Etude
Five Things Companies Get Wrong about Corporate Venture Capital
Five Things Companies Get Wrong about Corporate Venture Capital
Many corporate executives are uncomfortable taking the levels of risk that VC requires.
Etude
Many corporate executives are uncomfortable taking the levels of risk that VC requires.
One of the best ways to avoid being disrupted in your industry is to become the disrupter.
That’s why so many companies are setting up corporate venture capital arms—nearly 800 were active in 2018, up from about 220 only five years earlier. Executive teams feel the pressure brought on by innovative disrupters who, backed by venture capital, are attacking their markets. They know they need to reach further out than their business development and R&D teams can take them, and the best way to do this is by becoming an active participant in the VC ecosystem. For many, this means setting up their own funds and innovation teams, often in Silicon Valley.
But this is a difficult pivot for most corporations. VC firms operate with a higher risk-reward profile than most companies do. The economics of venture capital dictate that most investments will fail to deliver their promised returns, and those that pay off take many years to do so. Plus, by definition, venture capital operates in unproven territory, investing in technologies years before the arrival of a product, let alone revenues. Neither of these factors are an easy sell in a culture that measures profit and loss on a quarterly basis, and where sponsoring a failure can be a career-limiting move.
Despite these risks, more and more corporations are deciding they need to play in this arena, hoping to gain insight on what’s coming next and avoid being disrupted.
When done right, corporate venture capital can be a valuable way for companies to create a competitive advantage, since it affords a view that may be three or four years ahead of what the public (and competitors) are able to see. Think of it like the icebreaker forging ahead of the larger ship. It can also help improve deal and transactional skills, inject some Silicon Valley culture into the corporate DNA, and create new opportunities in R&D, business development and M&A. A team that listens to 100 pitches and invests in only 5 of them has still learned a great deal about the state of innovation from the rest.
However, corporations need to develop some new muscles to make venture capital work within their culture. Executives need to understand the specific role that venture capital plays in their innovation strategy. They need to view it as the tip of the spear, rather than an extended arm of business development. The corporate VC team should have the mandate of looking well over the horizon to identify potential disrupters, a perspective that requires steering clear of legacy thinking. Successful disrupters take outsized risks and often rely on methods that are anathema to a conservative corporate culture. Most long bets fail, and corporate executives can make such bets only if they believe they won’t be punished for backing failures.
For venture capital to thrive within the corporate sphere, you may need to rethink its role in your innovation strategy. Most corporations use their VC arms to find “known knowns”—technology or products that they know already exist and can be used right away to improve their business (see Figure 1). But in fact, they should be doing this through their business development and R&D units. The real value of a VC arm is to discover “unknown unknowns” and, to some extent, the “known unknowns.” These are the things that will break new ground and disrupt the industry.
Consider Uber, which failed to attract several large automakers as early investors because, when it was founded in 2009, it was primarily an app for hailing town cars. Automakers had little interest, seeing this service as far from their core business. But Uber was the birth of a radically new business model, which is poised to disrupt the entire auto industry. And automakers today spend millions building their own ride-hailing services or partnering with established ones.
Our work with the venture capital community and corporate venture capital units brings to light some key lessons that companies should consider as they develop their own CVC arms.
Corporate venture capital can be extremely valuable in today’s environment of digital disruption, but it’s difficult to do right. Savvy executives will learn how to get out of their own way. They will give greater freedom to their CVC teams, allowing them to be the proverbial sand in the oyster, the irritant that ultimately creates the pearl. Most of all, they will encourage their teams to take greater risks based on uncertain potential—and not punish them when bets don’t pan out. Only by understanding and playing by this different set of rules can executives extract the greatest value from their corporate venture capital initiatives.
Thomas Wendt is a Bain & Company partner in Silicon Valley, working with the firm’s Global Automotive and Technology practices. Elizabeth Spaulding is a Bain partner in San Francisco and coleader of the firm’s Digital practice.