Remove 2001 Remove Differentiation Remove Pre-Money Valuation Remove Venture Capital
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What to Expect When You're Expecting Venture Capital Returns

This is going to be BIG.

One of the first things I did when I joined the venture asset class as a lowly institutional LP analyst in 2001 was to build the VC fund cashflow model. You incorporate expected company returns, mortality rates, and fee structures to try to predict how a venture capital fund works from a cash in, cash out, and NAV standpoint.

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Time is the Enemy of All Deals

Both Sides of the Table

million at a $15 million pre-money valuation. We had people hearing through the grapevine that we were about to raise money and new investors started calling us to get in on the deal. Many companies that were in the process of raising money did not. It quickly became impossible to raise venture capital.