• Women in Venture Capital: Cindy Padnos and Aileen Lee

    This case focuses on Cindy Padnos's and Aileen Lee's experiences founding their own VC firms. It introduces some of the tradeoffs and challenges facing both founders. In particular, the case highlights some of their early investing experiences as women VCs and how those experiences shaped decisions with their funds.
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  • Women in Venture Capital

    This case introduces students to the history of women in the venture capital industry. It explores the impact of gender diversity on both company performance and fund returns, describes the lack of funding for female founders, and highlights examples of women-led venture capital firms.
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  • Stanford Management Company in 2017: Venture Capital and Other Asset Allocation

    Greg Milani, Senior Managing Director of the Stanford Management Company, considers how much of Stanford's $27 billion endowment to allocate to early stage capital, taking into account the various pro's and con's of that allocation.
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  • Alchemist Accelerator

    Alchemist Accelerator follows the story of Ravi Belani, founder and Managing Director of Alchemist Accelerator, as he leads one of the leading enterprise-focused accelerators in Silicon Valley. The case discusses the origins of the program, as well as the many challenges faced by Belani and his team as they seek out potential methods of scaling the program. The management team debate difficult choices, such as how to preserve the quality of the Alchemist program while also reacting to rapidly changing market dynamics. This case prepares students who are interested in learning more about venture capital, enterprise startups, and enterprise-focused accelerators.
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  • Splunk and Venture Capital Investing in Enterprise Technology (Part A)

    Case describes the funding landscape for enterprise technology startups and how there has been a renewed interest in these types of companies in 2012 and 2013. The case highlights recent IPOs within this sector and the venture capitalists who have created funds to pursue an enterprise information technology investment thesis. Case focuses on the company Splunk to highlight the intricacies and nuances of building a successful enterprise startup from funding to IPO. The case also highlights issues around fund raising, selecting the right venture capitalists, and whether to accept an acquisition offer.
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  • Startup Capital Ventures in China

    John Dean and Danny Lui began raising their first fund as Startup Capital Ventures (SCV), a small venture capital firm in 2005. They made a soft commitment to invest 15-20% of their first $25MM fund in China. They made their first Chinese investment in 2005 in Zero2IPO, a Beijing-based market research firm that tracked Mainland china private equity and venture capital markets. The investment has gone well so far, but the venture capital market is changing rapidly. Dean and Lui need to decide whether to continue investing in China, and if so, they must develop a new strategy. This case examines the challenges of venture capital investment in China, given increased competition for deals, significant regulation changes and a rising preference for local teams versus foreign VCs.
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  • Founders Fund

    For Sean Parker, a managing partner at Founders Fund (FF), a San Francisco-based venture capital (VC) firm, November 2007 was a critical moment in the process of raising the firm's second fund. As he prepared to describe FF's nontraditional strategy to a potential limited partner (LP) in San Francisco's Financial District, he decided to focus on what distinguished Founders Fund from the sea of VC firms in Silicon Valley, how it was innovating within a mature industry, and why it would be the most successful fund in history. Since its inception in 2005, Founders Fund had attracted substantial publicity. Though most had been positive, Parker nevertheless wanted to address a few of the critiques that had surfaced within the industry press. He hoped to be persuasive-FF wanted to close the $150-million round before the end of the month.
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  • SuccessFactors

    The protagonist is Lars Dalgaard, a young manager with solid experience but none in leading a technology company. Through a combination of circumstances, Dalgaard becomes the CEO of a drowning software company focused on the HR space at the peak of "Nuclear Winter" in Silicon Valley. The case explores how he and his small team attempt to restart SuccessFactors and transform it into something sustainable in the face of seemingly insurmountable obstacles.
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  • LesConcierges

    Linda Jenkinson, Chairman and CEO of luxury personal services company, LesConcierges (LC), hung up the phone after checking her voicemail in July 2007. She had just received a message from Randy Haykin, an angel investor and board member who had participated in the Series C round that Jenkinson recently raised. After an initial "honeymoon period," she and Haykin had started disagreeing on internal matters, most recently about whether to hire an interim CFO while the company took time to source a permanent candidate. Jenkinson began to wonder whether Haykin had been the best choice for the board and if there was anything she could do to work with him more effectively. Unbeknownst to Jenkinson, Haykin was simultaneously considering whether his investment in LesConcierges would turn out to be the "home run" that he had originally anticipated. He also questioned how he could help solve the challenges facing the company's CEO without damaging their relationship in the process.
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  • StartUp Capital Ventures

    John Dean and Danny Lui began raising their first fund as StartUp Capital Ventures (SCV), a small venture capital firm, in 2005. Along with the four other "Managing Members" of the firm, they intended to focus investments on early stage software companies with capital-efficient business models. SCV looked for organizations with initial pre-money valuations of less than $5 million. The firm's philosophy was to target companies that already had a product or service generating revenue and that could show a reasonable likelihood of reaching near-term profitability with SCV's investment. During the fundraising process, Charlie Eubanks, an "anchor investor" for the fledgling firm, pressured the founders to devote 30% of SCV's capital to investments in China. The country was a compelling place to invest in many ways. China's GDP was growing at 10% per year, primarily driven by annual private sector growth of 20%. Tax burdens were light--there was no capital gains tax. In addition, seven times more engineering students graduated from colleges in China every year than in the United States. Yet, Dean and Lui (who was originally from Hong Kong) were also cognizant of significant drawbacks to investing in the region. Examines some of those challenges as they related to two questions the colleagues tried to answer: whether to enter that market at all; and whether to invest in Zero2IPO, a Beijing-based market research firm that tracked Mainland China private equity and venture capital markets.
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  • Benchmark Capital Europe: Bringing Silicon Valley Venture Capital to the Continent

    The protagonist is Bruce Dunlevie, a co-founder of venture firm Benchmark Capital. In early 2007, Dunlevie and his partners are faced with whether to expand their firm into China and/or India, as many other well respected VC firms had been doing at the same time. Despite having two existing and successful satellite offices in the UK and Israel, the partners are not convinced that further expansion makes sense. Therefore, to follow logic, they are also considering whether to spin out the existing satelittes to be independent entities or keep them as part of the Benchmark franchise.
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  • Western Technology Investment

    Introduces the venture leasing or lending industry by looking at pioneering in the industry: Western Technology investment. Asks students to walk in the shoes of a venture lender by outlining a term sheet of a "live" investment decision that Western Technology needs to make about Quinstreet, an emerging Internet start-up.
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  • Handspring and Palm, Inc: A Corporate Drama in Five Acts

    Follows Jeff Hawkins, Donna Dubinsky, and, later, Ed Colligan from the founding of Palm, Inc., through the founding of Handspring, to the point that Handspring and Palm began considering a merger. Examines the conditions that drove the two rival companies toward a merger. In a relatively stagnant market for personal technology, Handspring lacked the financial resources to launch its next-generation product, the Treo 600; meanwhile, Palm's market position was threatened by a lack of breakthrough product innovation and viable growth plans. From the date of its founding, Handspring nurtured a rivalry with its chief competitor, Palm, Inc. By early 2003, Palm, Inc. had stabilized its business, while Handspring found itself in a dire financial situation. Handspring pursued two financing alternatives: a PIPE and a merger with Palm--engendering two different operating states for the company. The board of directors and management team were fairly evenly split between the two deals, each of which involved uncertainty.
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  • Evolution of the Venture Capital Market in India

    Examines the early-stage venture capital industry in India in 2004. Focuses on technology-based, early-stage venture capital, as opposed to private equity-type investments. Using the past success of Draper International Fund as background, briefly visits the history and evolution of venture capital in India and current market opportunities. Next, presents a basic framework for examining a venture capital ecosystem, and analyzes the promise of the Indian venture capital market in its context. The emergence of a strong Indo-U.S. corridor is also highlighted, and comparisons are made with Silicon Valley, California, and Israel.
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  • Juniper Networks

    Details the history of Juniper Networks, with specific emphasis on idea formulation and on founder Pradeep Sindhu's decision relating to funding the company as well as his relationship with its venture capital investors. Also explores the decision the company's CEO, Scott Kriens, faced when considering the path of corporate investment.
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  • Peter Levine

    Successful Silicon Valley executive, Peter Levine, finds himself at a career crossroads, trying to decide between pursuing numerous options, including being a CEO of a growth company or a venture capitalist. Explores the different qualifications and goals required of an operating vs. an investing role, and items to consider for each type of career.
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  • Splunk and Venture Capital Investing in Enterprise Technology (Part B)

    Case describes the funding landscape for enterprise technology startups and how there has been a renewed interest in these types of companies in 2012 and 2013. The case highlights recent IPOs within this sector and the venture capitalists who have created funds to pursue an enterprise information technology investment thesis. Case focuses on the company Splunk to highlight the intricacies and nuances of building a successful enterprise startup from funding to IPO. The case also highlights issues around fund raising, selecting the right venture capitalists, and whether to accept an acquisition offer.
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