Analysis

September 16, 2022

What did VCs do before they became VCs?

VC platform Vauban has looked into the backgrounds of its users, and there's a serious lack of startup experience


Amy Lewin

3 min read

European VCs talk a good talk about being “founder friendly” and “hands on”. But the vast majority of them have still never actually run a startup — or worked in one.

New data from Vauban, a platform which helps investors raise, structure and then manage their funds, suggests that European VC ranks remain heavily filled with former bankers and private equity investors — and are low on former startup operators.

Finance backgrounds

Vauban has looked at the career history of 379 VC partners from 180 firms on its platform. Around 40% are based in the UK, around 40% in the rest of Europe and the remaining 20% from the rest of the world. This is data which it asks for as part of its onboarding process. 

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The most common industry to have worked in before becoming an investor is finance, with 48.3% of the investors on Vauban’s platform taking this route. 

24.7% of investors on Vauban were previously founders, while 16.6% worked for management consulting firm or an established company (mostly in senior roles). Just 1.8% were previously startup operators.

This more or less tallies with previous studies — and suggests there has been little change in recent years with regards to the low number of startup operators moving into VC. 

In 2019, non-profit Diversity VC looked into the backgrounds of more than 2,000 VC employees in the UK — and found that 20% had a background in consulting, 18% in finance and 12% in investment banking. Just 8% had worked at startups, and only 4% in tech. 

In 2021, Sifted looked at the employment background of female VC partners in Europe. We found that 27% had worked in investing previously, 17% in consulting, 16% at a corporate and 13% in finance. Only 10% had worked at a startup and just 8% had been founders. 

Founders turned investors

Vauban’s data does suggest that a fair number of founders move on to a career in VC, however. This wasn’t what Diversity VC or Sifted found previously. 

Several high-profile former founders have recently launched VC firms. In June, Wise cofounder Taavet Hinrikus, Songkick founder Ian Hogarth and Teleport cofounder Sten Tamkivi unveiled Plural, a €250m fund. All three had been prolific angel investors beforehand. 

In July, entrepreneur brothers Fabian and Ferry Heilemann launched AENU, a €100m evergreen climate tech fund. Ferry Heilemann was a cofounder of Berlin-based logistics unicorn Forto. 

Startups are also increasingly raising money from a bigger pool of angel investors — many of whom are often founders or startup operators — thanks in part to the rise of platforms like Vauban, Odin and Bunch. This trend could see more startup operators get the investing bug — and an investment track record — and later head into VC. 

👉 Read: Who does what at a VC firm?

Amy Lewin

Amy Lewin is Sifted’s editor and cohost of Startup Europe — The Sifted Podcast , and writes Up Round, a weekly newsletter on VC. Follow her on X and LinkedIn