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Hii sorry if this is a dumb question, but youre the creator of Snap sans, right? (The sleep specialist and therapist?) Just making sure I don't credit the wrong person!
Yeah lmao and we don't use "snap!sans" here, he's a "swap!sans" but a therapist. He can also go under the category "therapist!swap"
"Snap" is his out-of-multiverse nickname
Lmao sorry, "snap!sans" sounds like another sans that could be from undersnap or snaptale tbh XD
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Snaptalent Brand Identity
Mockups used in this project ⚡ mockupcloud.com
Design by brainstormgd.com
#brand#branding#mockup#mockupcloud#free#stationery#identity#freebie#mockup cloud#template#showcase#print#psd#download#inspiration#portfolio#cards#envelope#graphics#assets#scene#paper#advertising#creative#business card#texture#letter#a4
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I had fun doing this comic -w- Basically what happened was Ink wanted to cook with Fell and Blue so he took out his phone and wanted to post it on SnapChat but theeeeen, it took a whole turn oof This was my friends Idea! Hope you guys like how it turned out!
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This is fricking amazing
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this took so fukcinf long ofmdkdld,,
idk if anyone else has done this but, uh,,,,
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SnapTale
A universe if every situation with Ink and Error (most likely others also) were shared by snaps like Snapchat.
Ideas were random long ago stories.
Art by our crew member @rainbowinkgamer
Snaptale was Inspired by this art by @zyancrea
Ink is owned by @comyet
Error owned by @loverofpiggies
To the people who inspire us! We all enjoy your art work and some of us are really big fans! We the RainbowSplotchCrew wish you all great days and fortune!
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Read snapTALES 1-149 here: https://www.wattpad.com/story/95332055-snaptales-snapchat-flash-fiction-featured Add me on Snapchat: https://snapchat.com/add/harrikitteridge
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The Lion King in a Snap
#Lion King#snapchat#snaptales#Simba#mufasa#rafiki#pumbaa#timon#hakunamatata#scar#cute#emoji#story#fun#stars#animation#disney#waltdisney#movie
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(AngelList Radio)
In the second episode of AngelList Radio, we interview Sumon Sadhu and learn how to improve as an angel investor and why he thinks “national empires” are good investment opportunities.
Sumon explains why he’s excited about investing in international startups like Mobius Motors (an African car company), Chaldal (a Bangladeshi delivery company), and ClearTax (a Indian electronic tax filing company).
Here are a few of my favorite lessons from this interview:
Now is the time to build big international startups. Billions of people are entering the middle class or coming online for the first time. New startups that serve their local communities can build important companies, especially in large countries like India and China. Sumon discusses examples like Alibaba, and talks in depth about his investments in ClearTax (India) and Chaldal (Bangladesh).
Academic research can help you predict technology trends. Academic publications show us what is becoming technically possible. If you combine that with new behaviours you see in the world, you can use research that is five years old to predict new trends.
Be a signal. As a contrarian, Sumon often has to convince other investors to consider companies that they normally wouldn’t. Fast forward to 31:00 to hear how Sumon did this with Chaldal.
Share your favorite part by leaving a comment on Soundcloud.
Learn more about Sumon’s investments on AngelList, follow him on Twitter and read his blog.
Read on for the full transcript of the interview.
Tyler Willis: Hi, everybody. I’m Tyler Willis. I am an entrepreneur and an angel investor. This year I’m your host for season one of “AngelList Radio.”
[0:17] In our first season we’re interviewing different investors. We’re learning how they invest and what’s made them successful.
[0:23] Today I’m joined by Sumon Sadhu, the co-founder of Snaptalent and the first employee of Quid, which had raised $49 million from top investors. Most recently he co-founded Muse.
[0:32] Sumon is also an angel investor. In talking with him, I’ve really enjoyed how defined, well reasoned, and unique his thought process is. In a business where it pays to be contrarian and right, this is usually a signal worth paying attention to. I’m excited to hear what he has to say today.
[0:47] Sumon, thanks for joining us.
Sumon Sadhu: [0:48] Thank you, Tyler, for having me.
Tyler: [0:50] Before we get started and dive into it, give us an overview of what your career has been like today. How do you find yourself here?
Sumon: [0:58] I’m originally from the UK, originally from Northwest London. I studied biochemistry and infectious disease, both at Oxford and in Imperial College, London, so by training, I’m a scientist.
[1:12] My original sort of motivation for going into that was, I was really fascinated with how nature works. Back in 2000, when the human genome emerged, was really a time where there was exponential knowledge being created in biology relative to other sciences, so I made a bet that that would be a good place to be.
[1:30] As any sort of good student does, I was originally really focused on research, and managed to sort of publish a paper during undergrad and sort of get myself over to an internship in France.
[1:41] It was there in France where a professor that I was working with said to me, “For a scientist, you talk about business in a really sort of interesting way, in that you seem to understand,” we’re talking about stocks. I was analyzing a company. The way that I was describing it to him was certainly different to how he, any previous student has described to him.
[2:01] I went back to Oxford, sort of final year of university, and ended up joining up a society called Oxford Entrepreneurs, which was the student entrepreneurship society at the time, and attempted to start a company.
[2:16] My first ever sort of venture was trying to build software to bring together…there’s a lot of latent knowledge that exists inside of a student population, so how do you turn that knowledge into something, so conceived of something that was sort of Yahoo Answers back in 2005, in the UK.
[2:34] That was really my first experience in trying to put together a project. Obviously, didn’t work, programmers walked out on me, ended up finding a bunch of people to come together, but what it left me was with this desire to sort of turn ideas into projects.
[2:52] That got me started practically in entrepreneurship, and then the summer between Oxford and going to grad school at Imperial College London
[3:00] At that point I didn’t know what I wanted to become but finally I got this glimpse of entrepreneurship because of the Student Entrepreneurship Society. I ended up…again, this was part of the telephone campaign, raising money and did pretty well. I was one of the top callers.
[3:17] Ended up swinging another internship over the summer where I was part of a team that was responsible for performing the first census study of venture capital spending in the UK. My job as an aspiring entrepreneur was to call up every single entrepreneur in the UK, and try and figure out how much they raised and what their companies did.
[3:38] I learned a lot about how to analyze venture back in that summer between university and grad school. The two strands of analysis, as well as practical entrepreneurship, are two things which have combined over time to lead to investing.
[3:54] I went to London. I went to Imperial College London. My goal there was not to be a PhD student. It was actually, really, to spin out the society that was in Oxford to Imperial College London.
[4:09] I attempted that, then I had a really massive setback. I paralyzed my right arm. That was a pretty critical injury. For six months I had to recover from that. What happened was that I was either going to start the society or I was going to be considered a failure.
[4:26] My friend Bob, who earlier had gone to Silicon Valley. He was headhunted by Max Levchin. He was the first employee of Yelp. He wrote me an email, actually. That email was pretty interesting. It said, “If you don’t make this thing real then you’re going to be considered someone who talks, who doesn’t act. You’re going to leave yourself all these splendid starts.”
[4:46] After this injury, I was determined to make this happen. I ended up starting Imperial Entrepreneurs, which was a spinout of Oxford Entrepreneurs at Imperial College London. Imperial College London at the time, 2005-2006, didn’t really have a culture of entrepreneurship. The goal was this is the MIT of Europe. How can we build really great companies out of here?
[5:09] Through that initiative was really great to meet some entrepreneurs who had gone to Imperial. I had to raise money for the student society. I ended up pitching Index for money, for £1,000. Can you give me a £1,000 to start the society?
[5:26] Got some money from Michael Birch, who was an Imperial alum at the time who started Bebo, is in Silicon Valley. Then also at the time I met Saul Klein who was just leaving Video Island and starting up as a partner at Index.
[5:42] When meeting Saul and pitching him this vision for a student society and sparking entrepreneurship in Europe, he said to me, “Hey, there’s an initiative that I’m starting up which your counsel might be very useful for.”
[5:55] That was Seedcamp. Here I was, 22 years old in London, organizing these events, bringing together entrepreneurs from outside and the student population, and I ended up getting to know a lot of the European venture capital community.
[6:12] At that time, Imperial Entrepreneurs was my startup, and then I got to sit on the advisory board of Seedcamp, help to start that. When Seedcamp needed space to start up, we used our student connections to get some space at Imperial, and managed to help build their first website with some of my later co-founders in the startup, and that was a really great experience.
[6:37] The connection that’s interesting is being on the Seedcamp website actually alerted another major incubator at the time, which was Y Combinator. Obviously my aspiration was not really to be a PhD student, so I was getting by, doing enough work, but at the same time, leaving the lab to go do Seedcamp stuff or do an interview at the BBC about entrepreneurship in Europe.
[7:02] Came to San Francisco over a summer with a couple of friends, and managed to get an email in my inbox from Paul Graham, of all people. He’d funded a few friends of mine from the UK, and he said to me, “Hey, we were looking for founders that were promising, and your name appeared familiar. I recognized you from the Seedcamp website. Would you consider pitching me in California?”
[7:28] That email was the opportunity of a lifetime. With a couple of friends, I ended up putting together a prototype over the summer, and we were accepted early, during the summer of ‘07. I went straight back to the UK, quit the PhD, and that started the entrepreneurial journey into Y Combinator.
[7:52] Until that point, there had been a bunch of key inflection points, and then I came to the Valley in 2007. We were staying in the Y-scraper, which obviously was the cheapest place to rent at the time in North Beach. It was great.
[8:11] Some of the first people I met in San Francisco were the founders of Scribd, the founders of Weebly, the founders of Dropbox. They were all in that building.
Tyler: [8:20] I’d not heard that before, “The Y-scraper.” Is this where all the early Y Combinator founders were renting?
Sumon: [8:24] Yeah. The reason why it was quite popular is because it was one of the places where if you didn’t have a credit history, you didn’t have any kind of financial backing, it was somewhere that you could rent that was fully furnished, month to month, and also at the time, it happened to be that a few other people were there, and so the secret was out.
[8:45] It wasn’t so popular that everyone was going to do it, and really for us, we had no option. I was a PhD student. I wasn’t very good at working for other people. I’d always had this aspiration of turning projects that I thought of into companies, and so this one opportunity to come out to California and be funded was a great one.
[9:10] We managed to bridge ourselves between getting accepted into Y Combinator. Back then, funding was you got around $17,000. It was me, Tim, Jamie. Jamie was from the states, so he didn’t have to go back and forth, but me and Tim had to fly back and forth. Just before YC, he brought on a fourth guy called Brad, from MIT. We met on “Hacker News.”
[9:37] We were four guys in Y Combinator in the winter of '08, and on $17K, so we had to make it last, and we had to make money. What happened was that the idea we applied with was not the idea that we executed on. We’d been working a lot on understanding student employment, and we also reasoned that the way that students behaved online were very different to how ordinary consumers were behaving online.
[10:06] The base idea behind Snap Talent, which is the company I started in winter '08, was, “How do you distribute recruitment advertising to the sites that people already spend their time, not on job sites?”
[10:19] We conceived a distributed recruitment ad network. we changed the formats of those ads from text to rich media. We built novel targeting mechanisms, so if you were coming from a Google IP address, how could I show you an ad that said, “Leave Google. Join Microsoft”?
[10:36] That was the basis of what Snap Talent was. During YC, we signed up 18 companies. We made about $30,000 inside of Y Combinator, and ended up raising $1.5 million after YC, and we really needed to raise that money, because we were running off of a cliff, flights back and forth from the UK.
[10:57] That was my first venture, and within…it truly did accelerate our progress, because four months before that, we were just students in the UK, and five months later, we’d come out with a company that had money and actually had brand-name investors. It was fortunate to work with a bunch of really great investors back then.
[11:19] We were in Zachary’s first fund. We raised money from early Googlers like Andrea Zurek and Aiden Sankkt, Paul Buchheit. We raised money from Index, at the time, and Jeff Clavier was also an investor in the company, and Saul, who probably said Matt through the course of this innovation work, back in the UK, and came to back Snap Talent.
[11:45] We put together a really all-star set of investors around the company, and so Snap Talent was an interesting experience, because it didn’t go right. I managed to learn a bunch of lessons from Snap Talent. One is of market timing. First of all, what we were conceiving was incredibly future-looking relative to the state of the market. It also happened to be prior to the recession.
[12:14] Also, I think another thing is we probably made every entrepreneurial mistake in the book. We did very well in raising money. We then had to go straight back to the UK, because of visas, and so keeping momentum of the company up post funding was challenging.
[12:30] The second thing is, internally, while doing YC, we were pretty together. There were certainly moments in the company where we weren’t, and I think learnt a lot about who you work with, why you work with them, and really, the way that you know your cofounders is in crisis, not in actual, in glory.
[12:51] The short lesson was, we built four or five different products inside of Snap Talent. It wasn’t a very long period, but in a year and a half, superstar backers get impatient. We ended up with a board ultimatum, which was, “Shut down the company or get viral,” which is a very incredible request, if you consider it.
[13:13] We had over a million dollars, $1.5 million in the bank, and what we decided, instead of pivoting again, was to cut our losses and return the money back to investors. That was a moment of crisis, a very difficult decision as a CEO to go do that to your first company. That led to the next chapter, looking for the next thing.
Tyler: [13:41] Was it right after that that you joined Quid, or was there some space in between?
Sumon: [13:46] I pretty much jumped in as soon as I really to put my head down, and get back into a project, whether it’s my project or a friend’s project, and it happened to be that Bob and I were really close. We’d always advised each other on each other’s projects, and the two things that they were doing at the time were fascinating to me.
[14:04] One, because they were analyzing networks of information and trying to pull out insights, and two, they were doing that for the understanding of the venture-backed ecosystem, and I’d done both of those things. I’d both looked at networks as a bio-informatician, and I was able to analyze. I had learned the fundamentals of analyzing venture capital.
[14:25] A network of venture-backed companies was probably foreign to someone who didn’t understand venture capital and some of the trends that you could pull out from that data, and so we built a platform that effectively reduced the number of hours that humans had to both read as well as connect ideas, and ultimately that led to a system that could answer many, many valuable questions, leading to the automation of knowledge and knowledge industries.
[14:55] A lot of the problems that Quid software solves is where the question that you are asking does not have a concrete end answer, so, “What is the future of the electric car? What is the state of technology in China? What are the ways in which cloud computing will completely impact the enterprise?”
[15:17] It was through both building that system to look at data and understand connections from natural language as well as apply that in industry, and then eventually go and scale the application of that across many, many different clients. We both built an impressive system that actually, today, we do many secret projects that power many important decisions, as well as I built a massive knowledge base of understanding technology from first principles.
Tyler: [15:45] How do you, Sumon…? Walk me through one of those areas, maybe the electric car, or cloud computing, or something like that. When you’re setting your mind towards analyzing a trend, how do you discover the trend, and then what’s the next step from there?
Sumon: [15:57] You can look at technology trends from a set of fundamentals. One thing is first, what are the enabling waves that come together in order to make new things possible? Those technology waves could be in the case of the electric car, could be the fact that batteries are becoming smaller and more powerful.
[16:18] In the case, from a macro perspective, you’re looking at things like reducing our dependence on fossil fuels, because there’s immense pressure on natural reserves. For all technology possibilities, it comes from, initially, technology trends that are four to five years out of research, which can come together to enable new possibilities.
[16:45] Then you’re looking for needs which exist in the world, which intersect with that. so in the case of transportation, it could be that the miniaturization of batteries and the increasing power density of those batteries enable other forms of transportation beyond large vehicles, and it could be that smaller vehicles like the boosted Ford are new forms of transportation that fit into novel needs. Urbanization creates a need for transportation that lives alongside you.
[17:20] You see all sorts…it’s the intersection between societal behavioral change, because ultimately, if you want to build a technology, it’s got to be used by a lot of people, and technology possibility. Those two things coming together is what creates the opportunity for timing as well as possibility.
[17:36] You can anticipate a lot of those things by watching those things very closely.
Tyler: [17:41] Give me some specifics there, of when you’re watching very closely. Where are you looking for sources of data that you’re starting to pull out. Are you following specific blogs or information sources?
Sumon: [17:51] If you’re trying to understand technology from first principles, you really do have to understand research, and so what’s interesting is a lot of great ideas are already described in literature. There’s no surprises in trying to understand the next big thing to be commercialized, because it’s already been described probably 10, 20 years ago.
[18:14] Naturally, there’s a big treasure trove of information in academic papers in understanding any fundamental technology trend. For example, if you, as a biochemist, have been following synthetic biology since it’s inception – it’s something I wanted to do as an undergraduate, and obviously, you see the iGEM competition and how it arises.
[18:37] It wasn’t around when I finished my studies, but 10 years later, in 2010, you start looking into this stuff, and you see the understanding of the space increase.
[18:49] We have funds-submit enabling technologies. We can read DNA. We can start to write DNA. We can start to understand that we have a bunch more experiments as to how you can recompose those elements to bring novel changes to cells. You could start to see some of it bubble up in 2010, 2011. I actually crashed a synthetic biology conference, Synberc, in Berkley, pretending I was an on-leave PhD student.
[19:16] You can start to see a lot of these big ideas bubble up in academia, being very well described, where the application’s very well described.
Tyler: [19:25] Your thesis is that that often takes several years before the commercial application. You’ll start seeing it in the research and in the academic pursuits?
Sumon: [19:34] Yeah, you’ll see the really crazy ideas be…anything which was the vogue of research, probably four or five years ago, is something which should be commercialized today, and so you should quite heavily looking at those ideas, those algorithms, those opportunities, as something that is commercializable today, because there will be follow-up worked to make them robust.
[20:00] Then there’s the difference between server…the way that I think about new ideas is several fold, and this is inspired by John Maeda, who used to be a professor of design at RISD, and later on joined Kleiner Perkins. He says innovation comes from the thrust of four different disciplines – art, which questions, and questions without needing answers. You just question.
[20:27] The second thing is science, which obviously provides a foundation for possibility, engineering, which turns possibility into reality, and then sales and marketing, which ultimately drives things which become possible to things which become usable, and then mass market.
[20:46] Whenever you look at new ideas, there’s the artistic phase, which is, “This is crazy, and it has no purpose, but it’s worth asking the question why it doesn’t exist.” Then, as you go through thinking about new ideas, whether it’s from the perspective of inventing new ideas or from the perspective of investing in new ideas and assessing where we are along those things, you can put on a different hat and create a different lens for what you’re looking for.
Tyler: [21:16] Let’s step back really quickly. When you think about yourself as an investor, what kind of investor are you? It sounds like you’re obviously very data-driven and very analytical. You’re looking at particular spaces.
[21:28] How do you think of yourself in the universe of other angel investors? What makes you unique, what makes you different, and where are you aligned with a stereotype if there is one?
Sumon: [21:37] A lot of my influences in investing come from very classic things. I’m very influenced by the way that the Medici family in the Renaissance were able to cultivate a set of talent in order to push forward. One is, it’s very people-centric, in terms of I believe that if you can align with people’s fundamental motivations to do something, and you can enable them, then you empower them to create new things.
[22:14] Capital drives the permission to do new things, and so that’s one place, is in influencing people who typically have strong aspirations to invest, to be psychologically confident to make it to the next level.
[22:29] On the other end, it’s combining that with a very rational understanding of market timing, and so from that, the influences are really sort of the classic investing mode to Don Valentine at Sequoia. Market timing is everything, the size of the market, the confluence of factors that drive the market is absolutely everything.
[22:52] When you can combine both, when you can align the psychology of people’s desires to be great, and you can cultivate that together with aligning with market timing, you get great investments.
[23:04] In terms of where I fit into the spectrum of angel investors, I’m investing in things that are timeless, from a thematic perspective, because when you eliminate time, you end up in thinking about things in a very different way. You don’t follow trends.
[23:21] I’m very passionate about investing in for societal needs, and this drives both the projects I am involved with as well as the ones that I invest in, and I don’t look at the two things as being separate. There are some things that I can do myself in terms of companies that I could start, and there’s some things where I should be supporting other individuals, because I believe passionately in those ideals.
[23:42] Those four things that I believe in is – and these are fundamental societal needs that should exist for a very long time, are one, we should make economies more efficient, whether they’re physical or digital economies. We should create economies that create new jobs, so changing the efficiency of economies is one big thing.
[24:04] The second big thing that I’m investing in is the extension of human life span, whether it’s direct or indirect, sort of enablers. I can talk about examples of companies in these themes as well.
[24:15] The third thing is amplification of human intelligence. We live in a complex world. We seek to understand that world in order to make decisions for our survival, for our survival on this planet, for our survival on other planets. We need to extend the capabilities of the human mind to address that complexity.
[24:35] Then the fourth thing that I believe in is this throwback to empires. We’ve sort of forgotten about empiric thinking, and investing in entrepreneurs that want to build empires, particularly national empires, is something I’m pretty passionate about, because those companies can attract and monopolize talent and their local markets, and really build something empiric. The ambition that those entrepreneurs have is fascinating.
Tyler: [25:00] I want to talk about each of those separately, but the kind of building an empire, especially building a national empire piece is particularly interesting because it’s very unique. I don’t think a lot of people think about that today.
[25:11] You see some of these empires being built. The ones in China have gotten some attention recently. What are the other areas where you think national empires can be built? What are you evaluating when you’re looking for a potential national empire?
Sumon: [25:23] Obviously, the first thing is there could be a massive national market, or it could be a massive market where a national focus gives you real emphasis. For example, one of my investments is a company called ClearTax. ClearTax is essentially building the Intuit of India, and every single year, people do their e-filings through ClearTax.
[25:54] This year should be around three percent of e-filings in India go through ClearTax. Next year, 10 percent, and this is an example of an opportunity where an economy is going through a transition from having nothing to going digital. That is an opportunity in the history of that country for a company to enter and take advantage of that shift, but the fact that it’s starting to build a transactional relationship with so many Indians, over a very long period of time, leads to many other opportunities to digitize, to change the behavior of those companies.
[26:28] That’s an example of this historical shift where, for the first time, you can do x, and it seems very obvious to everyone sitting in the US or in the UK, but you get a chance to take that thing and have it become something completely different over time. That’s very exciting.
Tyler: [26:48] There’s a saying that I’ve heard from another investor that I’ve stolen for myself, which is ideally you find somebody where their initial market is very obviously massive, and then there’s optionality towards much larger markets after that.
[27:04] There’s a clear path to a billion dollars, but then if you’re really looking to find the company that’s a $10, $50, $100, multi-$100 billion company, they’re going to have to venture out of their core business at some point, and so you’re looking for somebody who has both a clear initial business as well as then great future optionality.
[27:23] Is that a fair way to say that a lot of these companies that you’re looking at, because they have a monopoly focus internal to one country, they have a lot of optionality to go elsewhere in that country?
Sumon: [27:34] That’s fair to say that, but what’s also true about these entrepreneurs is, because they’re looking at the problem for the first time, they inherently don’t have any limitations to their thinking. They’re not checking themselves because there’s competition left and right, and they’re veering in one direction. It just means that they’re very free about how they’re thinking about things, and that’s a very different way of thinking about an opportunity.
[27:59] When there’s nothing, and you’re the only guy that can get capital to address that opportunity, you can do anything. Then the choice becomes what do you do, and why do you do that? Those are the choices that I help those entrepreneurs make, and I remind them. It’s like we often check ourselves in the US, because there’s someone doing something on the left, and someone doing something on the right.
[28:19] It’s very strange to find yourself in a place where no one’s doing anything, where if you do it, everyone will follow you, and everyone will work for you. That’s kind of an interesting opportunity that many of these emerging markets entrepreneurs have. From a fundamentals perspective, they’re very large opportunities, so we see that as a chance to make a company worth $1 billion, but there’s also a chance to make a company worth $100 billion.They’re not focused on the financial outcome. They’re focused on making something for their country. They’re focused on, for example, creating a type of work that their country doesn’t have, and also, they have no limitations. Often, the conversations with these guys are very crazy.
[29:02] For example, my investment in Chaldal, which is the Amazon of Bangladesh, their motivation for starting that company was a very cheeky remark, which is like, “There’s hundreds of millions of people with money. How do we take it?” You wouldn’t make that statement if you were starting an e-commerce company based out of New York.
[29:24] It would be much more reserved, and so, I think there’s just a different mindset, which if you can cultivate and tune that ambition in those entrepreneurs, they really end up going for something incredible.
Tyler: [29:35] One of the first things we, basically the way we met, was around this Chaldal investment. Is it OK if we tell the story there? Is that…?
Sumon: [29:42] Yeah.
Tyler: [29:45] You organized an angel list fund to invest your XY Combinator founder to invest in Y Combinator startups for that particular batch, and I thought this was a couple of things I wanted to dive into. Chaldal, but I also want to talk about the process used for evaluating companies.
[30:02] One of the things that actually made my ears perk up was like, “Oh, I want to know that guy, and I want to learn more about how he sees the world and what he’s going,” is the fact that you didn’t take the safe route. You didn’t raise a bunch of money to deploy into a batch of 80 or 90 companies, and then really diversify. You didn’t go for 15 investments or 20 investments.
[30:22] You put the bulk of it into one company, into Chaldal. Tell me a little bit about how you made that decision, because obviously diversification is widely regarded as, “Oh, it’s the safe strategy, and it’s what everyone should do.” Why did you buck that trend?
Sumon: [30:37] I do believe in an all winners strategy, and in evaluating the Y Combinator batch, I did say to myself…I’m interested in returns, and I’m interested in disproportionate returns, and ultimately, that’s how you get remembered as an investor. That’s how you make money for your LPs.
[31:00] My focus there was simply the thinking around, “This company has a national economy to dominate, and if we’re able to appropriately capitalize this company, I give enough of a signal to other investors, then they will disproportionately capitalize in this funding round relative to their competitors, therefore giving them a significant advantage in doing this.”
[31:26] That doesn’t necessitate a $25K investment. That involves being the lead signal for the round. Obviously, it wasn’t a decision that was made in a day, but it was fairly quick, from meeting the entrepreneur to doing several days of diligence, really trying to understand the national opportunity, the risks, the psychology of the entrepreneur.
[31:53] It felt like supporting this entrepreneur…and the other thing about the company is, the company was making significant money on a monthly, recurring basis, so objectively, you’re investing in something that returns your capital in cash.
[32:17] Unobjectively, you’re investing with the upside of if you owned a piece of a company that had…Bangladesh is the eighth largest country in the world, and was the number one transactional commerce provider. What else gets built off of that platform? That was the upside, and so I felt that it was a better way of turning $400 into $40 million, $50 million, than other bets.
Tyler: [32:47] You talk about three things there, in those days of diligence. You’re analyzing the opportunity, the risks, and then the entrepreneurs’ psychology. Let’s walk through to those. How do you evaluate an opportunity? What are the things you look for in upside potential? What are some of the questions you ask, or things, your criteria you look for?
Sumon: [33:05] Proxy dollars don’t really go away. Even in the most obscure opportunities, there’s always some proxy spend, that there’s always dollars for displacement. In the case of Chaldal, there is a share of wallet of the Bangladeshi middle class, and that money is going to be spent in some way or another, so there’s proxy dollars at stake.
[33:31] The other thing is that a lot of the risks have been taken out as to whether this company was one that could take money from those individuals. They had already built a transactional relationship which was growing at a significant rate per week.
[33:47] Just to get some of these things off the ground is often difficult. You’ve got to master the logistics, you’ve got to master marketing. You’ve got to actually brand the thing. You’ve got to get it out there. They were on a path where they could be profitable by the end of the year, and so a lot of that risk had been taken out.
[34:02] The third thing is, is the entrepreneur crazy, because he could just stop at being an e-commerce business, and it happened to be that we’re seeing from Chaldal. There’s somewhat an interesting aspect of the psychology of the entrepreneur in that he was a former colleague of Parker and Laks at Zenefits. They’d all come out of SigFig, which is a really interesting company in that it’s created founders that have gone on to do really great things.
[34:28] In his peer group of friends, his immediate influences are to build something massive, because they feel…there was a psychological aspect where one, this was a guy that wasn’t normal. He was slightly crazy. Two, he was in a peer group of founders that were building big things, and he clearly wanted to do that, and he didn’t want to stop.
[34:53] Their original motivation for building that company is to build the Internet company of Bangladesh so that they could create the types of opportunities that they experienced in Silicon Valley in their home country, and that was a better way to do economic development than just throw money at things. That felt like someone who could go a long way.
Tyler: [35:12] You said there a thing that I think was really critical, which is slightly crazy, and you said that as a good thing, where I think a lot of people would say, “Well, is the entrepreneur crazy? If so, I don’t want to back that person.” You actually look for that as a signal. What are you looking for in the right type of crazy?
Sumon: [35:29] It’s really a scale of ambition. Scale of ambition means talking about something that takes many steps to execute, but talking about it in a very confident way. If you’re willing to entertain the possibilities that will take 20, 30, 40 steps of execution, then you’re, as far as I’m concerned, the right level of ambition, because we can figure out how to descope it, how to make it more tractable, and ultimately most entrepreneurs do that.
[36:01] One of the differences is the scale at which people talk about their ideas. There’s some absolute thing that’s really driving them, and most people will check their ambition. Checking your ambition is a sign of not being as determined or as crazy as you’d like. I like those entrepreneurs, because I can spur them to think at that level.
[36:23] That’s another reason why people are interested in working with me, is because that’s the level that I like to participate in in companies.
Tyler: [36:32] I want to take you back to the early days, let’s say your first investment that you made. When was that, and were you at Snap Talent at the time? Were you at Quid? Were you already past that?
Sumon: [36:43] I was at Quid. It was a year or two before I left. It was 2013, 2014.
Tyler: [36:55] What was that company?
Sumon: [36:56] Zesty.
Tyler: [36:57] Tell me a little bit about Zesty. They do food delivery, right?
Sumon: [37:00] They do food delivery. The original reason for investing…I was actually very nervous in making that investment. I was very nervous in making that investment, because it involved one factor, which is how determined was David Langer, who was a friend that I know from Oxford University, in building that business?
[37:21] He had previously started a company in the UK, which he was not so happy with the success of, and so this was his chance. He’d finally made it to Silicon Valley. This was his chance to do something big, but at the time, the configuration of the business was not the one that you see today.
[37:40] At the time, the idea was very simple. I was a user of their app, and as well as a passionate, enthusiastic supporter of David, and he wanted some help in sequencing his round. This was the first round of the company, very close to the friends and family round, and they needed more capital.
[38:00] One of the things that I was obviously very good at is in understanding how do you position a pitch, and then going and making upstream introductions.
[38:09] I had been doing that for a little while. I was walking out of the room, having helped him put together a spreadsheet of upstream investors, and it just occurred to me that maybe I should really just do something here myself instead of talking about it. It was that very nervous first step in making that investment.
Tyler: [38:28] Did you have money set aside at that point? Did you have a thesis set aside, or was this really just kind of a, “Hey, there feels like something here, and I can afford to take a risk”?
Sumon: [38:37] I had actually seen the connection between nutrition and life extension, and so the fact is that he was really focused on delivering healthy food, and taking a swath of all of the possible meals that one could order from restaurant delivery services. They weren’t optimizing for what is healthy, and my fascination with that was that if you could deliver that at scale, you’d actually be impacting the nutrition of a lot of people, and that would have some meaningful impact on lifespan.
[39:07] That was really the thesis, like, “You’re the anti-McDonald’s, and you’re impacting.” It was an irrational connection of things which I was passionate about that led me to say, “No, this is how you should pitch it. This is the big idea, and this is what I believe in.” I psyched myself up to invest. I’d put aside some money for investing, whether it was in public equities, but didn’t necessarily know that that would be how I would get into angel investing.
Tyler: [39:37] You had set aside some money for investing, but it wasn’t clear to you yet that that would be private tech companies?
Sumon: [39:42] Once you make that first investment, and you start building that inductive feel for how to do it, it’s very scary, and I was certainly scared. I was like, “Well, I’m probably going to lose all of this money.” Fortunately, he pulled off a $17 million Series B, Series A with Index and Founders Fund recently, again building on that thesis of extending human lifespan through food.
[40:11] You could tell he would get that. Food is a big business, so a lot of space.
Tyler: [40:17] Do you think about, once you had made that first investment, were you committed to building a portfolio? Do you think about building a portfolio as a way of mitigating risk? How do you think of constructing where you invest?
Sumon: [40:31] I actually made two, three other investments in quick succession after I had made that investment, and the reason was, again, it gave me conviction to back some of the things I believe. When I look at investing – we talked about the four things before – it’s like, “Can we extend human lifespan? Can we expand the efficiency of economies? Can we amplify human intelligence? Can we support these national monopolies?”
[41:03] I believe them regardless of whether I’m investing or founding companies, and so it was more that I had belief in those areas, and as a consequence, I was able to make investments that fit those areas. Another investment was Benchling. Benchling at the time no one wanted to back, because they didn’t believe that cloud software for life sciences was a market.
[41:25] Even people in the industry had said, “It’s not a market,” but as a scientist, as someone who had said, “There’s a lot of people creating a lot of GDP in life sciences. If you can change the efficiency of that, that’s a really valuable thing that you could to do the world. What would happen if you changed the efficiency by one percent, two percent, three percent?” That’s the big idea. I believed in that idea, and so I backed them to pursue that.
[41:48] These are all about the founders. The founders are incredibly determined.
Tyler: [41:52] Do you think about downstream effects? Do you look at something and say, “Well, shoot, I’m investing early, and I don’t know that there’s going to be a lot of people behind me,” especially in the case of a Benchling, where it’s not clear that a Series A investor would look and say, “Oh, there’s a market there. I should bet.”
[42:09] Are you considering that before you make an investment, or are you trying to prove that by your investment?
Sumon: [42:14] In the case of Benchling, there’s proxy dollars. A significant portion of GDP comes from life science industry, so there’s actual proxy dollars. Those companies do make money, and so have money, but they don’t buy software, because no one had built the relevant software for them to buy.
[42:31] By proxy, I am investing in fundamentals – markets, market timing, the psychology of the entrepreneur, as well as my belief in when those things will intersect correctly. I’m very independent in making those decisions, and quite often, my investment is a signal for others to come in and validate that. Often the thing that I do with entrepreneurs, I change their deck, and I work with them to re-architect how they tell their story.
Tyler: [43:01] Is it fair to say that part of your value-add is then helping them tell that story and show that signal, show the path for the Series A or Series B investor who may be lagging behind?
Sumon: [43:10] Yeah, it’s giving them conviction or early conviction where maybe others don’t give them conviction, and I think once the entrepreneur is sufficiently determined, then that’s wind in their sails. That initial set of belief is really valuable.
Tyler: [43:26] You did three or four investments in fairly rapid succession. Was that too fast, too slow? If you had to go back and do it again, would you have changed anything?
Sumon: [43:35] You sort of invest in waves. You first have to put out a set of bets, like, “What do you believe in?”, because then you don’t have enough inductive experience. You don’t know what a good first meeting feels like. You don’t know what a good set of co-founders feels like. You don’t know what a mistake feels like. You have no range of experience to draw from. You have to pay for that.
[43:57] It’s like college tuition. You’re paying for that. You’re going to pay for that regardless. Maybe if you make money from those companies, that’s fantastic, and that shows some strong conviction, but really at that point, it’s like you’re putting down your college tuition and it’s going to cost you.
[44:14] For me it was really important to make a set of investments, and then to sit back and evaluate before making another set of investments.
Tyler: [44:22] You did three or four, and then how long was the break that you gave after that?
Sumon: [44:26] Finally, what happens is that as soon as some of those companies do well, and your a value add to them, obviously more people approach you. I did my first six investments reasonably quickly, within a year of going, and then I’ve slowed down since then, and really focused on…my pace is actually two to three a year. That’s my actual pace. I’m on a slowdown with that.
Tyler: [45:03] I want to put you in the hot seat of giving advice to somebody listening here. We’ll end up with, obviously, lots of different types of people listening to the podcast, but I have in mind two archetypes of people that are probably listening to this, and they’re right on the cusp of making a decision of whether they should become active angel investors or not.
[45:24] One example of that might be somebody who’s an insider, who’s steeped in technology already, but is figuring out whether they want to risk capital and become an investor. The second archetype is somebody who’s maybe flush with capital, but is unfamiliar with technology. I want to run through each of those with you and get a sense for what your advice would be.
[45:45] For the person who’s an insider, let’s call them an x founder. Maybe they have sold their first company, maybe they have gotten some secondary liquidity, and so they’ve got some capital that they can put to work here.
[45:56] If one of your friends who’s in that scenario called you up and said, “Hey, I’m wondering whether I should or should not be an angel investor,” what are the first things you ask them or direct them towards looking at to help make that decision?
Sumon: [46:08] A lot of good experiences with investing in my life have come because of benevolence. You’re not investing because of your capital, because there’s no amount of capital that could provide value. There are people with way more capital than you, and there are people with less capital but maybe more value add.
[46:28] The first thing is, can you practically make a difference in this entrepreneur’s life, whether it’s through giving them perspective, whether it’s giving them experience, whether it’s protecting them from thinking about things in the wrong way, whether it’s protecting them from distraction.
[46:43] I use “Protection” as a really important word, because a lot of the best investors don’t distract. They’re available in the right place, and they’re incredibly benevolent, and eventually karma pays you back. All of the experiences I’ve had that are positive from Y Combinator onwards have been about benevolence.
[47:02] When you’re making a decision about whether you’re investing in something, if it’s a good investment, typically it will follow a very ambitious person who, often, that’s the only constant that you’re investing in. The idea will change, how they execute it will change, their mind will change about how they do it.
[47:19] But if they’re intention and projection of that intention is to do something big – it’s the right time in their life to really commit to something, and you can be benevolent to help them in some way, then do it, because that is your only constant.
[47:33] If you are evaluating on external circumstances like whether the market’s there or not, whether you believe in this team, whether there’s competition, then you’re evaluating it in the wrong way. Obviously, those factors matter, but very much so in 5 years’ time, in 10 years’ time, as companies get going, the competitors won’t be around, because the determination of that person, the magnitude of their ambition, is going to be the thing that drives them to do something.
[48:01] If you have a connection to that person, if you can help them in a benevolent way, if you can bring them some value, whether it’s protecting them from distraction, or giving them advice at the right stage, then invest, but otherwise, stay out of that.
Tyler: [48:14] I want to, maybe even a little bit more tactically than that, assume that there’s plenty of ways to add value, as a friend, as an advisor, as an investor. If you’re on that fence of deciding, “Should I start writing angel investment checks?”, is there a certain number of companies you have to commit to?
[48:30] Let’s take the tuition example, earlier. How much of a tuition should you expect to pay before you actually have learned the business or understand whether it’s for you or not?
Sumon: [48:39] I think you’re going to spend $50,000 to $100,000 in tuition.
Tyler: [48:45] Those initial investments are $10K, $25K? Is that a rough assessment?
Sumon: [48:50] You should start small and slowly build up, as you build conviction behind your investments. I started with $5K investments to build, and then later on, I went back to those companies and put in more money as I had more conviction. I think that you want to feel like you can lose it. You’re slightly scared of losing this money, but you want to feel like it’s meaningful to you.
[49:13] If you want to make money long term – and I haven’t had any exits, so I obviously can’t talk to that, but a lot of up rounds in the portfolio. I think you should always start small, and you should deploy widely. Like I said, you’re going to pay tuition on your first 5 to 10 investments.
Tyler: [49:36] To the point of tuition, that you were saying earlier, the person who’s coming in who maybe kind of learning tech may also have to pay a larger tuition cost. They’re starting to learn what makes a good investment, what makes a good CEO, what makes a good leader, what makes a good founding team, for example, especially around tech, where they may not be used to evaluating technical risk.
[49:59] Do you see people learning that fairly quickly, or should somebody who’s coming in totally green to set aside a little bit more capital?
Sumon: [50:07] Setting aside capital, and there’s also learning from history. A lot of things that I’ve looked at have been historical investments. The thesis around investing internationally came from looking at Celtel, for example, was a deal that Bessemer did. It was a infrastructure company focused on telecomms in Africa, and if you would invested in that, you would have generated 200x return on your capital.
[50:35] Alibaba was a national monopoly. I think that you can learn a lot from history, and learn a lot by historically understanding the decisions that people have made, but yeah, also I think inductive experience like having that first meeting, doing that first check, getting in a round with other people, feeling what that’s like, you only get that from doing it.
Tyler: [50:57] So you think really the first few are important for building reputation, for building experience, network? What are those things that are interesting to you?
Sumon: [51:04] It’s building a track record of service to entrepreneurs, because those entrepreneurs will talk. When you want to do your third deal or your fourth deal, the first guy that you backed that’s really happy with you will give you a reference to get into that deal, and that’s the stuff that matters, that later on compounds.
[51:21] Focusing on having a really good experience for the entrepreneurs that you back initially, and then using that to compound your involvement, rather than having a very light touch involvement. Your name on the CAP table, it doesn’t matter. You have no relationship that you can draw on to gain leverage from later on.
Tyler: [51:40] I want to switch gears a little bit for the other type of investor, the other archetype. The person who is…perhaps they’re coming from real estate, or they’re coming from financial services, or something separately, where they have a lot of capital. They may be users of technology. They may deeply understand technology, but they’re not steeped in the business. They haven’t been operating a company, or investing in tech companies.
[52:02] What would be your advice to that person who’s sitting on the sidelines and looking at, “Hey, maybe I do want to invest in technology, but I don’t have a clear, deep, competitive advantage across folks that have been operating?”
Sumon: [52:16] That’s two things to think about. That one is maybe there is an angle that you have that is valuable. If you’ve been in real estate, maybe there’s some advantage you can provide beyond capital, or if you’ve been in finance, there’s some rigor that you can add, but for the most part, if you’re completely new to the business, then I think find ways of being involved that are helpful, whether it’s empowering others to invest on your behalf, whether it’s…
[52:48] Again, it comes down to being helpful. If there’s a situation where you have an opportunity to invest, think about how you can be helpful. Quite often, writing a big check and getting an entrepreneur to a certain funding milestone is helpful.
[53:01] In fact, it’s like, beating around the bush, waiting for a check to arrive or asking too many questions often causes disappointment. Maybe there’s a way in which you can get a great reputation by being a guy that’s reliable that ask good questions but was quick and did things.
[53:18] There are ways of differentiating, that’s if you’re doing direct investing and there are opportunities for this indirect investing through value added individuals. Get to know them, reach out to them, talk to them, understand how they invest. Then pick a few of those that you back indirectly, it could be through syndicates. It could be by being an LP in a fund.
[53:38] There are lots of opportunities to participate in the ecosystem beyond that vantage point.
Tyler: [53:46] For those folks, let’s say, was there ever a point where you would say, “Hey, don’t do direct investing”? If somebody came to you, what are the times in which you would tell them as a potential, “Hey, you should really go do LP or you should really go back syndicates instead of trying to do direct investing”?
Sumon: [54:02] Direct investing is incredibly stressful. Quite often, if your relationship with the entrepreneur, you have to be incredibly patient capital, and it requires a sort of understanding of the human situation an entrepreneur’s going through.
[54:17] If you’re not used to those ups and downs, then don’t invest directly. It’s not sort of a good thing. If you’re willing to be patient capital and sort of see things out over a long period of time, and smile through thick or thin, then I would say do it, but in general, it’s not a good thing if you’re not patient in that way.
Tyler: [54:41] Yeah, I think your point earlier about reputation compounding is a double-edged sword. If you have a negative in reputation early on, you get bad selection bias after it.
Sumon: [54:51] Yeah, and quite often, there are some angels that I know that I just known as being the guy that you go to for a few hundred K. Those are the guys, they invest passively, they often interact over email, but they’re known to be reliable. If they want to do a deal, they do a deal. They’re getting into a lot of stuff.
[55:09] Being reliable, being virtuous to an entrepreneur, that’s how you build a stellar reputation for yourself.
Tyler: [55:16] When you’re talking about a reputation, the things that are really critical for an LP, being able to provide some sort of value add, and then being consistent. Is that, those are the kind of the two things that you see as being important?
Sumon: [55:29] You, as a GP or as an LP?
Tyler: [55:31] As a direct investor.
Sumon: [55:34] As a direct investor. Again, I think it’s about, can you impact the levers that drive a company’s sort of positive value? One thing is, in raising financing, do you know other investors that you can bring in? Quite often the conversations that are happening, like, can you help focus the entrepreneur in on a specific way of describing the opportunity that is valuable to them?
[56:05] It might be the central thesis that drives the company or something like that, but can you help focus them on that? When the entrepreneur’s distracted can you bring them back to focus?
[56:15] Also, the other thing is that there’s lots of ups and downs in starting companies. Can you be a source of positive psychology for the entrepreneur? You often see a lot of entrepreneurs – that’s what they’re looking for in terms of service. Can you be the guy that you go to?
[56:34] Quite often in Snap Talent Chris Sacca was the guy that I would call up who was the founder’s friend. Being the founder’s friend is a really valuable position.
Tyler: [56:45] Talk a little bit more about that. I know it’s valuable from the entrepreneurial side, where there are people that I’ve called and gotten great boosts to morale. Something’s gone wrong. I really need somebody to tell me it’s not the end of the world.
[56:58] As an angel investor, though, I think it’s also similarly valuable to be the investor that’s closer to the company, the investor that’s let into the wall a little bit more deeply. Do you see that as well playing out in your role given that you’re really early and really connected to the company?
Sumon: [57:15] If you can accept imperfect circumstances then you’re really valuable. Quite often investors meet companies at inflection points. Those companies are perfect for those inflection points. They have got the right messaging. They’ve got the right team, they’ve got the right funding. But the point is that you know that three weeks before they made up all of that stuff.
[57:34] If you can understand the relationship between the stuff you make up and the stuff that’s perfect, then you’re going to be the guy that sees the stuff that’s imperfect. Quite often that means you’re meeting the companies at a point where they are not refined.
[57:48] If you can assess something that is not refined and you can make it become more refined that’s a very valuable place to be in the ecosystem. The guy that gets the call about the board deck before the board deck goes up is valuable. The guy that sees the pitch before you even have the third cofounder, that guy’s valuable. The guy that can persuade the fifth guy to join, that guy’s valuable.
[58:11] It’s about understanding imperfection. I think that’s a role to play that a lot of investors don’t lurk in.
Tyler: [58:22] There was something that triggered in my head from the very start of this conversation. You described getting the email that changes your life. That’s Paul Graham reaching out and saying, “Hey, would you consider coming and pitching us?”
[58:35] One thing that blows me away, especially seeing how big Y Combinator has gotten today, is the concept that they would actually hunt – they would actually go out and look for talented entrepreneurs or people that possessed the potential that they wanted to tap into.
[58:50] It’s my understanding that even today they still do some of this. Partners are very active in evangelizing YC and trying to find raw talent that might not be convinced to join yet.
[59:01] You’ve been close to YC for a long time. Do you think that’s a core part of their success?
Sumon: [59:08] The two core parts of the success is…I think that there’s an adage that there’s 15 great companies that get built in Silicon Valley every year. Andy Ratcliff talks about the study that he did, comes out of benchmark capital and Marc Andreessen references it.
[59:24] The truth is, how do you make 15 companies that didn’t exist that become those 15 great companies? There are certainly more ideas and more entrepreneurs of unfulfilled potential.
[59:35] That’s the gap that Y Combinator fills. The matching the total idea space for technology together with the total opportunity space for individuals to fulfill their destiny as being great in that.That’s the marketplace opportunity that Y Combinator is looking to fulfill.
[59:59] Being benevolent to those individuals, believing in those individuals before they became big because it was their only opportunity. It was their first opportunity to be believed in. That’s the other place where that is consistent with the values of Y Combinator.
[60:12] Ultimately what that means is an army of angels, an army of founders that are schooled in that way. That ultimately leads to an ecosystem that has those values.
Tyler: [60:28] When you were raising money for your own companies, what were you looking for in your angel investors? When you were talking to the angel investors for the company you just founded what were the criteria that you were looking for?
Sumon: [60:40] Again, I think that when you’re building a company with a long time horizon and you’re building a company with a long technology time horizon, at least at the beginning, you’re looking for investors, again, that are willing to believe in the founders and the capability of the founders to lead you through that uncertain jungle to commercialization.
[61:06] In my experience, that patience was something that very few people had. That was something that I’m looking for because the journey in your first year, in your first two years is going to be very different from when you’ve taken the money, too.
[61:28] I really wanted to find investors that were willing to support that, that believed in me and my cofounder. That’s important.
Tyler: [61:36] When you think about when you started investing and perhaps today, have there been large scale changes? This is only a few years ago that you started. Is it still the same as when you started or are you perceiving changes in people that are just starting to angel invest today?
Sumon: [61:56] What’s true is, like any sort of movement, just line in entrepreneurship, there’s certainly more acceptance of how to do angel investing and how to do it better. There’s also, certainly, more opportunities for angels to fill in the gaps as venture and institutional investing moves upstream.
[62:17] There are certainly more ways in which angel investors can become noticed and build brand. I was fortunate to be hacking with AngelList Syndicates back in 2014. That was because I wanted to scale up my ability to be benevolent to founders, but also as a way in which…getting real inductive experience in investing other people’s money.
[62:41] There are definitely new opportunities to…I think any sort of revolution in product or technology comes when things become more consumer-centric. There’s a consumer need and then there’s a market need. Now there’s more opportunities to bundle capital advice and branding in a way that you can serve the entrepreneur more specifically. That movement has taken off.
Tyler: [63:10] You think there’s an increased ability to bundle those things? I know some of the other people in the industry have said actually this process is about unbundling. You’ll get advice separate from capital. You’ll get angels well before you get venture investing.
[63:26] Do you see this actually as a rebundling across smaller vehicles? Or is this an unbundling that’s happening across the industry?
Sumon: [63:36] What it is is that it’s the relationship between service and those bundles. It’s the opportunity to…
[63:45] For example, if you have those three ingredients, you have X amount of capital, Y amount of brand, and Z amount of service typically you can have more choices for how those things come together. Often they will reflect the optimal make up for an entrepreneur to take them.
[64:05] If the entrepreneur’s the customer there’s going to be more options for them with those three components. You can say, “They’re 10 percent capital and they’re 5 percent brand but they’re 50 percent service and maybe I’ll take more of that than this.”
Tyler: [64:18] How do you see yourself as…what’s the mix-up of your bundle? Maybe how that’s changed over time, 'cause I would assume with a Five K check you’re obviously small amounts of capital.
Sumon: [64:28] That was at the beginning I think. I’m writing much bigger…
[64:31] [crosstalk]
Sumon: [64:31] …checks now.
Tyler: [64:32] Now you’re probably changed the mix of it.
Sumon: [64:35] The difference is obviously I think with institutional support, with some of the work they’ve done with Maiden Lane, some of the work they have done with the YC Funds Project out of AngelList as well as the syndicate means that I see myself competing in the super-angel slot and often using the ability to drive much more capital to create new types of outcomes, whether it’s sequencing rounds, whether it’s pricing rounds.
[65:05] It’s moving upstream. The relationship between service and capital – eventually you’ll have the best service providers indistinguishable from existing capital providers, but because they provide the best service…my goal is to go upstream. I see that emerging with the different tools that are coming out.
Tyler: [65:28] Do you think, long time scale – use whatever time period you want – do you think you will work as a venture capitalist, or as a traditional venture capitalist, at a firm?
Sumon: [65:38] My goal is to pursue my mission, which is again, to further humanity on those four fronts. One way of doing that is obviously driving capital towards the ideas that further those things. Obviously by some reason that will involve controlling the flow of capital. That may involve traditional investing in that sense, whether it’s my own fund or whether it’s part of something else. At some point those things will come together.
[66:10] But my secret goal has been for a long time is to be one of the best investors in the world. I’ve been studying venture for a long time, since 2005. I’ve done my 20,000 hours of really understanding the future of markets and all that stuff. My angel investing activities is part of keeping a lot of that experience going.
Tyler: [66:36] Do you feel competitive with that person who is maybe on the sideline maybe thinking about investing, or is it cooperative? Let’s say I’m an entrepreneur. I’m considering writing my first 10K or 25K check or 5K check. Am I competing with you for access into companies, or is this a cooperative, helpful “We’re all in it together-type economy”?
Sumon: [66:54] It’s cooperative because every single company has different needs and different constellations of stars will come together around those companies. I think that it’s not a thing about competition.
[67:12] I mainly focus on, one, service to entrepreneurs, and two, my mission as an individual on this planet. If those two things are interesting to people, if those two things are complementary then certainly, very open to talking. But I think it’s all about service to the entrepreneur and ultimately that will dictate things.
[67:31] If people are genuinely benevolent, if people are genuinely value-added, if people are genuinely complementary then they’ll find themselves in constellations with other people.
Tyler: [67:41] This is…it’s an industry where the median return is negative – at least venture, and I would assume the same thing extends to angel and some of the studies I’ve seen have shown that maybe it’s less negative. But it’s still a game where being in the middle of the pack means you’ve lost.
Sumon: [67:57] It’s an elitist sport.
Tyler: [67:59] Yeah. Is your thesis that by being truly benevolent, by being truly value-added and focusing on long-term help for the companies that you do rise to the elite level? Or is this that being particularly good at analysis or particularly good at evaluating people is a critical start skill that you need to have and then all the rest of the stuff allows you to play the long term?
Sumon: [68:26] To be a great investor you have to be great at analysis. You have to be able to do a deal. You have to be able to assess people, and you have to have some differentiated view on the world at the time of the investment, because then that’s where you create an advantage. If you have an advantage in all four of those things they compound. As an athlete my focus is obviously to be really good at those four things.
[68:50] Then in terms of regarding how other people invest, if you want to invest, don’t invest casually. Invest seriously. Invest as a sport. Invest in a way where you want to get into the best deals, where you want to provide the best service for entrepreneurs. Then ultimately there will be 10 percent remaining in 10 years’ time that are still doing it.
[69:14] If you look at the cohorts of venture not everyone makes it. Not everyone generates returns. Ultimately I am very benevolent for those entrepreneurs that have massive ambitions, but mainly because by aligning around that you hopefully will generate big returns, which then allows you to get the next cohort of incredibly ambitious people to back again. It is about returns.
Tyler: [69:44] You said you do two or three in a given year? How many companies do you look at in a given year that you actually do analysis on?
Sumon: [69:49] Because of the selective nature of my thesis, I have a lot of inbound pitches, but I’m not actually focused on inbound. I’m focused on outbound. If there’s something that I like that I’m passionate about, I’ll go after it.
Tyler: [70:04] How are you identifying those?
Sumon: [70:06] Again, they fit within the four investment theses that I have. If I talk or write widely about those things, those…
[70:18] There are certain ideas that I believe in and they resonate with certain people. If I’m resonating with people then those entrepreneurs will come through. If there’s something I particularly like I move quite fast and try and be first into that company.
[70:35] In that respect I am competitive. The pattern that I look for is if lots of people are in it I won’t invest in it. For me being first or being misunderstood is important and for it to be confusing to me and confusing to others is also important.
Tyler: [70:53] Why is that?
Sumon: [70:54] Again, if we look at the 15 companies example, if there’s 15 great companies built in Silicon Valley, but another 15 can be created, I think that there’s less competition for the ones that get created because it requires a different skill set to find them, to nurture them, to build those up. That’s what’s driving a lot of angel investments.
Tyler: [71:18] I want to be respectful of your time. You’ve given us a ton. Two quick last questions. The first one is, what is the biggest obvious mistake you made in the first year? What’s an obvious pitfall you can help somebody avoid?
Sumon: [71:33] One thing is to make an investment decision really emotionally. One is to fall in love with the theory of the idea, and then to invest on your interpretation of that. You have to be listening for objective signals and I think it’s really interesting in angel pitches…
[71:54] There’s a company I was involved in as an advisor. I was in love with the theory of what they could build, and ultimately the fundamentals of the company were not correct. That company ended up being acquired, but mainly because acquisition was the only way to get out of that company.
[72:13] I fell in love with what I thought they could build, and that was the thing that made me invest. It wasn’t any of the fundamentals. You do have to remain very objective and unemotional, to some extent.
[72:26] That’s a big mistake in angel investing, is to lead with your dream of what this company becomes and use that to drive your decision, not something that’s much more objective that comes from the company, from the fundamentals of the company.
Tyler: [72:42] You publish thoughts online. You tweet fairly significantly. You blog. If people want to learn more about your thesis and how you view the world where do they find that?
Sumon: [72:52] My website, sumonsadhu.com, has a bunch of my thoughts on there. My twitter handle, twitter.com/sharpshoot has a bunch of my nascent thoughts.
[73:03] [background music]
Tyler: [73:04] Thanks so much for joining us and the time.
Sumon: [73:07] Thank you, Tyler, for having me.
Tyler: [73:08] Cheers.
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Snaptales Surf Video - Episode 1
Snaptales Surf Video – Episode 1
This week on WeedmapsTV features “Salsa Lizano,” Snaptales Episode One, starring Bruce Irons, Carlos Munoz, Betet Merta, and Dylan Goodale. This is the first of a series of web edits filmed for Logan Dulien’s highly anticipated and upcoming “Snapt 3”.
Bruce had been hitting the surf in Mexico before he headed straight to Central America to begin filming for the newest documentary in the “Snapt”…
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DeterminedChild posted: (1/2) ooo what are these???
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Okay one more for today, just because I really like that I look like Frisk now 😄 @demdoodles snaptale IRL is super fun!
#snaptale#snapchat#undertale#demdoodles#frisk undertale#undertale cosplay#video games#toby fox#sans#flowey the flower#I love that duck#Jennibelleart#JennibellesArt
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frisk is confused, how come chara and sans are not trying to kill each other??
btw theyre going to toriel’s house eat pie!
sans came along too
((((too closssssssssssssssse)))))
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Snaptale 3: The Snappening
Can you tell I'm old by these video titles? Original comics can be foundhere, by demdoodles! http://demdoodles.tumblr.com/post/133637848866/snaptale-au-where-everything-is-the-same-but Music is a sped-up version of needlr's Spear of Justice jazz cover! https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VAseWp8vNv8 PLEASE Like, comment, share AND SUBSCRIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIBE.
Follow your princess below! http://www.facebook.com/peepsva http://twitter.com/#/MaddyActrice http://youtube.com/user/AngiesMod http://madeline-actrice.tumblr.com Subscribe for more!
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Conversation Over Coffee
Read snapTALES 1-149 here: https://www.wattpad.com/story/95332055-snaptales-snapchat-flash-fiction-featured
Add me on Snapchat: https://snapchat.com/add/harrikitteridge
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DeterminedChild posted: Still so far off. . .
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