
Starting point is 00:37:03 Anthropic is going to be a $100 billion company or Open AI is going to be a $100 billion company or whatever it is. But it turns out it is. Like it turns, you know, what we used to think I'm comparing not to say open AI is going to be $100 billion company.
Starting point is 00:37:16 Right. Exactly. Yeah. I mean, I mean a few years ago, you know, and so it doesn't seem like we've sort of truly internalized that this is the norm. That there's going to continuously be $100 billion, you know, outcomes. If not.
Starting point is 00:37:33 Or that the market just continues to grow and therefore it necessitates larger fund sizes. I mean, I would say probably the venture market was, what, 100th of size 20 years ago? Yeah, probably something like that. It's kind of wild to think about. Yeah. And we did think a few years ago that there'd be a great contraction in the asset. That 2021 was a blip and that, you know, it would sort of right size back to where it used to be. And it doesn't seem to be the case that it's going to.
Starting point is 00:38:01 to 2010 levels. I'm not sure if you guys have the data on you, but when I talk to the RRT, when I talk to Thrive, it seems that people think, no, more capital is just going to keep entering. I think that's just because companies stay private longer too.
Starting point is 00:38:16 Right. Yeah. But I think the actual number of $100 billion plus companies in the last 20 years is pretty small. I don't know the exact number, but it's like 10 or 15 or maybe 20 or something. So it's like you're really betting you can get like the one every year or two that gets there. If you're, you know, let's say you're doing a series A at like a billion post or something, right?
Starting point is 00:38:40 And you want 100X, even ignoring dilution. You'd have to bet that there's more of them and that more of them going to happen and that there are also more ways of getting liquidity from them as well. But also just, but that also kind of suggests purely by the numbers that the most important thing is just being in one of those. and not, if you can, the most important thing is being in one of those independent of price. And that's the higher bit. So I think,
Starting point is 00:39:10 I think that's, I mean, I generally agree, right? Like, if you're in, like, the best company of the year, I don't think,
Starting point is 00:39:14 like, ownership matters that much. I don't think, like, the price matters that much. If it's going to be the best company, like, 10 years forward. I guess to your earlier point where,
Starting point is 00:39:23 you know, if venture funds had more money that, like, do higher valuations. I mean, I mean, it sounds like then you could do the higher valuation today, too, though, right? you could just be like, hey, if we just want to get in this one,
Starting point is 00:39:32 we'll pay twice the price and get half the ownership or something, right? But you also need a diversified portfolio. You need enough companies to get- No, you need the fund size to run that. This is why I think a lot of this comes back to fund size. I mean, even in the Andreessen portfolio, I was just thinking off the top of my head. We have three companies that are at the $100,
Starting point is 00:39:47 four companies at the $100 billion mark, right? I mean, there's Stripe, Databricks, Coinbase, Open AI. And so they're not that rare. You guys have awesome coverage. I mean, like, I think, I guess the question is, like, how many more could you name, though, from the last, like, you know, 15 years? My guess is 100, you're not like 100, right? Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. I mean, 20 billion plus there's a lot.
Starting point is 00:40:13 And that used to be so right. And enterprise software, it used to be an adage that nobody ever broke, you know, 20 billion or 10 billion, right? And Paul Alta Networks was at 15 and we were like, this is crazy. And now there's so many of them that have. And so maybe with 100 billion, you're right? But in the world that I live in, the amount of, like, decoorns is probably an order of magnitude more than what it was 10 years ago. And on the face of it, that would argue for an order of magnitude higher fund size, if you want to play the strategy of being in the winner. I mean, there's clearly multiple strategies.
Starting point is 00:40:47 But if you want to, again, I don't know the, for me, the key question, I don't know the answer. I want to run the numbers is if you take a dollar of earnings, like a dollar of earnings, like a dollar of earnings. for a venture capitalist, did that come from a company that raised at high prices or not? And I would guess the answer is yes, just because the winners are so outsized.
Starting point is 00:41:10 I mean, I will say there's like multiple ways to play it, right? Which is if the outcomes are 10x bigger, you can have a 10x bigger fund and basically run the same playbook, keep the same ownership, and like a big outcome still returns the same amount of the fund. You can also do like more investments
Starting point is 00:41:25 that like, you know, a fraction of the ownership. And then each investment maybe moves the needle less, but you have a higher chance of hitting like, you know, this pipe of the year, the Uber of the year. Totally. Yeah, yeah. Yeah. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:41:36 Yeah, that's good. Yeah, that's a good point. Yeah, that's a good point. Yeah, no, you're right. I want to make a few related points here. One is, I remember someone quote tweeted Martin's tweet and said, this is a sign that the asset class is dead or something, the idea of a more efficient market.
Starting point is 00:41:54 And I think what that really means is more that, that individual's firm is if an individual firm can't compete and win deals in an efficient market, they're going to lose. And so I really is my second point, which is I think there's a lot of venture capital, venture capitalist identity is tied in being non-consensus, in being able to to see things that others can't see because it's hard to win against all these other much bigger, much more well-funded players. And for that reason, I less want to use the terms,
Starting point is 00:42:28 because that's the non-contest because it's so core to people's identity. And more, one to use the term, like, either it's a hot round or it's not a hot, you know, it's competitive round or not competitive. And I think another way of framing that it's not perfect is, is the company working or is the company not working at the point of investment? And let me add some nuance to it, which is if it's, if something is working, then it's okay, it's like, you know, what is the price and what, you know, what is sort of the, you know, potential return.
Starting point is 00:42:55 turn multiple and how does it work with your threshold, et cetera. There's some things that are competitive and not working, but have an incredible founder or people, you know, whatever. It's early enough that people believe the vision and so you're still paying that price based on what you think. And then there's lots of things that are not working or are not obviously working. But we've chosen to do less, I believe, consumer things that are pre-traction. So basically it's like, Do you want to invest things that have traction or no traction? And there's failure modes with both. But not every hype thing,
Starting point is 00:43:31 not every competitive thing has traction, of course. But it's just another way of framing this to be. I'm curious, feel free to quibble with my framing. I think I saw the same quote tweet. I'm probably somewhere in between. I don't think Venture is dead. I think it gets a lot more fun if it's purely consensus. The reason is I think in a purely consensus world,
Starting point is 00:43:49 like it all just comes down to the cost of capital. right? And so if my LPs want 5x and yours want 2x, you could pay two and a half times higher prices. And the company's not better. It's just like, oh, like your cost of capital is lower, so you're going to win all the time. But also it's like we all see the same value. Everyone sees the same value. It's like, who wants the smallest return that gets like business? And that just feels less exciting to me. Yeah. I mean, I'll get a little bit philosophical on this. But like the thing that I've always, that's always bugged me about PE investing and public market investing is it just doesn't care about productivity really. I mean, it does to some degree, but I just like, you know, if you're in a large public company like I was, you realize that the public markets really care about predictability over innovation, for sure.
Starting point is 00:44:46 I mean, and so innovation is stifled so much. And in fact, it kind of causes large companies to protect themselves through kind of incumpancy and monopolistic practices and everything else just because they're not allowed to be aggressive on growth. So I feel like it's almost this negative force on progress and innovation. And I don't want to be too dramatic about it. But I just feel like, I'll bet if you draw a dollar at random that gets invested, you know, 90 cents of those of that dollar.
Starting point is 00:45:21 goes into like keeping incumbents alive and or, you know, predictability and not to growth. And I'm a huge believer in creative destruction, man. I'm like, fuck, man, get them out of the way. Let's invest in growth. And so I love the idea of venture as an asset class getting more efficient. And I love the idea of more money going into it
Starting point is 00:45:44 because the entire thesis is growth. You never invest on it. I don't. I mean, I'm sure you don't lay. I never invest on, on downside laws. I don't care, right? You only invest on upside.
Starting point is 00:45:55 And so to me, more dollars going into venture is only a positive for humanity. And again, I don't mind to sound too grandiose, but I do feel it's just a net positive. Well, so maybe on that front, like, I think it's a really interesting
Starting point is 00:46:08 perspective. I feel like a lot of the, more from a company perspective, than investor perspective, I feel like a lot of the most disruptive products were maybe non-consensus at the time. Totally.
Starting point is 00:46:17 Where you start with, you know, like, buttons on the iPhone or you got like Uber instead of taxi. It's a stranger driving. And those are the ones where I think if you're like, I'm going to build a taxi company, but it's like 20% more efficient, like probably can be a big business, but not quite the same level of disruption and growth as like, you know, you take a big bet and you might very high chance you're wrong. But if you're right, like you're going to be, you know, in a really good position. Yeah. And this is so critical. I'm glad you brought it out. I really believe the best companies themselves are
Starting point is 00:46:47 non-consensus to customers, I just think that the investing market is different than that. Like, they kind of understand that. And therefore, a comment on investors being consensus is very different than a product or being consensus. Does that make sense? Like, investor sentiment, I think, is actually much smarter than people think. Like, I think, like, the adage is VCs are dumb. Like, you know, they just,
Starting point is 00:47:17 you know, chase trends and all of that is true. But the reality is, as a group, we have identified a cohort of companies that are quite disruptive and invested in them and price them. And those, the companies themselves, tend to be actually quite non-consensus to the actual consumer or to the market.
Starting point is 00:47:36 I do want to build Martin, on your point because I think it's so interesting just to comment on how not everyone's incentives are totally aligned here, especially between sort of what's good for the individual and what's good for the ecosystem, And so in the sense that, yeah, you know, if you're an individual VC, you don't want more capital. Or if you're a founder, you don't want more founders in your space.
Starting point is 00:47:56 But to your point, like competition is, and so people were saying competition is bad. You don't want competition. But competition is what fuels incredible product. It's like the Darwinian process. Like this is how, you know, we get, you know, a bigger, you know, a bigger startup outcomes, startup ecosystem having more value, incredible products for customers and users. This is how we solve cancer, man. And more money goes into VC and we invest in companies and as opposed to investing in dying companies
Starting point is 00:48:22 his ability to retain their place. 100%. Like all the finance needs to change. And I think VCs are trying to straddle sort of, you know, LP incentives, founder incentives, their own incentives. And there is some overlap and there's magic there. But it's also just worth acknowledging that not every individual person is aligned and that's okay. I also do still very much believe in the barbell that there will be, you know, these big,
Starting point is 00:48:42 these big, you know, sort of massive funds that continue to win and invest in compound value and also these, you know, smaller focus, concentrated. The boutiques. Yeah, the boutiques who absolutely crush it. And we all work together. So, Leo, we're going to run the numbers. I was trying to get it done by now, but there's a lot to do. The numbers are fuzzy.
Starting point is 00:49:06 I just want to walk through what we're going to be looking at. and then maybe we'll schedule another podcast once the numbers are out to actually discuss it. So one of the numbers we're going to look at is if you look at, if you cohort companies into winners and not winners, call it, looking to whether on average for that company, the rounds were priced above or below median for other companies at a similar stage.
Starting point is 00:49:39 So this is going to, this will say whether is relatively high priced for winners or not. And then the other one, which is even more difficult to determine, is given actual returns, are the bulk of the returns from companies that were on average high priced or not? And I think these two numbers will give us a sense to whether the market is actually pretty smart about the value and the price.
Starting point is 00:50:08 You should not look for price arbitrage. you're looking for returns. Does that sound fair? Yeah, I think that sounds fair. I definitely agree with the not looking for a price average charge fees because I will say, for me personally, my best investments have been ones on average that took a while to raise their seed down.
Starting point is 00:50:26 A lot of people didn't get her or didn't like it. But on the flip side, some of the biggest misses are also the ones where it's like, oh, we liked everything except the price. And like, we thought it should be of 10 and some big fund gave them a term sheet at 20 and we passed. And then now it's a 10.
Starting point is 00:50:41 million dollar company. So maybe that was like, maybe that was not a good pass. Yeah. You know, you know, honestly, as we go through this conversation, it does strike me that, uh, I think a lot of this is honestly, it's just we have a bit different perspectives. Like I have to deploy a lot more money than you do, right? Like, I'm a series A investor who needs to basically cap out 30 to 40 million in order to have a significant position. And so I may have to be a bit more concerned about this than, than you do at the early stage. And I'm sure stage does color this conversation quite a bit. everything you're saying is totally sensible to me
Starting point is 00:51:14 so I don't think there's any disagreement. It was definitely something I was thinking about which is like I think if every check you write has to be at least $100 million, I think it's actually very hard to do non-consensus. Yeah. Because there's not a lot of companies that hit a stage where you invest $100 million,
Starting point is 00:51:27 but it's still not clear if it's a good company or not. And I think the earlier you go, if it's like $30 million checks 10, 5,1, I think you get more and more of a category where like you have the option and you could do either one, assuming you have access to the consensus opportunities.
Starting point is 00:51:40 Leo, I'm curious what, and you know, you guys have absolutely crushed it at Seed with some, you know, Robin Hood and Flexport, etc. But I'm curious what you think of Romton's sort of thesis that multistage has won Seed more or less in the last like 10 years. When you look at a lot of the big winners, they were done from multi-stage firms, you know, at Seed. I'm curious, one, if you agree with that sort of, you know, reading of history. And then two, if you think that's like, well, definitionally, you probably don't. It's like going forward. Hey, you guys. Yeah, exactly.
Starting point is 00:52:13 I actually thought this was an interview. What's the other question? Does, did multistage win seed or more seed than seed firms win seed? Obviously, there's, you know, first round, Sousa, you know, like lots of great seed firms. But when you look at the aggregate of, you know, of winners, do they have a multi-staged seed or not? That's what Rompton's argument is they had a multi-stage seed. And that's why he co-investes with multistages. its whole strategy, and then just past isn't the future necessarily.
Starting point is 00:52:42 What do we think about the future? So, I mean, I haven't looked at, I haven't rigorously analyzed like the $10 billion, $50 billion outcomes for over the course of Sousa, I think we've invested in like 10 or 12 unicorns roughly. Maybe like a third of those or quarter of those had a series A investor at Ced. And I'm not really counting. Like sometimes it was like, oh, the series A investor did a 50K check in the YC round or something.
Starting point is 00:53:07 I mean, actually, like, took half the round or more. So most of them still were seed only, where seed funds dominated the early round. And then they went to multistage very quickly after that. But so in my experience, like, I think there's a subset of seed where, I don't know if I'd say multi-stage funds won, but they have like a very strong advantage, right? Where if it is a founder that previously built a business that exited for $100 million
Starting point is 00:53:33 and they're like in the space that they know super well, that's going to get done at like 40 instead of 20 or 80 instead of 20 post. And chances are it's going to be a multi-stage and not like a boutique seat firm. So I think for that segment, like multi-stage hasn't won, but I think it's probably like the predominant, like the majority of the time they have a big leg up. I think for the other ones where it's plus obvious, it tends to be much more seed dominated or seed fund dominated. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:54:00 Thanks for listening to the A16Z podcast. If you enjoyed the episode, let us know by leaving a review at rate thispodcast.com slash A16Z. We've got more great conversations coming your way. See you next time. As a reminder, the content here is for informational purposes only. Should not be taken as legal business, tax, or investment advice, or be used to evaluate any investment or security and is not directed at any investors or potential investors in any A16Z fund. please note that A16Z and its affiliates may also maintain investments in the companies discussed in this podcast. For more details, including a link to our investments, please see A16Z.com forward slash disclosures.

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