The Twenty Minute VCAdam Besnivick: How to Invest in Pre-Seed & Seed Stage Companies; Looking Glass Capital | E1020
Harry Stebbings and Adam Besvinick on pre-seed discipline, reputation, and thematic focus in modern venture.
In this episode of The Twenty Minute VC, featuring Adam Besvinick and Harry Stebbings, Adam Besnivick: How to Invest in Pre-Seed & Seed Stage Companies; Looking Glass Capital | E1020 explores pre-seed discipline, reputation, and thematic focus in modern venture Adam Besvinick, founder of Looking Glass Capital, explains his highly disciplined, institutional-style approach to pre-seed and seed investing from a relatively small solo GP fund. He emphasizes reputation with founders as an investor’s primary controllable currency and argues for concentrated portfolios with meaningful ownership rather than spray-and-pray strategies. The conversation dives into fund construction, LP fundraising dynamics, thematic focus (healthcare, climate, education, SMB SaaS), and how to lead and structure early rounds without massive checks. They also explore the post-2021 venture reset, multi-stage funds’ impact on seed, and how founders should think about runway, investor selection, and round composition.
At a glance
WHAT IT’S REALLY ABOUT
Pre-seed discipline, reputation, and thematic focus in modern venture
- Adam Besvinick, founder of Looking Glass Capital, explains his highly disciplined, institutional-style approach to pre-seed and seed investing from a relatively small solo GP fund. He emphasizes reputation with founders as an investor’s primary controllable currency and argues for concentrated portfolios with meaningful ownership rather than spray-and-pray strategies. The conversation dives into fund construction, LP fundraising dynamics, thematic focus (healthcare, climate, education, SMB SaaS), and how to lead and structure early rounds without massive checks. They also explore the post-2021 venture reset, multi-stage funds’ impact on seed, and how founders should think about runway, investor selection, and round composition.
IDEAS WORTH REMEMBERING
5 ideasReputation with founders is the investor’s most important controllable asset.
Track record is partially out of a VC’s control, but how you behave with entrepreneurs compounds over time into better referrals, deal flow, and outcomes.
Small funds can work with concentrated portfolios if ownership is meaningful.
With sub-$50M funds, Adam argues every investment should be capable of returning the fund, which requires targeting ~4–5% entry ownership and disciplined check sizing rather than dozens of tiny bets.
First-money-in and ‘first yes’ can substitute for huge checks if you add real value.
By setting terms, committing early, and then effectively acting as a placement agent to build the syndicate, a smaller fund can still ‘lead’ rounds and influence cap table construction.
Thematic focus is a sourcing and credibility engine for a solo GP.
Concentrating on sectors like healthcare, climate, education, and SMB tools helps Adam stay top-of-mind with other investors, attract relevant cold inbound, and immediately build trust with founders through portfolio adjacency.
LP fundraising requires clarity on your ideal LP ‘phenotype’ and minimum viable fund size.
First-time managers should understand which LPs will truly grasp their strategy, do an early first close once they’ve hit ~50% of a minimum viable fund size, and then invest as if they’ll never exceed that number.
WORDS WORTH SAVING
5 quotesReputation is the number one currency as an investor that you have control over.
— Adam Besvinick
If you’re investing out of a $50 million fund or smaller, a billion-dollar outcome has to return the fund, or this job becomes even harder than it already is.
— Adam Besvinick
To me, the definition of a lead is the one that helps catalyze a raise, sets the terms, and is the first call when things are going terribly or when things are going really well.
— Adam Besvinick
Raise capital from reputable, reliable sources that align with your ethical standards and that are providing clean terms. Beyond that, it almost doesn’t matter who you raise from.
— Adam Besvinick
This is not a home run game, it’s a grand slam game.
— Adam Besvinick
QUESTIONS ANSWERED IN THIS EPISODE
5 questionsHow can a first-time founder practically assess whether a potential investor’s reputation with founders is genuinely strong, beyond brand name and marketing?
Adam Besvinick, founder of Looking Glass Capital, explains his highly disciplined, institutional-style approach to pre-seed and seed investing from a relatively small solo GP fund. He emphasizes reputation with founders as an investor’s primary controllable currency and argues for concentrated portfolios with meaningful ownership rather than spray-and-pray strategies. The conversation dives into fund construction, LP fundraising dynamics, thematic focus (healthcare, climate, education, SMB SaaS), and how to lead and structure early rounds without massive checks. They also explore the post-2021 venture reset, multi-stage funds’ impact on seed, and how founders should think about runway, investor selection, and round composition.
For solo GPs or small funds, what are the concrete steps to ‘lead’ a round without being the largest check writer?
How should founders decide between taking a larger, higher-valuation round from a multi-stage fund versus a smaller, more disciplined round from a specialist early-stage firm?
In thematic investing, how do you stay focused without becoming so narrow that you miss transformative out-of-theme opportunities?
Given the current fundraising climate, what specific financial and operational milestones should a pre-seed or seed-stage company target before attempting to raise its next round?
EVERY SPOKEN WORD
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