Alright, let's do this video man. 50, 35 hours a week. I'm super old school here with my printed notes. People are asleep. What are we talking about today man? Excuse me. What do people need? Five things to know before working in private equity or venture capital. Nice topic. What's your name? Just a software update.
Alright, so this video can save you literally years of career mistakes. Alright, it's very important to know what you're getting yourself into. And this video is not only relevant for people who say I definitely want to go into private equity or I want to go into venture capital. It's basically relevant for anyone who wants to make big bucks in the future. Because sooner or later what you're going to become is you're going to become an investor.
At some point you're going to stop offering services. You're going to start playing with capital. Allocating capital. Making money work for you. That's what you're going to do in the future if you're ambitious enough. So this video is very much relevant for all the ambitious people out there. It works. And I'm very happy to have you on my channel. So let's get right into it.
Five things I wish I knew before going into private equity venture capital. For the disclaimer I haven't worked in private equity ever in my whole life. Unless you classify the VC and the venture building game which is something I do. And venture building is like a small subset of what you can do in the VC space as the subset of private equity. Which it is technically.
So I have the right to sit here and talk about it. Okay. So five things I would have liked to know. And plus you know of course I have a multitude of people that I coached in the past that I'm good friends. And et cetera that are working at top funds like Blackstone, KKR, whatever. Also on the other side of the aisle I have so many people from venture capital that I'm interacting with on a daily basis and part of my job. Or even have to help them get their jobs.
So here are my two cents. First of all the selection of the fund makes a big difference. Much more than choosing the firm in management consulting or choosing the bank in investment banking. Okay. If you are starting out your fresh graduate you have the dream of going into consulting or banking. Then it's like yeah.
I mean it kind of makes a little difference here and there culture wise focus wise which consulting firm for example you pick or which investment banking pick but then again. Not that much. But I mean if you are in BCG or if you're working in McKinsey it's basically different people. That's it. I mean there's only so much of a difference whereas in private equity car.
It makes a huge difference. You have mega funds you have mid market. You have funds that are mainly focusing on this trust game. They are focusing on restructuring turnaround investing. You have funds that are mainly focused on growth focused on LBOs. There is a huge universe of things.
Firstly that a fund can be focused on terms of what private equity games is he playing. What kind of investing. And then also in terms of the fund size that makes again a very big big difference especially in terms of the work load because if you are at one of these mega funds. The competition gets super high and basically the whole team is working all around the clock to find ways to justify certain deals or to extract value from certain deals that are on the table.
There is only so much potential for carry. So everybody is trying to maximize their carry. Everybody is working hard. 80 to 100 hours and it's grind. Whereas in mid market funds there is less competition. There is stronger networks. I mean if you are at one of these funds in Germany for example you have your set of potential customers.
People that you are talking to on a daily basis. Some chief executive officers from SMEs for example. So that makes things a little bit easier. Work life balance is better. So long story short it makes a big difference on what fund you are going to work with. What company you are going to work with both in private equity as well as in venture capital. So do your research and look at forums like Wolf Cheetoases where there are so many discussions around.
How is the work culture at this fund? What is the work life balance like? What kind of deals do they do and so on. That's very important.
这家基金的工作文化如何?工作与生活的平衡怎么样?他们主要做什么类型的交易,等等。这些都非常重要。
Second point. It is extremely challenging to get into private equity and venture capital without prior experience in either investment banking management consulting or nice startup credentials. Now. And then elsewhere in the world. For private equity. It's very obvious. These people want associates. Want people who are able to trust numbers. They are able to take a look at deals, model them, find out whether there is possibility to extract value out of these deals.
So they need people who are able to deal with numbers in a very relaxed way. In a very comfortable way. So what they will go for most of the times is investment bankers, former investment bankers, investment banking analysts. Could also be management consultants. But what I observe is private equity funds will tend to go for investment bankers. Now if it is a private equity fund that is heavily focused on adding value. So helping the management team for example, design a new growth strategy. Then they will go for management consultants because that's what management consultants do. They advise management of big companies. Five, six, one, five, one, five, one, five. Four venture capital on the other hand. Management consulting is not that relevant because it's not really what you're doing with the startup. You don't have the modeling experience that an investment banker will have. And you also don't, you can't argue with your I give advice to corporates angle because you don't give advice to corporates. A startup is a totally different thing from a big multinational company. So your consulting edge doesn't really apply here. Now is it impossible to get into this game being a strategy consultant? No, of course not. It's all about how you position yourself properly. But just giving this out there for venture capital funds. It's either or preferably investment bankers. Mostly for funds that are heavily quantitatively driven.
So a little bit later stage funds. And on the other hand, ex-founders because what's better than having someone who's your customer in a sense. Having him work for you. So now you're switching sides. You're not in your prior startup. You got funding, you received funding. Now you're switching sides. You're the one giving funding and you know exactly what the guy or the girl on the other table wants. So that's great. So that's point number two.
Number three. You are unfortunately not going to be the one making the decisions. At least at the beginning. So some people have the impression or have the dream that they are going to join one of these funds. And they are the one driving the deals and actually then in the end being the one saying, Okay, let's do it guys. This is a great deal. We're going to make millions and we're going to sit on the odds drink champagne and have inspirational conversations. That's not how it goes. At the beginning you are just a small tiny piece in a big machine. You are doing your analysis baby please but you're not really the one making the call in the end. That is still going to be the partners and sometimes even within the partner structure you have very senior partners who just by saying one word can basically dismantle all the other partners opinions. And everyone's for the deal but this one guy says no and then everybody's like, Okay boss. So that's unfortunately how it is. Add some firms. So don't be fooled. You're not the one making the decisions. You can be the one making the decisions at some point.
And if you are working at a smaller firm, smaller private equity fund, smaller VC fund, of course the chances of you being the one making the calls is exponentially higher. Now having said that we're talking a lot about PE and VC all the time, check out my video Private Equity versus Venture Capital. I think it's called on this same channel. It's a very good one for you to get a good overview of what are the main differences. I can do another video in the future that is even more detailed but this one is a good primer. So check it out. Private Equity versus Venture Capital.
Now point number four, it can be difficult and this is particularly for Venture Capital. It can be difficult to make the jump from senior associate or investment manager to principal, most of the time it's called principal. So someone who is at the someone like a junior partner you could say, making this jump is extremely difficult. Some people think, okay, I'm just going to start as an analyst at this VC fund and I'm going to work my way up until I'm partner. It's not always as easy like that because what most people lack is deep industry experience. Even if you are an analyst or an associate working at a certain topic, focusing on a certain industry, sometimes it's difficult to build that super deep industry knowledge. And that's what prevents you from going to the next step to actually being someone who's a junior partner or who's a partner at the firm. So I have friends who worked at VC funds. They came pretty far. They have been investment managers, people who have been allocating capital to different startups but they were not able to make this next step to become a partner or become as a junior partner, a principal of the firm. And what they did most of the time is they joined the industry. So they went into either startups, more mature startups most of the time or strategic roles at big industry players for a couple of years to build that deep industry expertise. And then as the next step they come back to the fund. So that's something to be aware of.
And the last point is kind of like a double point. First of all, you're not completely independent and secondly you're not going to become a billionaire. So what do I mean by that? First of all, some people get into the game and they think it's now they're at the pinnacle of mankind. So you are the one making the decisions. You give money to the people who you want to give money to. And that's it. You're the king. You're not like a scrappy service provider like those investment banks or management consultancies but you're the one. It's not as easy like that because unfortunately the money that you're giving to other people is not your money. It's the LPs money. So you have the big guys at your back and the other ones giving you the money in the first place. So imagine if this money is not well invested. You have a problem. You have these guys probably will not be happy with it. So just remember that. If you are in this investing game most of the times it's other people's money. And yeah sure you make decent money with it. I mean you have your management fee, you have your carry, you make money from exits in BC. Great money. But you know you're not the king of the game. There's other people who are able to exert pressure during important. Commities during important meetings. And that's something to keep in mind. Now on the other side the second thing I said you're not going to become a billionaire.
That's a little bit oversimplified. But what I want to say is in this VC and PE game as part of the fund you can make great money. I mean you can make millions and millions and millions. But if you have the dream to make billions and billions and billions you will need to become a founder. Now founder in the broadest sense can be a high tech startup. Can also be your own fund. Right? And you recruit more and more partners in the fund and it grows and becomes a huge thing. And it's the next black stone whatever. But as part of this fund structure you will earn very good money but you will not strike it super big. You know just because your ownership of this thing that you're investing in is super small. So if you look at it's funny to look at for example Facebook the way you know it progressed through the different funding stages. And in the end you know Mark Zuckerberg earned X percent of Facebook and then you have the early investors how much percent they earned. And that's a tiny share already and now you need to remember that for this tiny share that you own not it's not like everything is yours right? This money gets distributed to the different limited partners. So those are the first people who have the right to cash out because you're investing their money in the first place. Now what's remaining from that is distributed within the VC fund to the different partners. And you can imagine you know like you still earn millions but it's not like you know you're the next billionaire. So that's something to keep in mind. And if you're if you got interested in both private equity venture capital you want to know more about both games how they differ and what's the right thing for you. Then check out my video private equity versus venture capital linked here and I'll see you in the next video man bye bye.