Strategy Tools Platform https://www.strategytools.io Changing the way you work on strategy Tue, 03 Feb 2026 10:55:56 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.1 https://www.strategytools.io/wp-content/uploads/2023/03/cropped-ST-Blue-Logo-32x32.png Strategy Tools Platform https://www.strategytools.io 32 32 The story of Nexus VC – From Emerging to Institutional Venture Capital: A Technical Roadmap https://www.strategytools.io/blog/the-story-of-nexus-vc-from-emerging-to-institutional-venture-capital-a-technical-roadmap/ Tue, 03 Feb 2026 09:34:57 +0000 https://www.strategytools.io/?p=276350 In our work with emerging managers and Fund-of-fund programs around the world, the ‘journey from emerging to institutional-ready’ is a common challenge for many first time fund managers to grasp. We wrote up the story of Nexus VC to show how to start small, start fast and scale a VC Firm into multiple VC funds and, hopefully, maturing into an institutional ready fund. We teach the same in our Fund Manager! Masterclasses

Second article leading up to the upcoming Dune Venture Days in Dubai.

The journey from emerging venture capital firm to institutional-grade investor represents one of the most complex organizational transformations in private markets. It’s not merely about deploying capital—it’s about building a repeatable system for identifying, winning, and supporting exceptional companies while generating top-quartile returns that justify institutional allocation.

A Dubai Story: The Nexus VC Journey

To understand this transition in practice, consider the story of Nexus VC, a Dubai-based early-stage VC firm that made the leap from emerging to institutional over seven years. Founded in 2016 by Chris Al-Mansour, a former corporate VC investor at a regional conglomerate, Nexus’s journey illustrates both the promise and the pitfalls of this transformation.

Chris started with a conviction: the MENA tech ecosystem was reaching an inflection point, with a new generation of founders building scalable businesses that international investors were missing. His thesis—seed and Series A investments in technology companies solving regional challenges with global potential—had worked in his previous role, but he’d always invested someone else’s capital. Building his own firm would be different.

The Capital Structure Evolution

Stage One: Proof of Concept ($500K–$5M)
Nexus’s Genesis (2016-2017)

You only have a few hours, truly, what are you going to focus on?

Chris began where nearly every VC begins: with a small pool of flexible capital. He raised his first $2M fund from a tight network of supporters. The “fund formation” was a simple LP agreement drafted by a regional law firm ($15,000). The “office” was a co-working space membership at AstroLabs in Dubai. The “deal flow” was his personal network and cold LinkedIn outreach.

The earliest capital represents validation, not optimization. At this stage, VC firms are typically operating under sub-optimal structures:

Fund Structure Considerations:

GP commitment usually 1%–2% of fund size (for first fund, often reduced)

Nexus Fund I – The Capital Stack:
  • Chris’s personal capital: $50,000 (2.5% GP commit, significant for someone in their early 30s)
  • Former boss at the conglomerate: $500,000
  • Three family offices: $300K, $250K, $200K
  • Five HNW individuals: $100K each ($500K total)
  • Two successful entrepreneurs: $150K each ($300K total)

Total: $2.05M fund size

Operational Reality: The GP is typically wearing every hat—deal sourcing, due diligence, portfolio support, fundraising, back office, and investor relations. Technology stack consists of Excel, a basic CRM, and perhaps a simple data room. Legal work is outsourced to the cheapest responsive firm.

Chris was everything. He sourced deals through founder events, conducted due diligence with Excel models and reference calls, negotiated term sheets, sat on boards, supported portfolio companies, managed LP communications, and handled fund accounting. His “tech stack” was Gmail, Excel, a $50/month Airtable subscription for deal tracking, and DocuSign.

The Investment Strategy:

  • Check size: $50K–$150K at seed stage
  • Ownership target: 5%–10%
  • Sector focus: B2B SaaS, fintech, logistics tech
  • Geographic focus: UAE, Egypt, Saudi Arabia
  • Follow-on reserves: ~30% of fund size

First Investments (2017):

Chris moved quickly. By end of 2017, he’d deployed into four companies:

  1. A B2B procurement platform in UAE ($100K)
  2. An Egyptian fintech startup ($75K)
  3. A Saudi logistics SaaS company ($120K)
  4. A Dubai-based HR tech startup ($80K)

Total deployed: $375K across four companies. He’d created a mini-portfolio, but the real work—and uncertainty—was just beginning.

Stage Two: The Inflection Point ($5M–$30M)

Nexus’s Growing Pains (2018-2021)

This is where most emerging VCs fail. The fund is past the friends-and-family stage but hasn’t achieved the scale for institutional attention. This zone represents maximum operational stress per dollar of AUM.

Through 2018-2019, Chris continued deploying Fund I. He made eight more investments, bringing the total to 12 portfolio companies with $1.6M deployed. He reserved $450K for follow-ons and kept $150K for operating expenses (management fees of $41K annually weren’t enough to support operations fully).

Early Portfolio Signals:

  • Two companies failed outright
  • Three were struggling and likely to fail
  • Five were showing decent traction but needed follow-on capital
  • Two were showing exceptional growth—the Egyptian fintech and the Saudi logistics company

The problem: Chris needed to raise Fund II to follow on his winners, but institutional investors wanted to see realized returns from Fund I. He was stuck in the classic emerging VC trap.

The Infrastructure Build-Out:

At approximately $10M under management, economics begin to support institutional infrastructure, though painfully:

After legal and compliance ($50K–$75K), fund administration ($25K–$40K), technology ($15K–$25K), and events/travel ($40K–$60K), there’s barely enough for one salary

The First Hire Decision:

In mid-2019, as Chris began raising Fund II, he faced his first critical decision: hire someone or continue solo. He chose to stay lean through Fund II raise but made a promise to himself—first hire once Fund II closed.

Fund II Raise (2019-2020):

Chris’s pitch for Fund II:

  • Fund I portfolio showing signs of life (paper markups from the two breakout companies)
  • Expanded thesis: earlier stage (more pre-seed/seed), larger fund for follow-on capability
  • Target: $10M
  • Same terms: 2.5%/20% with 8% preferred return
  • GP commit: 2% ($200K, mostly through deferring management fees)

The raise was brutal. Chris pitched 420+ potential investors over 18 months:

  • Existing Fund I LPs: $3.5M (70% re-up rate by capital)
  • New family offices: $2.8M (through extensive networking)
  • Regional institutional investor (sovereign wealth fund’s emerging manager program): $2M (breakthrough allocation after 9-month diligence)
  • Small fund-of-funds focused on emerging managers: $1.5M
  • New HNW individuals: $1.2M

Total: $11M closed by September 2020

The sovereign wealth fund allocation changed everything. Even though $2M was a pilot check for them, it provided institutional validation that Chris could leverage.

Critical Hires and Sequencing:

The hiring sequence matters enormously for VCs. The optimal path is typically:

  1. First hire (~$10M AUM): A principal/associate who can source deals, conduct diligence, and support portfolio companies—compensation $100K–$150K plus carry participation
  2. Second hire (~$25M AUM): Either a portfolio operations person (platform team) or another investing partner, depending on firm strategy
  3. Third hire (~$50M AUM): Whatever role wasn’t filled in step two, or a dedicated CFO/COO

The First Hire (October 2020):

Chris brought on Daniel Kim, a Korean-Canadian investor he’d met through the regional startup ecosystem. Daniel had spent three years at a larger regional VC and had strong networks with founders and co-investors. Compensation: $110,000 base plus 5% of carry on Fund II (vesting over 4 years) plus 8% management company equity.

Daniel became Chris’s investment partner—sourcing deals, conducting diligence, supporting portfolio companies. The two-person investment team could now cover more ground.

Service Provider Maturation:

This stage requires upgrading from startup-friendly vendors to institutionally acceptable ones:

  • Fund Administrator: Moving from DIY accounting to a recognized name (Standish, Otter, Carta for smaller funds; SS&C, Citco, Gen II for larger)—cost increases from near-zero to $30K–$60K annually
  • Auditor: Moving from a local CPA firm to a Big Four or national firm with PE/VC expertise (BDO, Grant Thornton, RSM, or ideally PwC, KPMG, Deloitte, EY)
  • Legal Counsel: Establishing relationships with dedicated VC fund formation attorneys (Debevoise, Ropes & Gray, Goodwin, Latham, but regionally Dechert or DLA Piper)
  • Back-office Infrastructure: Portfolio monitoring systems (Carta, Pulley for cap tables; Visible, 4Degrees, or Affinity for CRM)

With Fund II capital, Chris invested in infrastructure:

  • Hired Otter as fund administrator ($35K annually)
  • Engaged Deloitte for annual fund audit ($50K)
  • Retained Dechert LLP for ongoing fund and deal legal work ($100K annually)
  • Subscribed to Carta for portfolio tracking and Affinity for CRM ($15K annually combined)
  • Moved into a small dedicated office in DIFC (2 desks, $30K annually)

These costs now came from a larger management fee base ($275K annually from Fund II), but margins remained thin.

Performance and Track Record Building:

At this stage, institutional prospects will begin conducting diligence. They expect to see:

  • Realized returns (not just paper markups) demonstrating ability to identify and exit winners
  • Portfolio construction that shows discipline and strategy adherence
  • Value-add capabilities beyond just writing checks
  • Network effects and deal flow quality
  • Co-investor quality as validation

By mid-2021, Chris had meaningful data points:

  • The Egyptian fintech (Fund I) had been acquired by a regional bank—3.8x gross MOIC in 3.5 years
  • The Saudi logistics company (Fund I) raised a $15M Series B at a $60M valuation—Chris’s stake marked at 5.2x
  • Fund I DPI (distributed to paid-in capital): 0.4x (from the fintech exit)
  • Fund I TVPI (total value to paid-in capital): 2.1x on paper
  • Fund II was actively deploying with 8 investments made by mid-2021
Can you map out Nexus VC fund II using the Fund Strategy canvas?

Stage Three: Institutional Threshold ($30M–$100M)

Nexus’s Institutional Breakthrough (2021-2023)

Crossing $30M AUM represents an invisible but critical line for VCs. Institutional allocators begin to take meetings. The fund has enough AUM to suggest market validation but isn’t so large that the opportunity set is constrained.

In Q4 2021, with Fund II partially deployed and Fund I showing real returns, Chris began exploring Fund III. His target: $30M–$40M, which would push Nexus firmly into institutional territory.

The Consultant Ecosystem:

Access to institutional VC capital increasingly runs through gatekeepers:

  • Placement Agents: Third-party fundraisers specializing in emerging managers, typically working for 2%–3% of capital raised with placement fees paid from GP or as an additional LP commitment
  • Fund of Funds: Aggregators like Horsley Bridge, Greenspring, Top Tier, HarbourVest who can write $3M–$10M checks and provide institutional validation
  • Institutional LPs: Pension plans, endowments, foundations, sovereign wealth funds with emerging manager programs
  • Family Offices: Increasingly sophisticated with dedicated alternative investment staff

Chris faced a decision: hire a placement agent or build institutional relationships organically. He chose the latter—partially from conviction that relationship-building was more sustainable, partially because placement agent fees on a $40M fund ($800K–$1.2M) seemed prohibitive.

The Second Hire (January 2022):

Chris brought on Joshua Martinez as VP of Platform & CFO. Joshua had spent five years in VC operations and portfolio support and understood both the investment side and operational requirements. Compensation: $130,000 plus 3% carry on Fund III plus 6% management company equity.

Joshua’s mandate:

  • Build portfolio support capabilities (recruiting, customer intros, follow-on fundraising support)
  • Professionalize fund operations and reporting
  • Support Fund III fundraising with data room preparation and LP reporting

The Third Hire (June 2022):

As Fund III fundraising progressed, Chris hired Malika Khair as Partner focused on Investor Relations and Business Development. Malika had spent eight years at a regional institutional investor evaluating VC funds and had relationships with LPs across the GCC and Europe. Compensation: $150,000 plus 2% carry on Fund III plus 5% management company equity.

Her immediate impact was professionalizing LP communications and opening doors to institutional allocators who wouldn’t have responded to cold outreach.

Due Diligence Intensity:

Institutional VC due diligence is comprehensive and multi-layered:

  • Strategy assessment: Is the thesis differentiated? Is it sustainable? What’s the competitive moat?
  • Team evaluation: Track record of individuals, team dynamics, reference checks with founders and co-investors
  • Performance analysis: Portfolio construction, deal flow quality, value-add capabilities, follow-on discipline
  • Operations review: Fund administration, compliance, portfolio tracking, reporting capabilities
  • Reference calls: Portfolio company founders, co-investors, service providers, other LPs
  • Scenario analysis: How does fund perform across different outcome scenarios? What’s the path to top quartile?

In Q2 2022, Nexus underwent its first institutional operational due diligence. A $3B European pension fund with a dedicated emerging manager allocation sent a two-person team to Dubai for a week. They:

  • Interviewed the entire team separately
  • Called 10 portfolio company founders for references
  • Spoke with 5 co-investors about Nexus’s reputation
  • Reviewed all fund documents, side letters, and carried interest calculations
  • Analyzed deal flow metrics, pass rates, and investment decision-making
  • Examined portfolio monitoring and value-add frameworks
  • Assessed fund economics and alignment of interests

The process was exhaustive. Three months later, in August 2022, the pension fund committed €3M (~$3M) to Fund III.

Fund III Fundraising (2022-2023):

Chris’s pitch for Fund III evolved:

  • Fund I: 2.8x TVPI with 0.6x DPI (two exits realized, three more in process)
  • Fund II: 1.6x TVPI early, but portfolio showing strong signals
  • Proven sourcing in underinvested market
  • Platform capabilities to support companies through scale
  • Target: $40M with potential to upsize to $50M
  • Terms: 2%/20% with 8% preferred, improving to institutional standards (quarterly reporting, LPAC formation, key person provisions)

The fundraising took 18 months:

  • Existing LPs (Funds I & II): $12M (strong re-up rate)
  • European pension fund: $3M (breakthrough institutional LP)
  • Two regional sovereign wealth fund programs: $8M combined (both emerging manager allocations)
  • Established fund-of-funds (Top Tier Capital): $5M (validation from recognized name)
  • US-based endowment: $4M (first North American institutional LP)
  • Family offices: $6M (increasingly sophisticated allocators)
  • New HNW individuals: $2M

Total: $40M final close in June 2023

The fund-of-funds and US endowment commitments were game-changers. Both required extensive diligence, but their presence in the cap table signaled to other institutions that Nexus had arrived.

Terms Standardization:

To attract institutional capital, fund terms must align with market standards:

  • Management fees: 2% on committed capital during investment period, 1.5%–2% on invested capital post-investment period (some funds use NAV basis)
  • Carry: 20% remains standard, with 8% preferred return (some institutions push for 10%)
  • GP commit: 2%–3% of fund size (increasingly enforced)
  • Key person provisions: if Chris or Daniel left, investment period suspended
  • LPAC formation: 3–5 seats representing major LPs
  • Reporting: quarterly detailed reports with portfolio company updates and fund performance
  • No-fault divorce provisions: LPs can remove GP under certain circumstances
  • Clawback provisions: ensuring carry is only paid on realized profits

Fund III incorporated all institutional standard terms. Chris and Daniel committed $1.2M combined (3% GP commit), primarily through management fee deferrals and personal capital.

The Destination: Institutional VC Firm ($50M+)

Capital Deployment at Scale

Nexus’s Institutional Operations (2023-Present)

With $40M in Fund III, Nexus operated as an institutional VC firm. The transformation was complete in structure, if not yet in scale.

Deployment Strategy:

  • Check sizes increased: $200K–$500K seed, up to $1M+ Series A
  • Ownership targets: 7%–15% at initial investment
  • Portfolio construction: 20–25 companies in Fund III
  • Reserve ratio: 40% for follow-ons (recognizing winners early and supporting them aggressively)
  • Geographic expansion: maintaining MENA focus but open to global opportunities for exceptional founders

The Team at Scale:

At institutional scale, VC teams must professionalize across all functions:

Investment Team:

  • Managing Partners drive strategy and make final investment decisions
  • Partners/Principals source deals, lead diligence, take board seats
  • Associates/Analysts support diligence, portfolio monitoring, market research
  • Venture Partners/Advisors provide domain expertise and deal flow

By 2024, Nexus’s investment team:

  • Chris (Managing Partner) – focused on strategy, key deals, Fund IV planning
  • Daniel (Partner) – actively sourcing and leading investments, 4 board seats
  • Two Principals hired in 2023 ($140K each plus carry participation) – deal flow and execution
  • Two Associates ($90K each) – supporting diligence and portfolio companies

Platform/Operations Team:

  • Platform professionals supporting portfolio companies (recruiting, sales, fundraising)
  • CFO/COO managing fund operations, compliance, and administration
  • IR/capital formation professionals managing LP relationships and fundraising

Joshua’s platform team:

  • Portfolio talent specialist ($95K) – recruiting support for portfolio companies
  • Platform associate ($75K) – coordinating portfolio events and resources
  • Joshua (VP Platform/CFO) – overall operations and portfolio support

Malika’s IR team:

  • IR associate ($85K) – managing quarterly reporting and LP communications
  • Malika (Partner, IR & Business Development) – institutional relationships and Fund IV preparation

Total team: 11 professionals (6 investment, 5 platform/ops)

Operational Infrastructure at Institutional Scale

Technology Stack:

  • Fund administration platforms (Carta, Allocate, Juniper Square)
  • Portfolio monitoring systems (Visible, Chronograph, Kushim)
  • CRM and deal flow management (Affinity, 4Degrees, Sourcewhale)
  • Data rooms and document management (DocSend, Dropbox, DealRoom)
  • Communication and collaboration tools (Slack, Notion, Airtable)
  • Analytics and benchmarking (Cambridge Associates, PitchBook, Preqin)

Nexus’s tech stack in 2024:

  • Carta for fund administration and portfolio cap table management ($60K annually)
  • Visible for portfolio monitoring and LP reporting ($25K annually)
  • Affinity for CRM and relationship management ($40K annually)
  • PitchBook for market intelligence and benchmarking ($35K annually)
  • Various other tools ($20K annually)

Total technology spend: $180K annually (up from $15K in Fund I days)

Governance and Oversight:

  • LPAC formation with 3–5 institutional LP representatives
  • Annual LP meetings (typically in-person at major LP gatherings)
  • Quarterly reporting with detailed portfolio updates and fund performance
  • Independent valuations for portfolio companies (409A or fairness opinions)
  • Comprehensive compliance program with annual testing
  • Advisory boards with domain experts and successful entrepreneurs

Fund III LPAC (formed Q4 2023):

  • European pension fund representative
  • Top Tier Capital representative
  • Sovereign wealth fund representative (rotating seat)
  • US endowment representative
  • Independent member (successful serial entrepreneur and LP)

The LPAC met quarterly to review:

  • Fund strategy and any proposed changes
  • New investments above certain size thresholds
  • Portfolio company challenges or restructurings
  • Key person issues or organizational changes
  • Follow-on fund planning and terms

Insurance and Risk Management:

  • D&O insurance: $10M coverage
  • E&O insurance: $5M coverage
  • Cybersecurity insurance: $3M coverage
  • Fidelity bond: $2M coverage
  • Key person insurance on Chris

Fund Lifecycle and Returns Management

Successful institutional VC firms manage multiple vintage years simultaneously:

  • Active deployment from newest fund
  • Active portfolio management across all funds
  • Exit planning and DPI generation for older funds
  • Follow-on decisions across fund vintages
  • Fund IV fundraising while Fund III deploys

Nexus Fund Portfolio (2024 Snapshot):

Fund I ($2M, 2017 vintage):

  • 12 investments, 10 still active (2 failed completely)
  • 3 exits realized (fintech acquisition, two acqui-hires)
  • 2 strong companies likely to exit at meaningful multiples (logistics unicorn, B2B SaaS)
  • Current metrics: 3.2x TVPI, 1.1x DPI (distributions improving as exits materialize)
  • Top quartile for vintage and geography

Fund II ($11M, 2020 vintage):

  • 18 investments, 16 active (2 failures)
  • 1 exit realized (modest return)
  • 5 companies showing exceptional growth, raised follow-on rounds at significant markups
  • Current metrics: 2.4x TVPI, 0.3x DPI
  • Tracking toward top quartile

Fund III ($40M, 2023 vintage):

  • 12 investments deployed (~$8M), investment period ongoing
  • Early to assess performance, but initial companies showing traction
  • Deal flow significantly improved with institutional backing

Exit Strategy and DPI Generation:

Institutional LPs increasingly focus on realized returns (DPI), not just paper markups (TVPI):

  • Exit pathways: M&A (most common in emerging markets), secondary sales, IPOs (rare)
  • Active management of exit timing—knowing when to sell vs. hold for next round
  • Secondary market solutions for liquidity before traditional exits
  • Engaging with investment banks and corporate development teams early

Chris and Daniel actively worked exit opportunities:

  • The Fund I logistics company had become a unicorn ($1.2B valuation in 2023). Chris faced a decision: sell secondary stake (5x–6x) or hold for potential IPO (10x+ but uncertain timing). After LPAC consultation, he partially exited (50% of position) in a structured secondary, generating meaningful DPI for Fund I while retaining upside.
  • Two Fund II companies received acquisition interest from larger strategics. Chris negotiated exits at 4x and 3.5x MOIC respectively.

By 2024, Fund I was approaching final distributions with strong returns. This performance became critical for Fund IV discussions.

The Critical Success Factors for VC Firms

Performance and Track Record

Institutional VC investors evaluate firms on multiple dimensions:

  • Gross and net returns: Top quartile benchmarking (need 3x+ net MOIC for top quartile in most vintage years)
  • DPI generation: Actual cash returned to LPs, not just paper gains
  • Investment discipline: Pass rate, portfolio construction, follow-on management
  • Value creation: Evidence of value-add beyond capital
  • Deal access: Quality of deal flow and competitive win rate
  • Portfolio outcomes distribution: How concentrated are returns? (VC follows power law)

Nexus’s track record (2024):

  • Fund I: 3.2x TVPI, 1.1x DPI (top quartile for vintage)
  • Fund II: 2.4x TVPI, 0.3x DPI (tracking top quartile)
  • Deal flow: 800+ companies reviewed in 2023, 12 investments (1.5% conversion)
  • Competitive win rate: 75% of term sheets accepted (high for region)
  • Portfolio support: 85% of portfolio companies reported Nexus as helpful or very helpful in annual survey
  • Follow-on signaling: 90% of Nexus portfolio companies that raised follow-on rounds received additional Nexus capital

Team Quality and Stability

LPs invest in teams, not just strategies:

  • Track record of individuals: What have they built or backed before?
  • Team dynamics: How do they work together? Is there alignment?
  • Retention: Has there been turnover? Are people locked in with golden handcuffs?
  • Succession planning: What happens if the founder leaves?
  • Diversity of thought: Different perspectives and backgrounds strengthen decision-making

Nexus’s team stability:

  • Zero turnover in core team (Chris, Daniel, Joshua, Malika) over 6 years
  • Management company equity: Chris 65%, Daniel 12%, Joshua 8%, Malika 7%, option pool 8%
  • Carry allocation clearly defined across funds with vesting structures
  • Decision-making process documented: Chris and Daniel both had veto rights on investments, but decisions made by consensus
  • Succession: Daniel capable of leading firm if Chris unavailable

Deal Flow and Market Position

Sustainable deal flow is the lifeblood of VC:

  • Founder networks: Do great founders come to you first?
  • Co-investor relationships: Do top firms want to co-invest with you?
  • Brand in market: Are you known for specific expertise or value-add?
  • Geographic or sector moats: Do you have differentiated access?
  • Platform capabilities: Can you help companies beyond just capital?

Nexus’s market position (2024):

  • Recognized brand in MENA tech ecosystem—founders sought Nexus out
  • Strong co-investor relationships with international tier-1 VCs (Sequoia, Accel, Index, others) who valued regional presence
  • Domain expertise in fintech, logistics tech, B2B SaaS recognized by founders
  • Platform capabilities (recruiting, sales intros, fundraising support) differentiated from pure-play capital providers
  • Chris and Daniel both regular speakers at regional startup events, active on social media, published thought leadership

Alignment and Economics

LPs scrutinize fund economics rigorously:

  • GP commit: Is GP capital at risk alongside LPs?
  • Management fee structure: Are fees appropriate for fund size and strategy?
  • Carry structure: Is carry aligned with LP returns (hurdles, catch-up provisions)?
  • Conflicts of interest: Side vehicles, SPVs, management company conflicts?
  • Transparency: Are fund economics clearly communicated?

Nexus’s alignment:

  • GP commit: 3% across all funds (Chris and Daniel’s personal capital at risk)
  • Management fees: 2% committed capital during investment period, reducing to 1.75% on invested capital (lower than many peers)
  • Carry: 20% with 8% preferred return, subject to clawback
  • No side vehicles or management company conflicts
  • Full transparency on fees and expenses in quarterly reports

The Institutional Mindset Shift

The transition from emerging to institutional VC isn’t just operational—it’s philosophical. Emerging VCs optimize for access and survival. Institutional VCs optimize for repeatable process, portfolio construction, and sustainable returns.

Chris’s Reflection (2026):

In a conversation with a prospective emerging VC seeking advice, Chris reflected on the journey:

The hardest lesson was learning that being a good investor doesn’t make you a good fund manager. They’re different skills. In the early days, I thought if I just picked good companies, everything else would work out. But institutional investors don’t just want good picks—they want evidence of a repeatable process, proof that you can do it again and again.

That meant formalizing everything. Our investment memos went from 3-page Word docs to 25-page structured analyses. Our portfolio monitoring went from ‘check in with founders’ to quarterly board meetings with KPI tracking. Our fundraising went from begging for meetings to LPs calling us.

The other big shift was time horizon. Emerging VCs think fund-to-fund—’I need returns from Fund I to raise Fund II.’ Institutional VCs think in decades—’How do we build a multi-generational firm?’ That changes how you think about team building, portfolio construction, and market positioning.

And honestly? The economics compress. Fund I, when it was just me, I probably cleared 70% margins on management fees after minimal costs. Fund III, with a team of 11 and real infrastructure, we’re running at 35%–40% margins. But it’s a bigger base, the business is sustainable, and we’re not dependent on me not getting hit by a bus.

The valley between $5M and $30M under management is where most VCs die. You’re too big to run lean, too small to afford infrastructure. You need returns from your early funds, but those take 7–10 years to materialize. It’s brutal. We survived because we stayed disciplined, hired intentionally, and always thought about what institutional LPs would require—even when we didn’t have institutional LPs yet.”

This means:

  • Building repeatable processes over gut-feel investing
  • Accepting that team building and operational excellence matter as much as deal picking
  • Recognizing that LP management is a continuous relationship, not transactional fundraising
  • Understanding that reputation in VC compounds exponentially—one ethical lapse or major failure can close doors permanently

Conclusion: Building for Permanence

The emerging VCs who successfully transition to institutional status share common traits: they treat venture capital as a business, not just a series of bets. They invest in team and infrastructure before they absolutely need it. They build relationships with LPs as true partnerships, not just capital sources. And they recognize that institutional VC capital is patient and sticky—once earned, it provides a foundation for building a multi-decade franchise.

Nexus’s Future (2026 Outlook)

As of January 2026, Nexus VC manages $53M across three active funds (Fund I largely distributed, Fund II partially realized, Fund III actively deploying). The firm is preparing to launch Fund IV with a target of $75M–$100M, which would firmly establish Nexus as a institutional-scale regional VC.

Chris, Daniel, Joshua, and Malika have built something that transcends any individual. The firm has institutional LPs who view Nexus as a core emerging markets allocation. The team has depth and succession planning. The deal flow is sustainable and differentiated. The portfolio is generating real returns, not just paper markups.

The journey from Chris’s co-working desk to a $100M institutional VC took nine years (including Fund IV raise), three key hires, hundreds of rejected pitches, and a willingness to professionalize every aspect of the business. It’s a journey hundreds of emerging VCs attempt every year. But as Chris learned, getting from $2M to institutional scale isn’t primarily about picking winners—every VC believes they can do that. It’s about building an organization that institutional fiduciaries trust with their capital.

The hard part, Chris often reflects, wasn’t raising the first fund—friends and family believed in him personally. And it wasn’t deploying capital—there were always companies to invest in. The hard part was the years between Fund I and Fund III, when he had to build real returns, hire a team, professionalize operations, and convince skeptical institutional LPs that a regional, emerging VC deserved their attention.

But for those who survive the valley, who build the track record, who invest in team and process, who treat LPs as true partners—there’s a path from emerging to institutional. It’s not easy, it’s not quick, but it’s possible.

And on quiet mornings, when Chris arrives at the Nexus office before the team, he sometimes thinks back to those early days in the co-working space, cold-emailing founders and begging for investor meetings, wondering if he could really build a firm. The answer, it turned out, was yes—but only by building something bigger than himself, something that could endure beyond any single fund or investment cycle.

The emerging VCs who make it don’t just pick good companies. They build great firms. And in venture capital, the firm is the ultimate product.


The story of Nexus VC is fictional, but based on 100’s of conversations with emerging managers across accelerators, masterclasses and GP coaching sessions.


About Dune Venture Days: Welcome to the first edition of DUNE Venture Days: a complimentary, invite-only venture capital gathering designed for a curated group of VCs, startup investors, and ecosystem leaders.

DUNE will take place in partnership with Dubai CommerCity and alongside the WORLDEF Dubai 2026 Conference.

DUNE is 100% complimentary. It is simply about giving back to the VC ecosystem — a moment to strengthen existing relationships, build new ones, and bring together people we genuinely enjoy exchanging ideas with. Apply to join at Dune Venture Days.

Want to learn more? Explore Strategy Tools Fund Manager Masterclasses and GP programs.

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Facilitator, running Digital Scale Up? Here are 14 questions to help you prepare for a great session https://www.strategytools.io/blog/facilitator-running-digital-scale-up-here-are-14-questions-to-help-you-prepare-for-a-great-session/ Tue, 03 Feb 2026 08:54:33 +0000 https://www.strategytools.io/?p=276330 Having run 100’s of Strategy Sims Masterclasses we’ve learned how to best plan and structure a program for maximum value to the participants. One way of increasing the value, is to ensure that you, the facilitator and your team are sufficiently prepared . here are 14 questions you can ask yourself, if you are preparing to run a session – with a focus on digital.

Note, in this article we focus on Scale Up!, but the structure is equally valid for Fund Manager!, Transform! or any of the other Strategy Sims.

Scale Up! fact box Scale Up! comes in multiple editions: – Scale Up! (Global) – Scale Up Angel! – Scale Up X! – Scale Up MENA! – Scale Up Africa Rising! – with more editions due out 2026

This is your universe to manage.
1.      Who are your participants?

What’s their level? What’s their expectations? How well do you know the participants you will be working with? Make sure you have a deep understanding of your audience, and truly design a program with their level and expectations in mind.

Not sure who you will be meeting? That’s okay; run two webinars in advance to get to know them.

2.      What’s your framing?

How do you position this? Short, fun session? Learning opportunity for beginners? Advanced-level “I will teach you…” vs. “I expect you to handle everything we throw at you…”?

Personally, I like to frame Scale Up MENA! with “Can you outperform Careem? $3,2BN exit in 7 years. Can you beat it? Good luck” For Africa Rising!, we use Moove. “Can you outperform Moove? From Africa to the world. From pre-seed to $100M with Uber. Can you top it?” For early-stage founders, maybe the framing is ‘can you avoid bankruptcy’?` Think about the framing, the narrative you want to go for.

3.      What’s the core content you want to focus on?

You only have a few hours, truly, what are you going to focus on?

Pre-seed fundraising? Global market expansion? Cap table management? Growth stage fundraising? Long-term capital strategies? Partial liquidity? Investor outcomes? IPO process? Once you know your audience, decide on your core content. This is particularly important for choice of canvases you will be using.

Investor Map, great for beginners.
Outcome Canvas – advanced groups only
4.      What’s the outcome you seek?

When participants finish, what should they be able to do or know, that they did not going into the program? What do you want them to walk away with? What are the learning outcomes? The knowledge outcomes you expect to see? Make sure to spend time on this. Get this right. Upon completion of the participants should know: – – – and they should be able to do: – – –

5. What does ‘winning’ look like?

In Scale Up!, ‘winning’ can take many forms. It is 100% up to you to decide. Got super-early-stage founders? Make it ‘first team to raise three rounds – and make it over the goal line’. Or, ‘first team to hit 10M ARR – without going bankrupt – and make it over the goal line’.

More advanced, intermediate founders? ‘Raise six rounds of financing, complete at least one syndicate and hit 10M ARR – and make it over the goal line’. Or, ‘secure the best possible exit, simply’. Late-stage, advanced founders? ‘Best exit wins’, or ‘Lead the company through, seven rounds of financing, one syndicate, 10M ARR and a successful IPO transacttion’.

Before you start, always know – and communicate – what ‘winning’ looks like.

Winning, with exits and unicorns
6. Program structure – or stand alone session?

Is this part of a larger program, likely an investor readiness program or an entirely stand-alone Masterclass? Are you running pre-session Webinars – or not? Our recommendation is generally to run one or two pre-session webinars in advance, to help participants tune in, set expectations and prepare.

Webinar 1: Introduction to Scale Up! Why we are doing this Background Three types of companies (SME, local tech, global tech, what are you building?) The Founder’ Journey – and the funding from idea to IPO Next steps (+ access to pre-read)

Webinar 2: Recap on introduction Financing the Founder’s journey Investment instruments overview Term sheets (real-life) and Investor cards Recommendations for how to best prepare (pre-read, pre-work, pre-videos)

7. Pre-read package

What are you providing the participants to read in advance? For Scale Up Africa Rising!, we are now developing the following pre-read package:

i.            Case Study: Scaling Payzhub (50+ pages)

ii.            Angel E-mail (core instructions)

iii.            Team & Roles (team setup)

iv.            Founder Handbook (explaining)

v.            Real-life SAFE note (Example)

You, of course, select your own package.

Scaling Payzhub case, when the founders were still young and naive
8.      Pre-work package

What are you putting together for the pre-work package? What are the pre-session training exercises you want people to do? Are you holding people accountable for completing it? Are you reviewing and giving people feedback before the session? Or, are you just saying ‘complete it, good luck’?

We know from experience that only 20% – 50% will complete the pre-work package, but the ones that do, will have a massive advantage and be key people on their respective teams. For Scale Up Africa Rising! Pre-work package we are doing:

I.            Founder Handbook: 10 Building blocks (exercises) (40-60 pages)

II.            Founder Workbook: Edustream (exercises) (27 pages)

Edustream workbook
9. Pre-session videos

Are you using pre-session videos? If so, who’s shooting them? What’ the key content we focus on?

The videos we would recommend are.

I. Intro & welcome video. Introducing Scale Up! Miro board overview. Walkthrough of the Miro board and how to navigate it  (15. – 35. Min). (see example)

II. Pre-session exercises. Hands on training materials (15. min). (See example)

III.            Founders Journey video (can be replaced by Webinar I)

IV.            Investment Instruments, Video (with linkage to the pre-work package) (can be replaced by Webinar 2)

Scale Up! Intro Part I. Walkthrough of the Miro board.
10.  Is your detailed program design truly ready?

Have you mapped out every 15. Min block yet? Have you pre-selected all Founder Tasks and Strategic Dilemma you want to run? Have you clearly defined ‘milestones’ for end of each day? Running a Scale Up! without a detailed program design is…. Unwise.

  • Offsites (for the roles, like CEO, CRO, CFO, etc)
  • Breakouts (for the teams)
  • Breaks (coffee breaks) (step away from the computer, for real)
  • Plenary sessions (rolling dice, moving)
  • Plenary sessions (for content, canvases, teaching)
  • Everything need to be pre-arranged, clearly mapped out.

For example, if you want teams to make any decisions, they need to be in the same breakout room together. No offsites, expect to decisions. For every 60. Min (hour), plan for minimum two, maybe even three team breakouts.

Use the Scale Up! Masterclass Design Canvas

Running a true Masterclass? Plan your program in 15. Minute blocks. Seriously.

(Did you know, In our experience, if there is no detailed design in place, we tend to cover only 60% of the plan we hoped to cover for the day. With a detailed design in place, we are pretty much at 95% – 100%.)
One-day, basic workflow, Scale Up MENA!
Three-day workflow, Katapult Accelerator, 4-hour days + 2-3 hours between sessions
Zooming in one day 2 content.
11. Have you clearly assigned roles on the facilitator team?

Who is leading the plenary and sharing screen? Who is handling cards? Who is leading the offsites? Who is jumping from room to room, to support the teams? Who is running the Investor Map, Long-term Funding Roadmap and Outcome Canvas? Who is helping teams with cap tables?

All this need to be pre-set in advance.

KO facilitator team
12. Is your logic flow in place

Scale Up! is structured around what we call the Founder’s Journey. Over a few days, we typically cover 6-10 years of ‘startup life’. Make sure your plan, your design capture this in a logical manner.

  • Every roll with the dice represent a few weeks of ‘real life founder life’.
  • Every square on the board represent ca. 9 days.
  • Every length of the board represent 3 months or 90 days.
  • Every round around the full board represent a full year.

This means, the entire first round around the board is year 1. Think about, what happens, really, in year 1. Team coming together, early customer discovery, a grant. Maybe an angel investor. Possibly an accelerator. Maybe a friends and family round. Maybe first revenue, often wrapped in a pilot structure. Possibly an advisor or two. Maybe a few new team members. That’s often it. Some companies will hit $100M ARR and level five product, go-to-market and expand into six markets, but that’s extremely unlikely. Plan for a ‘normal’ growth phase, where pre-seed, seed, seed+ and Series A takes 2-4 years, not 3-4 rolls with the dice.

An action-packed three day program; not for beginners, this one.

With an advanced group, in a three-day structure, here is how we think about the logic flow. Note, this is not suitable for early-stage or beginners, as you’ll need to move much slower on day one.

13. How much time do you allow for debrief?

Want to good ending? Always allow time for a structured debrief.

Use Miro and sticky notes or structured canvases, but do not skip the debrief.

Debrief, Scale Up! 2022
14. What happens post-program?

Ok, you just wrapped up another great Masterclass. Now what?

How clear is your plan for next steps? Participant survey? Client debrief? Participant debrief? Project work? Real-life slide decks to review?

Be clear, always, on what happens next.

Your turn

ok, so if you are planning to run Scale Up! sessions, this guide can help you better structure and plan the entire workflow.

Good luck!

Bonus: use as much real-life input as possible. Like here, AMZ going public at 3 years old. Why not you?
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Should Exit Thinking Be Mentioned in Your Term Sheet? https://www.strategytools.io/blog/should-exit-thinking-be-mentioned-in-your-term-sheet/ Tue, 03 Feb 2026 07:13:41 +0000 https://www.strategytools.io/?p=276316 When startup VC exits does not happen by themselves, what’s a VC to do? Exploring the topic of discussing liquidity and exit strategy at term sheet level.
First article leading up to the upcoming Dune Venture Days in Dubai.

The Exit Gap in Most VC Markets

Across MENA, Africa, and Europe, venture capital ecosystems share a common challenge: the path to liquidity remains uncertain, unpredictable, and often an afterthought. In MENA, startups have raised over $11 billion since 2021, yet fewer than 7.5% have achieved exits. Africa recorded only 26 venture-backed exits in 2024, returning just $0.13 per invested dollar. European secondary markets, while more developed, still leave many GPs scrambling when fund lifecycles demand returns.

The numbers tell a challenging story. The VC markets across MENA, Africa and Europe are all maturing, evolving, even booming in the case of MENA. Deals are happening, new funds are being set up, but…….. everyone is also waiting on liquidity and DPI.

This raises a fundamental question: Should exit thinking be embedded directly into the term sheet itself?, or more precisely, how should liquidity strategy be presented in your term sheet?

The GP Exit Canvas: A Framework for Strategic Exit Planning

The GP Exit Canvas, developed through extensive work with fund managers across global VC markets, provides a structured visual framework for integrating exit strategy thinking from day one of the investment process. It consists of nine interconnected building blocks:

GP Exit Canvas

Building Block

  1. Pre-Deal Assessment

How do we work on exits in our pre-deal assessment?

2. Key Documents

What exit items do we use in term sheets, shareholder agreements, and exit memos?

3. Exit Strategy BOD Day

How do we design and deliver an annual board exit strategy day?

4. Mapped Out Exit Paths

How well do we map out exit paths for each portfolio company?

5. Exit Committee

How do we setup and run an exit committee years ahead of a transaction?

6. GP Exit Team

Do we have team members dedicated to exits?

7. Exit Advisors

Who are the right exit advisors for our portfolio companies?

8. Exit Network

How large is our relevant exit network and how can we grow it?

9. Exit Dealmaking

Are we successful in completing exit transactions?

Notice that “Key Documents” sits prominently in this framework. The canvas explicitly asks: What are the key exit items we use for the company’s legal and strategic documents? Do we use a tiered exit model at various company stages? This is where the term sheet becomes a critical tool for exit planning.

The VC Debate: Should Term Sheets Include Exit Provisions?

The question of whether to include explicit liquidity and exit provisions in term sheets divides opinion among fund managers. Let’s examine both sides.

The Case Against

Premature constraints on founder optionality. Critics argue that embedding exit timelines into term sheets creates rigid structures that may not serve the company’s best interests. Markets shift, opportunities emerge unexpectedly, and what looks like the right exit path at Series A may be completely wrong by Series C. Founders need flexibility to pursue the best outcomes, not contractual obligations that force premature decisions.

Potential misalignment with founder vision. Some founders view explicit exit provisions as a signal that investors are more focused on their own returns than building a truly transformative company. This can create tension from day one and may deter founders who are building for the long term.

Negotiation complexity. Adding detailed exit provisions increases the complexity of term sheet negotiations, potentially slowing deal velocity and adding legal costs at a stage where founders often have limited resources.

The Case For

Alignment from day one. Proponents argue that discussing exit paths early actually creates better alignment between founders and investors. When both parties understand and agree on potential liquidity scenarios, there are fewer surprises later. As the GP Exit Canvas emphasizes, exit planning isn’t separate from investment strategy—it is investment strategy.

LP pressure demands clarity. Limited Partners are increasingly demanding DPI (distributions to paid-in capital) rather than just paper returns. In markets like MENA and Africa, where exits are scarce, LPs want to see evidence that GPs have thought through liquidity paths before committing capital. Having exit provisions in term sheets signals sophistication and planning.

Structuring for market realities. In regions with underdeveloped IPO markets and fewer strategic acquirers, secondary sales and tiered liquidity models often represent the most realistic path to returns. Building these mechanisms into deal structures from the start ensures they can be executed when opportunities arise.

Creating exit-ready documentation. When exit opportunities emerge, deals often fail because documentation isn’t ready for institutional buyer due diligence. Term sheets that anticipate exit requirements—drag-along rights, tag-along protections, information rights—create companies that can move quickly when windows open.

The Verdict: Yes, With Nuance

The evidence is clear: paths and timelines to liquidity are key for VCs and should be covered in term sheets. However, this doesn’t mean imposing rigid exit schedules or forcing founders into narrow outcomes. Instead, it means creating flexible frameworks that acknowledge the importance of liquidity while preserving optionality.

The most successful VCs think backward from liquidity events when making investment decisions. As the GP Exit Canvas demonstrates, this backward-thinking approach should be embedded in every aspect of the investment process, including the foundational document that governs the investor-founder relationship.

For emerging market funds, where smaller pools of potential acquirers and less developed exit markets create additional challenges, the discipline of incorporating exit thinking into term sheets can mean the difference between a successful fund and one that struggles to return capital to LPs.

Three Liquidity Mechanisms: Sample Term Sheet Language

Below are three examples of different liquidity mechanisms that can be incorporated into term sheets, each suited to different investment contexts and portfolio company stages.

1. Strategic Acquisition Facilitation Clause

Context: Appropriate for early-stage investments where strategic M&A is the most likely exit path, particularly in sectors with active corporate acquirers (fintech, healthtech, agritech).

SAMPLE TERM SHEET LANGUAGE

Exit Strategy Facilitation

Strategic Exit Support: Upon the Company achieving annual recurring revenue of [USD 2,000,000] or cumulative revenue of [USD 5,000,000], the Investors shall actively facilitate introductions to potential strategic acquirers identified in the pre-investment Exit Path Assessment. The Company shall maintain an updated list of no fewer than fifty (50) potential strategic acquirers, reviewed and updated at each Board Exit Strategy Day.

Exit Readiness Milestones: The Company agrees to achieve “exit-ready” status within thirty-six (36) months of closing, including: (a) completion of SOC 2 Type II certification or equivalent, (b) audited financial statements prepared in accordance with IFRS, (c) documented regulatory approvals and compliance records, and (d) clean cap table with all option grants properly documented.

Drag-Along Rights: In the event of a bona fide acquisition offer valued at or above [3x] the post-money valuation of this round, approved by (i) a majority of the Board of Directors and (ii) holders of a majority of the Preferred Stock, all shareholders shall be required to participate in such transaction on the same terms and conditions.

Information Rights for Exit: The Company shall provide Investors with monthly operating metrics in a format suitable for potential acquirer due diligence, and shall grant Investors reasonable access to management for the purpose of facilitating strategic discussions with potential acquirers, subject to appropriate confidentiality protections.

2. Tiered Liquidity Model (1/3, 1/3, 1/3 Structure)

Context: Designed for growth-stage investments where the investor seeks to manage risk and generate early DPI while maintaining upside exposure. Particularly relevant in MENA and Africa where full exits are rare but secondary markets are developing.

SAMPLE TERM SHEET LANGUAGE

Tiered Liquidity Structure

Liquidity Schedule: The Investors’ shareholding shall be subject to the following tiered liquidity framework, designed to balance early returns with continued participation in Company growth:

Tranche 1 – Series B Secondary (One-Third of Position): Upon completion of the Company’s Series B financing round at a pre-money valuation of at least [3x] the post-money valuation of this round, the Investors shall have the right (but not the obligation) to sell up to one-third (33.33%) of their shareholding to incoming investors or approved secondary buyers. The Company shall use commercially reasonable efforts to facilitate such secondary sale as part of the Series B transaction, including allocating reasonable capacity in the round for secondary purchases and providing necessary documentation and representations.

Tranche 2 – Pre-IPO/Series D Secondary (One-Third of Position): Upon completion of a Series D financing round or a pre-IPO financing round at a pre-money valuation of at least [8x] the post-money valuation of this round, the Investors shall have the right to sell an additional one-third (33.33%) of their original shareholding (or 50% of remaining position) through secondary sale mechanisms. The Company agrees to include standard secondary sale provisions in its Series D or pre-IPO documentation, and shall not unreasonably withhold consent to transfers to qualified institutional buyers.

Tranche 3 – Ultimate Exit/IPO (Remaining Position): The Investors’ remaining shareholding (one-third of original position) shall be held until the Company’s ultimate liquidity event, whether through IPO, strategic acquisition, or other qualifying exit transaction. In the event of an IPO, the Investors agree to customary lock-up provisions not exceeding one hundred eighty (180) days, following which they may dispose of shares at their discretion.

Valuation Floor Protection: The secondary sale rights described in Tranches 1 and 2 above shall only be exercisable if the applicable round valuation represents at least a [2.5x] multiple on the Investor’s cost basis for Tranche 1, and a [5x] multiple for Tranche 2. If such thresholds are not met, the secondary rights shall roll forward to the next qualifying financing round.

Company Facilitation Obligation: The Company shall designate a member of senior management responsible for coordinating secondary sale processes and maintaining relationships with secondary market platforms and qualified buyers. The Company shall not impose transfer restrictions or exercise rights of first refusal in a manner designed to frustrate the Investors’ exercise of the rights described herein.

3. Redemption and Put Option Mechanism

Context: Appropriate for later-stage investments or situations where market exit uncertainty is high, providing investors with a guaranteed liquidity path while giving the Company flexibility on timing.

SAMPLE TERM SHEET LANGUAGE

Redemption and Put Option Rights

Redemption Right: Commencing on the sixth (6th) anniversary of the closing date (“Redemption Date”), and upon written request from holders of at least a majority of the then-outstanding Preferred Stock, the Company shall redeem the Preferred Stock in three (3) equal annual installments at a price per share equal to the greater of: (a) the original purchase price plus any accrued but unpaid dividends, or (b) the fair market value as determined by an independent valuation conducted by a mutually agreed third-party valuation firm.

Put Option: In the event that no qualifying liquidity event (defined as an IPO, strategic acquisition, or secondary sale opportunity at or above [2x] the original purchase price) has occurred by the fifth (5th) anniversary of closing, the Investors shall have the right to require the Company to facilitate a sale of the Investors’ shares to (i) existing shareholders, (ii) the Company (subject to legal restrictions), or (iii) third-party buyers identified by the Company, at a price equal to the higher of (a) [1.5x] the original purchase price or (b) fair market value as determined by independent valuation.

Company Call Option: The Company shall have the right, but not the obligation, to call and repurchase the Investors’ shares at any time after the fourth (4th) anniversary at a price equal to the higher of (a) [2.5x] the original purchase price or (b) fair market value. This call option shall expire upon the occurrence of a qualifying liquidity event.

Exit Window Coordination: The Company agrees to engage an investment bank or M&A advisor to conduct a formal market assessment of exit opportunities no later than the fourth (4th) anniversary of closing, with the results of such assessment to be shared with the Board of Directors and used to inform liquidity planning discussions.

Note to self, work with fancy lawyers on exit terms; but start on day 1. You don’t need to wait for year 8 to begin….

Implementing Exit Thinking: Practical Steps for GPs

The GP Exit Canvas provides a comprehensive framework for making exit planning systematic rather than sporadic. When implementing exit provisions in term sheets, consider these principles:

Start the conversation early. Use the pre-deal assessment phase to discuss exit scenarios openly with founders. This conversation will inform which term sheet provisions are most appropriate and help identify potential misalignment before it becomes a problem.

Match provisions to context. A fintech startup with clear strategic acquirer interest needs different provisions than a B2B SaaS company targeting eventual IPO. The three examples above illustrate this range—use them as starting points, not templates.

Build in flexibility. The best exit provisions create optionality rather than obligation. Rights to sell don’t mean requirements to sell. Valuation floors protect against fire sales while preserving upside.

Integrate with governance. Exit provisions in term sheets should connect to ongoing governance mechanisms—annual Exit Strategy Board Days, exit committees, and regular exit readiness assessments as outlined in the GP Exit Canvas.

Communicate with LPs. When raising your next fund, point to these term sheet provisions as evidence of your systematic approach to liquidity. LPs increasingly want to see DPI, and demonstrating that you’ve built exit thinking into your investment process from day one differentiates you from GPs who treat exits as an afterthought.

Conclusion

In venture capital, capabilities compound over time into competitive advantages. Funds that embed exit thinking into their term sheets—and across all nine elements of the GP Exit Canvas—build a systematic capability that serves portfolio companies, LPs, and their own track records.

For fund managers operating in MENA, Africa, and Europe, where exit markets remain challenging but opportunities are growing, this systematic approach isn’t optional—it’s essential. The term sheet is where that discipline starts.

The most successful venture capital firms don’t just pick winners; they systematically create the conditions for winning exits. Make your term sheet part of that system.

_______________

About Dune Venture Days: Welcome to the first edition of DUNE Venture Days: a complimentary, invite-only venture capital gathering designed for a curated group of VCs, startup investors, and ecosystem leaders.

DUNE will take place in partnership with Dubai CommerCity and alongside the WORLDEF Dubai 2026 Conference.

DUNE is 100% complimentary. It is simply about giving back to the VC ecosystem — a moment to strengthen existing relationships, build new ones, and bring together people we genuinely enjoy exchanging ideas with. Apply to join at Dune Venture Days.

Welcome to Dune Venture Days

About the GP Exit Canvas: The GP Exit Canvas is part of the Venture Capital Series developed by Strategy Tools. Download the canvas and explore additional resources at www.strategytools.io.

About the Author: Christian Rangen is a strategy advisor and business school faculty member who works with VC/PE firms, fund-of-funds, DFIs, and governments on venture capital ecosystem development. He delivers VC Masterclasses and mentors fund managers globally.

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Nine ways to run Scale Up! https://www.strategytools.io/blog/nine-ways-to-run-scale-up/ Tue, 03 Feb 2026 06:42:14 +0000 https://www.strategytools.io/?p=276299 This year we expect to train and certify 50-60 Scale Up! expert facilitators. If you are one of them, here are nine ways you can run Scale Up!

Accelerating entreprenurship with Scale Up!

Globally, 1000’s of founders, investors and ecosystem developers have built their ‘scale up skills’ with Scale  Up! From introduction to cap table math, accelerating seed-stage founders or training investors on deal structures, partial liquidity mechanisms and IPO readiness, over the years we have seen a broad range of use cases of Scale Up!

Expert Expert facilitators like Scott B. Newton, Rick Rasmussen, Rumbi Makanga, Enrico Maset, Sanjana Raheja and many, others are pushing to create new best practices in Scale Up! delivery.

African accelerators, European family offices, Middle Eastern fund-of-funds, Nordic innovation clusters, US business schools, global impact accelerators and global entrepreneurship organizations are just some of the 100’s and 100’s of users who have picked up Scale Up! in recent years; but how can you run Scale Up!?

Well, in our work, we have identified nine different ways you can run Scale Up!

Before we start

Before getting into the details, the first question is always, “are you running this online or in-person”.

Scale Up! has been delivered 100’s of times in both formats. But what are you planning?

Some people strongly prefer the online version, noting the flexibility of adding new content, combined with nobody needing to travel. For many, the online format can be perfect. Others prefer the in-person setup. Being in the same room together. More energy, more collaboration, more engagement, more teamwork.

There is no right or wrong, it’s simply up to you, which format you prefer.

In-person, Bergen Norway vs. Katapult Impact Accelerator, online. Same, but different.
1.      “Bits and pieces”

Duration: Varies, from 30. Minutes to days

Format: online or in-person

Example: Hatch Founder Workshop

The “Bits and pieces” format allows you to extract certain pieces from the Scale Up! kit and work with it, without having to run the entire simulation.

This is great if you are running shorter sessions, focused workshops or want  to zoom in one a certain topic, without bringing the full kit. Expert facilitators like Enrico or Javier, regularly use the Scale Up! Strategy cards in founder coaching conversations, while I run multiple exercises for founders on the Investor Map and Long-term funding roadmap, combined with a handful of Scale Up! Investor cards.

There is no one best way to run this, feel free to mix and match the bits and pieces as you see fit.

Long-term Funding Roadmap, using investor cards from Scale Up!, Hatch Accelerator, Sep 2023

Or, if you prefer the in-person format.

Completing the Long-term Funding Roadmap, using Investor Cards from Scale Up! Innovation Norway, Sep 2023
2.      Discovery

Duration: 2-3 hours

Format: Light, easy, introduction level

Example: Strategy Tools hosted online discovery session

Imagine having friends over for dinner, and all you serve them is an appetizer and that’s it. That’s a Discovery session for you. It is a taster. Nothing more. But for most people, it is great way to get a first taste, a first chance to see Scale Up! in action. Just be clear on format and expectations. This is not a full program. It not even a full introduction. But for a couple of hours, it serves as a great appetizer.

Scale Up! Discovery session, online, July 2024
3.      Pilot

Duration: 1 day

Format: Beginner and intermediate, introduction focused

Example: Scale Up MENA! pilot in Dubai

Pilots are a great way to get people introduced to and initially started on Scale Up!

A good pilot session is usually a full-day (5-8 hours), something most founders can carve out time for. A good pilot will have four sections throughout the day. – Welcome & introductions (20. Minutes) – Opening lecture (30. – 90. Minutes) – Hands-on, in teams, running Scale Up! (3-6 hours) – Debrief, next steps and how to move from pilot to full program

We recommend most new facilitators to plan for 5-20 Pilot sessions per year, as it has proven to be a great way to get going with Scale Up! in a new market or ecosystem. Most founders, once they have tried a pilot session, usually want more  – and soon.

100+ founders met Scale Up MENA! through a series of pilots in Dubai in November 2025
4.      Workshop

Duration: 1-3 days

Format: varies from light, entry-level, to advanced, depending on the group

Example: 2-day Scale Up! workshop with the Ocean Startup Project in Canada , or 1-day with EO Dubai.

The workshop format is standard, full-scale delivery. But a workshop tends to be shorter, slower and less advanced in terms of content than a Masterclass. We have done 100’s of workshops. They are great. But think about workshops as the little brother against the Masterclass.

In a workshop format, you would aim to run Scale Up! from start to successful exit (end); but you have more flexibility in terms of content (take things out), pacing (slow things down), and adjust to the topics the group wants to focus on. A workshop is a very flexible format.

Often, the workshop format ties well into ongoing client engagements, where you decide to run Scale Up! as a part of a larger engagement. We frequently do this with angel networks, family offices, incubators, accelerators and ecosystem developers with great effect.

What Canadian ocean founders said, Nov 2021
5.      Masterclass

Duration: 2-3 days (3 days recommended)

Format: advanced level, complex, fast-paced, challenging, but also incredibly engaging

Example: Bahrain, DNB, Dubai, Cairo and many, many more

A Masterclass is an advanced, fast-paced, stand-alone delivery of Scale Up! It usually runs over three days, in some cases 2,4 or even 5 days.

What makes a Masterclass stand out is the full-on pace, advanced content and focus on taking all teams through the best possible experience we can.

A Masterclass is planned down to every 15. Min slot, and covers a number of Founder Tasks, Breakout exercises and Strategy Tools canvases.  A robust Masterclass will take participants through every step of the scaling up journey, and focus significant attention on the later-stage issues, such as Outcome Canvas, partial investor liquidity and a full exit transaction. Depending on the level of the participants, an exit transaction can end out in a ‘quick M&A’ (takes around 20. Minutes to complete) or a full-scale IPO process (takes around 3-4 hours to complete).

Personally, the 3-day Masterclass is my favorite format, as participants tend to lean in, work hard and we can see massive progress with just a few days of work.

Three day, Scale Up! Masterclass, Bahrain, April 2024
6.      Program

Duration: 30-90 days, could be more

Format: Usually quite advanced, depending on the group. Covers a broad range of topics, with Scale Up! being very central.

Example: 30-day Investment Readiness program with Katapult Accelerator, Savant Accelerator, Link Capital or GIZ

A program structure means Scale Up! is just a small piece in a larger entreprenurship program. This can be a one week program, a four week program, a 90-day program or longer. With Katapult, we run a 30-day, high-intensity program.

In a program format, we usually plan for Scale Up! as one of the cornerstone activities, but we also plan for a lot more work and content than just Scale Up! Over the years, we’ve run a significant number of the 30-day Investor Readiness Sprint, a 30-day, intense, packed program to get founders truly investor ready, and radically increase their chances of successfully raising their next round of equity investment. In this format, we recommend founders to allocate 100-150 hours per startup team, with Scale Up! taking less than 15 hours.

In your work, you can probably see many program structures where Scale Up! can be a small piece of the bigger picture.

In a program format, like the 30-day Investor Readiness Sprint, Scale Up! is just a small piece in a larger puzzle
7.      Education

Duration: From one day to a full semester

Format: Depends on learning goals, levels and target outcomes.

Example: FHV, Northwestern, ESCP and many, many more levels: Scale Up! is used in educational programs from High School (Canada), Business School (Europe and the US) and technical universities (Europe)

The first time we brought Scale Up! into a classroom was in Dornbirn, Austria (truly, in the Austrian alps) in October 2021. Since then, 100’s and 100’s of entrepreneurship students have experienced Scale Up! as a part of their educational programs.

In Canada, Stuart and Michael have been running an innovative space tech x Scale Up! high school program, as well as multiple university programs. In Germany, Austria and Italy, Enrico has been teaching with Scale Up! across programs. In Silicon Valley, Rick has been educating future startup founders with Scale Up! In London, Vishal is teaching entreprenurship with Scale Up!

Rick, Chris (and Enrico), teaching entrepreneurship in the Austrian alps
8.      Multi-year programs

Duration: Runs into years

Format: Varies significantly, but usually several Scale Up! sessions over time

Example: Reinventing the Norwegian innovation cluster program

A multi-year program might take the shape of a larger ecosystem development initiative, a national transformation program, a business angel development program or simply upskilling

In Norway, from 2017-2021, we ran a multi-year program on reinventing the national, Norwegian innovation cluster program. Here, Scale Up! was a cornerstone in the project. Over these 4-5 years, we probably ran 30 Scale Up! sessions of different lengths and formats. In Cairo, working with Tiye Angels, we run a multi-year program covering early-stage founders, scaling founders, angel investors and ecosystem coaches.

For anyone who might have a chance to plug Scale Up! into a multi-year development program, expect to see huge improvement in your own expertise and mastery in how you run Scale Up!

Looking ahead, we can see many forms of these multi-year programs:

  • Boosting the Nordic tech ecosystem
  • Scaling the European startup ecosystem
  • Taking the UAE and MENA ecosystem to the next level
  • Upskilling a generation of startup founders in Saudi Arabia – Developing stronger financial and fundraising skills in South East Asia
  • Boosting accelerators and Business Support Organizations in Latin America
  • Building deep skills in entreprenurial finance, cap tables and fundraising in Africa

These are just a handful of the Scale Up! multi-year programs we would love to see coming up, led by you, as the new expert facilitators.

Early-days, bringing Scale UP! into the Norwegian innovation cluster program, 2019-2020
9.      Train-the-trainers

Duration: From a few days to multiple months

Format: Blended, online or in-person (most do blended)

Example: Scale Up MENA! TTT, Strategy Tools Master Trainer, Katapult TTT

One day, hopefully, some of you might want to start training and supporting new Scale Up! expert facilitators in your ecosystem. Go for it! One of the best ways to learn is by teaching others.

We have taught, trained and certified 70+ Scale Up! Facilitators, closer to 300 if we count everyone that has been through the Train-the-trainers, but not necessarily taken up Scale Up! as a professional track.

In your case, if you have an accelerator team, local business school faculty or a network of consultants and investors you work with; go for it. Put together a new, innovative Train-the-trainers program in your ecosystem, or let’s work together with you running our standard TTT program, in your part of the world.

Who knows, maybe you will be the one to unlock 100’s of new Scale Up! facilitators, you just don’t know it yet.

Train-the-trainers, or expert-level certification, we have trained 100’s of people in running Scale Up! Maybe you will too?

The best way? Just get started

In this blogpost we have outlined ten ways you can run Scale Up! From classrooms to workshops, from multi-year programs to discovery sessions; the choice is yours.

Scott B. Newton in action, Dubai, June 2023. Be more like Scott.

Regardless, the best way to run it is simply getting started. Enrico, one of our most experienced Scale Up! facilitators, once said, that new facilitators (like yourself) should aim to run 20 sessions, minimum, in the first year. With 20 sessions, you build muscle memory, confidence and quickly gain mastery.  Just get started.

On our end, we are excited to see what you will do with Scale Up! in the coming years – ultimately supporting startup founders to build and scale better companies in your part of the world.

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Welcome to Scale Up! Train-the-trainers https://www.strategytools.io/blog/welcome-to-scale-up-train-the-trainers/ Tue, 03 Feb 2026 05:58:48 +0000 https://www.strategytools.io/?p=276283 Hi there,

So, you are getting ready to embark on the Scale Up! Train-the-Trainer? Exciting! This can be truly life-changing for your professional career!

Before you begin, here’s a couple of points you might like to know.

Scale Up! online format, with Katapult accelerator, Nov 2021

    Part I: Ten fast facts

    1.      What is Scale Up? Scale Up! is a methodology to develop entrepreneurs, founders, angel investors, accelerators, incubators, VCs and ecosystem developers. The Scale Up! Methodology is based on 20+ years of experience supporting 1000’s of high-growth startup founders from pre-seed to post-IPO. The methodology is built on ‘working visually’, with a series of visual canvases and the visual Scale Up! kit.

    2.      What’s the core idea behind Scale Up!? In Scale Up! participants form teams and compete through the Founder’s Journey, taking a company from idea to successful exit. For most people,  we do around 8-10 years in just three days.

    3.      How is Scale Up! delivered? In-person or online (using Miro and Zoom)

    4.      How can Scale Up! be run? Your imagination sets the only limitations; we describe seven different ways you can run Scale Up! We prefer the 3-day format, but half-day, one-day, two-day, five day or even 3-month formats are possible. It’s really up to you.

    5.      How many people have been through Scale Up!? Globally, ca. 4.500 to date

    6.      How many countries have Scale Up! been run so far? 50+

    7.      How many expert facilitators are there? ca. 70+

    8.      How many Scale Up! version are there? – Scale Up! (1.0) – Scale Up Angel! – Scale Up MENA! – Scale Up Africa Rising! – Scale Up Europe! (launching in 2026). More coming…

    9.      Who developed Scale Up!? Chris Rangen and his colleague Jolene Foo-Hodne was working with Innovation Norway, the Norwegian national innovation agency on a national program. This collaboration led to the first Scale Up! back in 20218.

    10. Who can run Scale Up!? Globally, anyone can learn to run Scale Up! To date, faculty, VCs, accelerator staff, coaches and consultants have all learned to run Scale Up! With a bit of training and willingness to learn, anyone can.

    Founders, investors, ecosystem builders – all benefitting from Scale Up!

    Part II: Two types of knowledge

    The two sets of expertise you will develop For anyone running Scale Up!, there are two skillsets you need. We count these on a one to five level, from beginner to expert.

    Domain knowledge Domain knowledge is how much you know about the content, the term sheets, the deal structures, the cap table math and how to bring together a 2M @4M post SAFE, with a 500.000 @3M pre equity round, while also keeping the initial angel investors happy and structuring a 12% post-round ESOP.

    Domain knowledge is important. It is what you know. It is the foundation you use to teach, coach and mentor others. Everyone should strive to develop their domain knowledge.

    But domain knowledge alone is not enough.

    Facilitation knowledge Next, you have faciliation knowledge, or really faciliation skills. How comfortable are you with structuring programs, designing multi-stakeholder workshops and facilitating high-paced masterclasses? Can you manage large groups, in both online and in-person formats?

    Can you use your voice well? Can you give instructions clearly? Can you design a workflow to keep people engaged over multiple days?

    For most of us, these two sets of skills is something we work on constantly, day in and day out. You never graduate, you just keep getting better and better over time.

    Getting to level five ….takes real, genuine work

    Part III: The five core topics you will master

    Our train-the-Trainer is designed around five core topic areas. Each represents a critical piece of the puzzle every Scale Up! Expert Facilitator needs to handle with confidence.

    1. Founder’s Journey From IPO dreams to the messy realities of taking a company public, you will learn to guide participants through every twist and turn. This is the backbone of Scale Up! – understanding what founders actually go through from idea to exit. Can you tell stories, of success and failure from across the Founder’s journey?

    2. Term Sheets 600+ term sheets. SAFE notes. CLAs. Priced rounds. Liquidation preferences. You will learn to read, understand, and explain even the most complex investor term sheets. Did you know there is such a thing as ‘too many term sheets’? You will.

    3. Cap Tables From foundational equity to Series K dilution, cap table mastery is non-negotiable. You will learn to help founders understand how their equity evolves – and how to protect it.

    4. Ten Steps to Scaling Up This is where strategy meets execution. Scale up mindset. Exit planning. Equity management. ARR velocity. Team development. Market expansion. Customer discovery. Financing. Product development. Scaling with AI. Ten interconnected elements that determine whether a startup stays stuck – or scales.

    5. Liquidity & Exits The ultimate question: how do you return value to investors? M&A, IPO, secondary transactions, partial liquidity – you will learn to facilitate conversations most founders have never had. Combined, these five are the core topics you need to study up on to build out your domain expertise.

    Scale Up! Train-the-trainer Structure

    Part IV: Three levels of development

    Here’s the thing about becoming a Scale Up! Expert Facilitator. It’s not about reading a manual. It’s about a progression through three distinct levels.

    Knowledge This is where you start. Learning the content. Understanding the frameworks. Reading term sheets. Studying cap table math. Getting fluent in the visual canvases, the Founder’s Journey, the Investor Map, the Rocketship Canvas. You are building the internal library that allows real improvisation later.

    Confidence Knowledge is not enough. Confidence comes from running programs. From co-facilitating with masters. From leading a full simulation and experiencing what it feels like when things go sideways – and learning to recover. This is where the nervous system develops. Where you learn to sense what a room needs, moment to moment.

    Mastery Master facilitators create unseen structure and invisible support. They make profound learning look effortless. They adapt mid-session to emerging themes without losing coherence. They know when the ‘wrong’ conversation is actually the most important one. Mastery is not perfection – it’s the hard-won ability to orchestrate genuine transformation.

    Scale Up! online format, Nov 2021

    Part V: What a typical Scale Up! session looks like

    Here, we use a three-day format. You can of course mix and match this around to best suit your format. You can easily adapt to a one-day format, two-day or even five-day.

    Day 1: The Foundations

    The Welcome session kicks off with the Founder’s Journey, Investment instruments and Foundational equity. You will dive into Strategy 101, Pre-seed/seed stage dynamics, ESOP structures, Term sheets, Investor mapping, Product development and Pitch deck fundamentals.

    By the end of Day 1, teams will have navigated 30+ term sheets across 2-5 rounds, managing raises from 1M – 10M at valuations of 10M – 30M. Boom cards. Bust cards. Burn rates from 10.000 – 100.000. Welcome to the founder’s reality.

    Day 2: Scaling Up

    Day 2 opens with a Pitch session. Now you take teams into venture territory. Sales organization. Market expansion. Long-term capital strategy. 3x Value uplift. Boards & governance. Rocketship canvases. LinkedIn positioning. Complex term sheets. SAFE conversion mechanics. Product mastery. Investor liquidity & returns. Outcome canvas analysis.

    The complexity ramps up. Each team should see term sheets: 30-40. Rounds: 3-5. Raises: 20M – 100M. Valuations: 100M – 500M (and pushing toward 1BN). Boom: 10-30. Burn rate: 500.000 – 5M. This is where scaling founders separate from starting founders.

    Day 3: Growth & Exit

    The final day opens with an Outcome pitch. You are now in growth stage territory. Global leadership. Market expansion. Margin expansion. Investor questions and power dynamics. M&A strategies. Liquidity transactions. IPO readiness. Exit transactions.

    The stakes are highest here. M&A: 0-3 deals. Term sheets: 20-40. Rounds: 1-5. Raises: 50M – 1BN. Valuations: 10M – 30M? Not anymore – we’re talking multiples higher. Boom: 10-15. Burn rate: 10M – 20M. This is where winners are made.

    A full-size Scale Up! program structure

    Part VI: Quick reads

    Who attends a Scale up Program? Read it.

    Who buys Scale Up? Read it.

    Evolving Scale Up! Read it.

    The Scale Up Angel E-mail Read it.

    The four cap tables in Scale Up! Read it.

    Scaling Up in MENA: The Most Common Investment Instruments Read it.

    Can you run the cap table? Read it.

    Scaling up in MENA! Read it.

    Ten Books That Will Save You From Costly Cap Table Mistakes: A Reading List for Founders, advisors & expert facilitators Read it.

    From student to master: how Enrico Maset become one of the world’s leading Scale Up Experts Read it.

    Setting up, Scale Up MENA! TTT, Dubai, Nov 2025

    Part VII: Selected case studies

    How Katapult Accelerator Gets Its Startups Investor-Ready Read it here.

    Scaling up in the rising Egyptian ecosystem Read it here.

    Helping Madica’s pre-seed startups bridge the scaling chasm Read it here.

    Scaling to exit with Dubai Future District Fund Read it here.

    Bridging the Capital Chasm Read it here.

    Term sheet focus, Egypt, Sep 2024

    Why This Matters

    Globally, over 70 people are now trained and certified to deliver Scale Up! programs. They work in 50+ countries. They’ve taken nearly 4.500 founders, investors and ecosystem builders through the journey.

    As an Expert Facilitator, you will join this global community. You will gain the ability to transform how founders think, how investors evaluate, how ecosystems develop.

    The best part? The journey from Learn to Run to Apply to Fly is one of the most rewarding professional development paths you can take. Each program you deliver, you get better. Each challenging term sheet negotiation you facilitate, you grow. Each breakthrough moment you witness – a founder finally understanding their cap table, an investor seeing the power dynamics differently – reminds you why this work matters.

    One day, this will all be yours…

    Ready?

    The Scale Up! Train-the-Trainer is not a certification you collect. It’s a capability you develop. A community you join. A journey you commit to.

    From Knowledge to Confidence to Mastery. From Day 1’s foundations through Day 3’s exits. From your first nervous co-facilitation to the flow state of mastery.

    Are you ready to help more founders scale?

    Let’s go.

    Looking forward to working with you!

    ]]>
    Top 10 Strategy Sims of 2025 https://www.strategytools.io/blog/top-10-strategy-sims-of-2025/ Tue, 06 Jan 2026 06:37:41 +0000 https://www.strategytools.io/?p=276259 In 2025, 1.981 people across 87 sessions got to experience Strategy Sims in action. From Impact investing in the Pacific, corporate transformation in Europe, VC fund management in North America, strategic leadership in South East Asia or high-growth scale up leadership across MENA; Strategy Sims keep expanding.

    This year’s top 10 ranking takes us to places like Switzerland, Nigeria, Fiji, Canada (twice), the United Arab Emirates, Egypt, the United Kingdom, Mauritius and Saudi Arabia; here are our top 2025 Masterclasses – all built around the Strategy sims.

    1. Fund Manager!, IMD (Switzerland)

    WHO: IMD (Business School)

    WHERE: Lausanne, Switzerland

    DURATION: 2 days (Twice, one in May, one in September)

    WHY THE SIM?

    Now in its third year, the collaboration with IMD is perfectly mission-aligned with our goal of taking venture asset education in Europe to the next level. We are honored and privileged to be working with faculty lead Jim Pulcrano, pouring all his energy and connections into building this program into a force for good in the European VC landscape.

    The reason IMD’s Fund Manager! Tops this ranking for the second year in a row is simple. The quality of the participants and the quality of work we witness in the program easily exceed any other group, anywhere (sorry, everyone else). This outlier performance is likely due to a couple of reasons. Number one, the top-notch quality of participants can really be felt from the moment we step into the classroom. These are high-processing power participants, ready to work. For this year, we had multiple high-caliber investment professionals, including Germany, Switzerland, Italy, Oman and Saudi Arabia. The pure quality of participants make this program stand out in every aspect.

    Second, people lean in, work hard, prepare well. It is clear that people take the time, focus, concentrate and show up truly prepared and ready to work.

    Third, participants truly engage with the content, exercises, challenges and presentations. They put in the work, overnight, from day one to day two. People are competitive and that truly helps team shift gears going into day two.

    OUTCOME:

    Clearly positioned as an educational experience, the four day Venture Asset Management Program has two core elements. Days 1 & 2; classroom learning through guest speakers, lectures and case studies. Days 3 & 4, hands-on experiential learning, where participants form teams to lead their own investments firms over a 15-year journey, for most teams culminating in running not one, but two investment funds.

    What teams truly take away; navigating the full 15-year fund journey, from start to net DPI.

    “The best learning experience—budding unicorns all over! An actual magic learning process.” — Anna Ziajka

    “Just wow… So much of what I’ve been picking up mostly piecemeal over the years really began to crystallize. My VC excitement is validated.” — Ashton Songer Ferguson

    “In just 48 hours, we went from barely knowing what pre-money meant to negotiating term sheets and syndicating deals. It’s one thing to read about VC in books, but you only ‘get it’ under pressure.” — John Nicholas

    WHY IT MADE THE #1 SPOT ON THE TOP 10 LIST:

    Our shared passion with IMD runs deep. We are in this together, to educate venture capital leaders across the ecosystem. From emerging limited partners, family offices, future fund managers, pension funds, sovereign wealth funds, newly formed CVC teams; we have met them all at IMD’s Venture Asset Management Programme. With 55+ Fund Manager! Programs completed globally, the IMD experience stands in a category of its own – for the second year in a row. Want to learn more? Join an upcoming Venture Asset Management Program in May or September. Read more about VAM here.

    FULL CASE STUDY: Taking Venture Asset Education in Europe to the Next Level

    DELIVERY TEAM: Chris Rangen, Scott B. Newton

    Congrats to the entire Sep 2025 cohort!
    Fund Manager! changes any classroom into a competitive pit of future fund managers and Limited partners

    2. Pacific Island Fund Manager (Fiji)

    WHO: Matanataki (General partner)

    WHERE: Fiji

    DURATION: 3 days (9 months, really)

    WHY THE SIM?

    “Chris, we want to make an impact version of Fund Manager!, for Fiji” “Of course”, I said, the first time Jodi, GP and founder of Matanataki brought this up in Singapore in November 2023. “No problem”

    Little, of course, I knew that this easy-going conversion would turn into the hardest, most complex project of all of 2025 – and ultimately culminate in a powerful ecosystem engagement workshop on Fiji in August the same year.

    Working with Jodi Smith, Andrew Irvin and the design team to bring the Pacific Islands Fund Manager! from  early idea to live delivery was a genuine highlight of the year – and stands as one of our most complex projects – possibly ever.

    Eight of 2.400 unique pieces for Pacific Islands Fund Manager!

    OUTCOME:

    The research took 5-6 months. Deep diving into the shifting world of impact investing. Not just the label of impact investing. The real world where most of the traditional instruments are not available. Where follow-on financing rounds do not exist. Where the traditional metrics for VC and PE are not just skewed but completely altered. Where the traditional PE playbook does not apply. Where impact frameworks have moved from complicated to outright impossible for most of us to follow (Shoutout to Aunnie Patton Power for being a grounded voice of solid research in this space, and Jen Braswell for lending a life-time of experience to our emergent research). As winter turned to spring, our work turned into content development and writing.

    We stopped counting at 2.400 new, unique content cards. We piloted. We iterated. Slowly, the content was starting to click. The fund financial model got built out; our most complex yet. (imagine you are running a full investment portfolio with both equity investments, cash flow and earnings and impact investment data. If you know, you know). Spring turned to summer, and the Fiji ecosystem engagement program was drawing closer. Internal tests and retests. Internal Train-the-trainers for the project team.

    We landed in Nandi, Fiji around 6 am. Ready to support Jodi and the full GP Team at Matanataki on their ecosystem engagement. LPs were flying in. Key people and partners, politicians, portfolio CEOs, former EIB and IFC fund-of-fund executives flew in. The actual Pacific Islands Fund Manager! Workshop took place in Suva, overlooking the bay.

    Five teams, five to eight people per team. Each team setting up their own $50M ocean impact fund, aiming to deploy capital and scale 10-25 impact investments across the Pacific. Perfectly modelled out to reflect the real-life challenges of leading a multi-decade investment platform in Fiji. Futaspak Pacific investment fund (Future Spark), Mana Pasifika, Wan Solwara, Pacific Ocean Resilience Fund and Loloma; all competed and collaborating, making a total of 50 investments, deploying $233.565.000, while returning back $475.239.939 to LPs. Mana Pasifika outperformed its peers with a 163,5 Impact Score, easily beating the average of 131,8 impact score. Financial top performance went to Pacific Ocean Resilience Fund, who turned a $16M equity investment in BlueSeaScape into a $230M cash-on-cash exit, ultimately returning 7.1X net DPI back to its LPs

    More importantly, the ecosystem engagement brought together 30+ key ecosystem participants across the Pacific. From General Partners at Matanataki, Limited partners with a clear ocean impact focus, Fiji-based pipeline and portfolio CEOs, political connections, ecosystem supporters, village chiefs, island elders and investment professionals supporting Matanataki. The experience left a deep, lasting impression of both the complexities of running a Pacific island ocean impact fund and the importance of working with the ecosystem to make it happen.

    WHY IT MADE THE TOP 10 LIST:

    We probably spent north of 900 hours to develop Pacific Islands Fund Manager! Bringing it to Fiji to run with a truly eclectic group of participants from across the Pacific islands investment landscape was a unique experience. At the same time, even the most experienced team co-facilitators came back, “this is too hard to run”, reflecting the genuine challenges of running a multi-strategy, impact-first investment fund in the Pacific.

    That’s how we designed it. To be hard. Because it is. Pacific Islands Fund Manager! Aims to truly showcase the details, the complexities, the technical requirements to run a 20-company investment portfolio with a mix of equity investment (but without any traditional follow-on rounds for equity valuation mark-ups), debt investment (but also requiring the investors to be deeply familiar with cash flows and ability to service debt), and recognizing that no traditional exit paths exists, to revenue-based earn-out models, community-based buyouts and self-liquidating exit routes need to become the default across the portfolio; while also balancing this with the PhD-technical-skill level of truly tracking impact metrics in line with(overly complicated) LP reporting requirements. We’ve looked globally. Nothing quite like this exists anywhere. This is why Fiji’s Pacific Islands Fund Manager! Made the top 10 list of 2025. But, it’s hard.

    DELIVERY TEAM: Chris Rangen, Jen Braswell

    Post-session, co-facilitator Jen wrapping up. Fiji, we’ll be back

    3. Scale Up MENA X DFDF (UAE)

    WHO: Dubai Future District Fund (Fund-of-funds)

    WHERE: Dubai,UAE

    DURATION: 2 days

    WHY THE SIM?

    Our partnership with DFDF runs back several years. When we started the development of Scale Up MENA!, DFDF was an obvious partner to work with to launch Scale Up MENA! In Dubai.

    Our thesis: Scale Up MENA! Will perfectly support founders as they raise their Series A and need to grow into venture- and growth stage territory. Working with Tiffany Bain, Nader AlBastaki and Mahmoud Ward and 20+ late-stage DFDF portfolio founders, we got the thesis proven. In November 2025 we hosted the first ever Scale Up MENA! Masterclass, aimed exclusively at a small, hand-picked group of portfolio founders and a few investment professionals from across the MENA ecosystem.

    OUTCOME:

    “Just wrapped up an incredible two-day workshop on Scaling and Exiting for Founders, hosted by Dubai Future District Fund who I’m deeply thankful for the invitation. If only I had attended something like this 20 years ago during my first venture… In just 16 hours, we covered what felt like a year’s worth of founder lessons thanks to Christian Rangen of Strategy Tools and the team”, said, Fahmi Al-Shawwa, Founder & CEO of Immensa upon completing the program.

    “In just two days we take people through a full 8-10 year journey to exit, the founder’s journey”, said Scott B. Newton, aptly summarizing the program.

    So, what are people equipped with upon completing Sclae Up MENA! ? – Think long-term growth strategy – Study term sheets, work hard to get five+ term sheets for each round – Understand investor outcomes, understand the VC business model and how you fit in – Work strategically on exits, start earlier than you think – Keep your cap table clean and updated. A messy cap table makes secondaries and exits impossible – And maybe most importantly, scaling up starts with a mindset shifts and expands form there

    FULL CASE STUDY: Scaling to exit

    WHY IT MADE THE TOP 10 LIST:

    “We are picking our very best founders”, said the team at DFDF. And they did. The founder participants we met were deeply experienced. Successfully built and exited in the region already. Negotiating the $160M term sheet with Blackrock. Raising Series A’s across markets. Deep experience in capital markets, having work for many of the leading investment banks in the region. They were, if you will, ‘supercharged founders’.

    Taking this advanced group of founders and investors through Scale Up MENA!, going from idea to exit in just two days was a sprint – but they truly aced it. It proves that Scale Up MENA! Is well suited, to not only support early-stage founders (seed) but also push and support venture- and growth stage founders as they scale.

    “Possibly the most unique training I have taken part in. The highs and lows of being a start up founder squeezed into two days.” – Michael Hunter, CEO & Co-founder, Holo

    “The best program so far I have attended and at what speed. Precisely designed, immaculately delivered” Avneesh Prakash, CEO, CAMB.AI

    DELIVERY TEAM: Chris Rangen, Scott B. Newton, Sanjana Raheja, Alain Traboulsy

    Pitching a VC outcome analysis, not a bad way to start day two

    4. Transform! Hult Ashridge (UK)

    WHO: Hult Ashridge Business School, in partnership with a leading European industrials company

    WHERE: Ashridge campus, London

    DURATION: 2 days

    WHY THE SIM?

    Transform! Has been a backbone of many executive education programs for the past six years. One of the most active business schools, with a long track record of experiential learning, has been Hult Ashridge and notably their global corporate and executive education teams.

    When one of Europe’s leading industrial companies partnered with Ashridge to design a high-impact, future leader program, Transform! Was a strong addition to bring into the teaching format.

    OUTCOME:

    Transform! Is centered around four key domains; Team performance, Strategy & transformation, Capital markets & governance and performance. Within each of these, numerous topics are explored in depth. “How well did we gather, share, process information, allowing us to solve complex problems?”, “How well did we use different capital and finance options to gain an advantage on our peers?”, “How well did we interact, communicate, and respond to capital markets and various shareholder and stakeholder groups?” and “How well did we develop a winning culture, game plan, and mindset, to both overperform, outperform,and outcompete the other teams”

    For the future leaders at the Industrial company, working at the incredible Ashridge campus, Transform! Served as a strong reminder that leadership is far more than just managing your team and hitting your P&L’s. To truly lead a transformational company, a very different playbook is needed.

    WHY IT MADE THE TOP 10 LIST:

    “Over a year we might run 25-30 Transform! Sessions globally, but this group was spectacular. Hungry, ambitious and clearly pushing themselves to transform faster – both individually and as teams”.

    DELIVERY TEAM:  Chris Rangen

    Deal structuring, mergers and investments at rapid pace

    5. Scale Up MENA! Falak Startups (Egypt)

    WHO: Falak Startups, in partnership with EBRD

    WHERE: Cairo, Egypt

    DURATION: 3 days

    WHY THE SIM?

    It all started in Cairo. A bit more than a year ago. We saw the effects of having more localized content. Of having more local market realities. Of having content and cases people could relate to. This insight, in November 2024, led us to develop Scale Up MENA! Now, a year later, we were back in Cairo, back with our friends at Falak Startups. In collaboration with EBRD Star Venture, Falak hosted nearly 30 scale up founders, investors and ecosystem builders.

    Scale Up MENA!, if you were, was coming home. Over three days we had five teams compete – and collaborate – to build breakout winner companies coming out of MENA ecosystem.

    OUTCOME:

    The scale Up MENA! Masterclass equips founders and investors with five key things.

    1. A chance to experience the Founder’s Journey, from idea to exit

    2. Navigate 500+ term sheets and financing instruments

    3. Crack the code of revenue velocity and market expansion

    4. Learn a series of visual strategy canvases

    5. Handle a cap table from first founders’ shares through an exit transaction

    WHY IT MADE THE TOP 10 LIST:

    What made this session unique was two-fold. One, being back in Cairo with the team that helped kick-start Scale Up MENA! to begin with. Two, seeing founders really engage – and compete – with the ultra-localized content, deal terms, investor term sheets, investment bankers and Superinvestors from across the region. But, most importantly, this was yet another fast-paced, high-energy, Scale Up! Masterclass, proving to us as facilitators just how much content, learning and advanced level materials we can pack into just three days.

    Full case study: Scaling up in the rising Egyptian ecosystem

    DELIVERY TEAM:  Chris Rangen, Rumbi Makanga, Mohammed al Rasbi

    Scale Up MENA! Drone view.

    6. Fund Manager! BKR Capital (Canada)

    WHO: BKR Capital

    WHERE: Toronto, Canada

    DURATION: 3 days

    WHY THE SIM?

    BKR Capital’s mission is to bridge the funding gap for Black-led companies in the technology sector, fostering an inclusive ecosystem by making capital accessible to visionary founders, driving wealth creation for the Black community, and training the next generation of Black investment professionals. They provide early, transformational investments in disruptive tech startups, aiming to create systemic change and normalize diversity in venture capital. BKR Capital has partnered with Strategy tools to work directly with their talented investment professionals including the Fund Manager simulation which was held in person in Toronto Canada in 2025 (and again in 2026)

    OUTCOME:

    The GPs and ecosystem partners that participated in the simulation were highly positive in their feedback, and noted both how realistic the simulation was, and how practical the tools are to diagnose and start improving performance from today forward.

    The talented GPs demonstrated how they can improve their Strategy, their pitch, their approach, and importantly teamwork to deliver at even higher levels of impact in the future.

    WHY IT MADE THE TOP 10 LIST:

    While we delivered Fund Manager to global groups in 2025, this particular SIM session stood out for the advanced levels of discussion, the intense preparation by the participants, and their application immediately in to their funds and teams.

    DELIVERY TEAM: Scott B. Newton

    BKR Catalyst – Launch Readiness Program, Feb 2025

    7. Scale Up! Madica Ventures (Nigeria)

    WHO: Madica Ventures

    WHERE: Lagos, Nigeria

    DURATION: 2 days (with 2 preparatory webinars the week before)

    WHY THE SIM?

    Madica wanted to move beyond investor theory and slide decks to give pre-seed founders a realistic, hands-on understanding of fundraising, investor dynamics, and long-term capital strategy. While most founders had already raised using SAFEs or CLAs, many lacked clarity on how these instruments convert, how dilution compounds over time, and how to plan multiple rounds ahead while balancing growth, cash flow, and investor expectations.

    The goal was to build real decision-making muscle by letting founders experience the consequences of their choices in a simulated but high-pressure environment.

    “Madica wanted practical, hands-on training where the founders could immediately apply the learnings in their own startups.” – Vishal Shah

    OUTCOME:

    Fifteen founders experienced the full founder journey—from idea through multiple funding rounds to exit—inside the Scale Up! simulation. Working in teams as CEO, CFO, and CRO, participants structured and closed funding rounds, selected and traded investors, responded to board demands, explored acquisitions, and executed high-stakes exits—learning firsthand how early decisions compound over time.

    By the end of the program, founders could confidently map long-term capital strategies, rebalance cap tables, understand SAFE and CLA conversions, and align growth plans with investor expectations.

    “…I learned a great deal about the fundraising process and the connection between financial metrics and company valuation.” Ahmed Chaari

    This simulation was an amazing opportunity to learn from realistic scenarios… and live through it up until the exit scenario”.- Yousef Elsamaa, Co-Founder & CEO, Daleela

    WHY IT MADE THE TOP 10 LIST:

    • Tackled one of the hardest challenges for African startups: scaling beyond pre-seed with capital discipline
    • Transformed complex VC mechanics into hands-on, high-pressure decision-making
    • Compressed years of fundraising, investor alignment, and exit planning into two intense days
    • Delivered immediately transferable skills in capital planning, dilution management, and investor strategy

    “I was strategizing how to build revenue and growth against how we fund that growth. It was really fun, but it was also very thought-provoking.” — Chidalu Onyeso, Founder & CEO, Earthbond

    FULL CASE STUDY: Helping Madica’s pre-seed startups bridge the scaling chasm

    DELIVERY TEAM:  Vishal Shah, Rumbi Makanga

    Scale Up! mid-session, under the watchful eyes of Rumbi

    8. Transform! IE Business School (Saudi Arabia)

    WHO: IE Business School, partnering with one of the largest food companies in MENA

    WHERE: Riyadh, Saudi Arabia

    DURATION: 3 days

    WHY THE SIM?

    Transform! Has served us well in global business schools including US, Spain, UK, Norway; but would it also hold up as well immersed in the cultural leadership nuances of Saudi Arabia? Would one of Saudi Arabia’s largest companies find Transform! And leading transformation at scale to be both relevant, applicable and suitable? The short answer: yes, absolutely.

    The session had clear cultural and content differences, based on conversations and executive leadership challenges that came up. It was not the same as running a five-day Executive Program in the United States, but nor did we expect it.

    Anchored in the realities and cultural distinctions of leading transformation in the Kingdom, Transform! Overshot its expectations and formed the backbone of “the best session of our entire leadership program”, according to one of our senior executive participants.

    OUTCOME:

    The number one outcome was a substantially increased clarity on ‘strategic leadership’. Recognizing that leadership goes far, far beyond ‘managing people’, and in this day and age, covers core skills like strategy, finance, M&A, innovation, hostile take-over, senior level negotiation, financial engineering, a balanced portfolio of core, growth and explore business models providing stable cash flow today and strong business opportunities for tomorrow.

    “This was the most insightful leadership development I’ve ever been a part of”, said one senior executive, echoing the group’s take-away; this was strategic leadership development, with profound impact on both team and individual learning.

    WHY IT MADE THE TOP 10 LIST:

    This was Transform!’s first appearance in Saudi Arabia – and went exceptionally well. This year we have run a record number of corporate education programs, all using Transform!, all seeing customization of content to capture the nuances of each individual client. From food and dairy in MENA, financial technology in Europe, manufacturing in the Americas and Europe to global tech; Transform! Proves an excellent fit for developing strategic leaders at all levels – and that’s why we see Transform! KSA on the list for 2025.

    DELIVERY TEAM: Chris Rangen

    Facilitator view, coffee break

    9. Supercluster! ISED – Innovation, Science and Economic Development Canada (Canada)

    WHO: ISED

    WHERE: Ottawa, Canada

    DURATION: 0,5 day

    WHY THE SIM?

    Supercluster! was first developed to provide a fun, engaging and competitive way to learn about innovation superclusters around the world. Today, it is regularly used by global cluster experts, ecosystem builders, national cluster programs and cluster managers to build better clusters around the world. Working with the ISED Global Innovation Cluster team in 2025, this was a unique and exciting opportunity to bring together key ISED staff, global cluster expertise and run a fast-paced, expert-level Supercluster! Session.

    OUTCOME:

    Highly competitive teams quickly formed up global supercluster management teams, stepping into the roles of cluster strategists, cluster boards and cluster leaders. Choosing from a series of ‘case’ clusters, we had Canadian, Norwegian, Chinese and Swiss clusters competing to build out their cluster strategy, secure members, lock in funding and deliver cluster innovation projects. In just a few hours, participants got a chance to not just strategize about cluster development and economic competitiveness, but truly experience the nuances and challenges of building a global innovation Supercluster.

    WHY IT MADE THE TOP 10 LIST:

    The Global Innovation Cluster team at ISED is one of the world’s most experienced ministry-level teams supporting a national cluster program anywhere. To sit down and race through the Supercluster! Simulation with them in a collaborative, yet ultra-competitive format was somewhere between hyper-competitive and ultra-delightful.

    In the global innovation cluster landscape, Canada has truly carved out a leading position, a global position over the past few years. Now, spending several days in Ottawa with the cluster team and their ecosystem development peer teams was highly insightful. Finding time to work through the Supercluster! Simulation allowed everyone to yet again, be reminded of the powerful effects of successfully building and expanding innovation superclusters. Just like with our IMD case study (above), having truly experienced people completing one of the sims in record pace, shows how high-value, high-impact, even a 4 hour session can be. That’s why we include ISED’s Supercluster! Sim in the 2025 ranking.

    DELIVERY TEAM: Chris Rangen

    Any country can develop Superclusters!

    10. Fund Manager! Masterclass (Mauritius)

    WHO: Equitable Ventures, in partnership with Simera

    WHERE: Mauritius

    DURATION: 3 days

    WHY THE SIM?

    Most parts of the world are still in their early steps of developing a rich, robust venture capital ecosystem. From VC education, emerging GP acceleration, depth of knowledge of the VC asset class and building out national fund-of-fund strategies; most parts are still learning.

    Zoom in on Africa the this picture just expands. With a massive youth population, rising middle class and a steep economic development path, the African venture capital ecosystem is expected to undergo a massive transformation in the coming decades.

    But to get there, we need to work at an ecosystem level to upskill and support all the key building blocks.

    This was the path that led us to partner with Equitable Ventures and Simera, to bring the Fund Manager! Masterclass to Mauritius for the very first time in 2025.

    OUTCOME:

    Over three intense days, four teams set up four GP companies, raising eight funds This could have been in New York, Frankfurt, or Abu Dhabi, but it was in Mauritius. The program was not for Silicon Valley VCs. It was for developing a new generation of LPs, GPs, and ecosystem backers—for Africa, in Africa.

    “It’s really impressive how the Fund Manager! simulation closely mimics the real life experiences of fund managers in Africa so this session makes up for a great learning experience. The facilitator’s experience, particularly their global insights, are a very rich addition to the whole experience. I would highly recommend this training to anyone working in Africa’s venture capital ecosystem.”

    Cikü Mugambi, Investment Director, DOB

    Pitching LPs is a full-time job!

    WHY IT MADE THE TOP 10 LIST:

    We absolutely love running Fund Manager!, covering the full fund journey, nearly 15 years, in just three days. It’s intense, it’s complex, it’s packed with learning that can save both GPs and LPs years of pain. Getting a chance to partner with EV and Simera to run this Masterclass in Mauritius was a superb start. Looking ahead, we already have multiple conversations going on how we can best support the maturing VC ecosystem on Mauritius, in turn supporting the ongoing growth of the entire African VC ecosystem. Fund Manager! Mauritius was one of the absolutely best Fund Manager! Sessions in 2025 and we could not be more grateful to the GPs, family offices and LPs that invested three days together with us on Fund Manager! Mauritius.

    FULL CASE STUDY: From early strategy to billions in DPI

    DELIVERY TEAM:  Chris Rangen, Scott B. Newton

    How we returned millions to our LPs

    Delivered by a global community

    Congratulations to our key partners and expert facilitators for making these 87 Strategy Sims sessions happen. Representing a true, global expert community, this would not have been possible without a massive effort from Scott (Italy), Ljubisa (Serbia), Sanjana (UAE), Vishal (UK), Rumbi (UK/South Africa), Jen (UK), Alain (UAE), Mohammed (Oman) and Stuart (Canada), Michael (Canada), Rick (US), Wan Fadzil (Malaysia), Suhail (Bahrain), Javier (Mexico), and many more.

    Kickstart 2026 by learning more about Strategy Sims in action

    Since inception, Strategy Sims have grown into a global phenomena, with 10.000 people, 400+ sessions, 70+ facilitators and ten unique Strategy Sims. Now you can read how global practitioners use Strategy Simulations to drive learning, mastery and change. In August 2025, the global community came together to co-author the first ever report, Strategy Sims in Action. Read it today.

    What you get in the report

    ●     An overview of the ten Strategy Sims

    ●     Case studies from leading business schools and companies

    ●     Expert insights from leading strategy experts

    ●     How Global Partners Use Strategy Sims in Action

    ●     The Strategy Sims Methodology

    ●     How to get started

    ●     …and much more

    Get the Strategy Sims in Action report today.

    ]]>
    Startup founder raising capital in MENA? Here are the top 10 AI prompts we use to help founders succeed https://www.strategytools.io/blog/startup-founder-raising-capital-in-mena-here-are-the-top-10-ai-prompts-we-use-to-help-founders-succeed/ Tue, 30 Dec 2025 11:58:34 +0000 https://www.strategytools.io/?p=276235 A year ago, some of our friends, clients and colleagues went to a 2AM rave party at the Pyramids at Giza. The music, the lights, the incredible setting. “Best ever”, was the loud message.

    This week were were back in Cairo, but this time the best ever was a series of AI hacks we shared with the founders in the 3-day Scale Up MENA! Masterclass. “This is incredible. best ever”, said one of our participants. I guess history rhymes.

    Over the past 3,5 years I have been involved in a number of projects and startups using AI for startups. Some of them works well. Some work really well; but the performance we are starting to see in the latest models this fall, well that’s a whole different level. In our recent Scale Up MENA! Masterclass, in Cairo, hosted by Falak Startups and EBRD we shared our ten ‘best AI prompts’ with the participants, and did a live working sessions with two founders in real-time.

    We used Claude, with the latest Opus 4,5 model. Other models are quickly catching up and are likely to be good or maybe even just as good. Personally, having applied these to 100+ startup cases over the last three months, I’m wildly impressed with what Anthropic’ s Claude can do. Regardless of your choice of AI companion, here are the top ten AI prompts we used in Cairo.

    So, where do I start on this AI thing?

    LEVEL I

    1. Deck evaluation

    (Files to upload: Your standard pitch deck)

    Imagine you are the world’s #1 startup pitch feedback coach. Review my pitch deck. Give me feedback. Tell me where the deck is strong. Tell me where the deck is still weak. Write your world class suggestions for all the pieces that are missing.

    2. Decks x Personas

    (Files to upload: Your standard pitch deck)

    Read my deck. Develop 5 unique investor profile/Personas (ideal investor personas) Write a unique key message and why each of these should invest. That text goes into a slide called “Why invest” Make this a superbly strong slide!

    3. Investment memo

    (Files to upload: Your standard pitch deck)

    Imagine you are one of the top Venture capital investors in MENA, like 500, BECO capital or MEVP. Write up a detailed, extensive investment memo for how they would view my company and a possible lead investment at my next round. Make sure the memo contains: – Executive summary – outcome analysis – Exit modelling + anything else we can expect. Conclude with a clear invest/no invest decision and also a summary on why. Finish a list of recommendations for “what would need to improve for us to lead an investment”

    “Investors are not locked in, liquidity is in our roadmap”. Loved this deck! AI helped too.

    LEVEL II

    4.      Market Map of investors

    Build me a list of the 100 most active investors across MENA. Identify networks and collaboration, i.e. who likes to invest and co-invest with whom

    5. Build my investor list

    (Files to upload: Your standard pitch deck)

    Build me a list of 1000 early-stage investors across MENA, focus on angel investors, angel networks, strategic advisors, startup accelerators, HNWI, successfully exited founders and anyone else investing in the early stages. Feel free to include family offices, CVCs and VC firms, but only if they have a proven track record of investing into the venture capital/early-stage space. Based on these 1000, analyze and identify the top 100 most relevant for me. Segment these 100 into different investor categories and groups. Develop a clear messaging for each of these unique groups. Focus on 3-5 key points on ‘why they would want to invest’. For the 1.000 list, please identify the right contact person, and contact details for each of them. Write the file in excel format, to allow me to plug it into my investor CRM

    6.      Investment ready – growth strategy

    (Files to upload: Your standard pitch deck + all key metrics. Share as much details as possible here + the Rocketship Canvas in .pdf or image)

    Review my pitch deck and KPIs. Evaluate our performance vs. ‘best in class’ venture stage companies. Focus on our KPIs. Answer the following questions: – Today: how are we performing on our key metrics vs. our peers? – Next 6-12 months: Which key targets and metrics do we need to hit to really become exciting to a VC investor?

    – Next 6-18 months: Write up an aggressive, ambitious growth strategy, focus the strategy on three stages. Use the Rocketship Canvas to structure your recommendation.

    Feed this thing to your AI and watch it take off!

    Level III

    7. Getting to five competitive term sheets

    (Files to upload: Your standard pitch deck + your fundraising process, plan, timeline)

    Chris Rangen, the Norwegian guy, talks about ‘the triple Olympic gold medal in entrepreneurship is to get five competing term sheets’. Build me a plan for how we best can get to five competitive VC term sheets – and fast.

    8. Strategic analysis

    (Files to upload: Your best, extensive, detailed investor deck + the ST Investor readiness deck)

    Write a short analysis on (insert your company name here). Then, complete the ten Project Work assignments in the ST Investor Readiness Deck. Keep each Project work section to max 5 pages of text. Use any source. (your company URL here).

    (Pssst….. if you want the ST Investor Readiness Deck, you should join our Scale Up! Masterclass series….)

    9. Strategic analysis with a focus on GTM

    (Files to upload: Your best, extensive, detailed investor deck + your GTM plan + outcome canvas)

    Develop a strategic analysis for (Insert your company name here) Make sure to develop: Ideal customer profile, Unique value proposition, beach head market, market expansion roadmap, go-to-market strategy, fundraising, ideal investor profile, write up a list of 1000 most relevant investors and fundraising strategy. Split the investors into different stages. Also develop a outcome canvas for a USD500.000 SEED round, at 5M post (adjust your own numbers). Make sure the investor list is correct and sufficiently detailed.

    10. Outcome analysis – to- investor mapping – to- e-mails (Files to upload: Your most extensive pitch deck + outcome canvas in .pdf or image)

    Develop a robust Outcome Scenario Memo for this company, use deck + any other sources.

    Ok, give me a list of 100 investors that I can bring into this deal over the coming years.

    Research each of these investors and write a highly, highly personalized e-mail to get them into the deal. Make sure to reference comparable deals and networks for them. Also write the bump, the follow-up and the nudge e-mails when they don’t respond. Finally, write a great thank you note, with a reminder to lets touch base for the next round.

    This is perfect for any AI engine

    11. Run my fundraising process for meRun my fundraising process for me

    (Files to upload: Your most extensive pitch deck + funding journey)

    Study my pitch deck. Study the Funding Journey. Write up a 6-month, detailed workflow and workplan for how we can win the funding journey. My fundraising team is me and my co-founder. We are experts at using AI, so we can automate a lot of stuff here, but of course, we rely on you to guide us as much as possible. Use the max potential in your AI engine, Claude + anything else we need. Use Boardy. Give us a plan, broken down to week-by-week, with clear deliveries to make sure we hit our fundraising targets.

    Run the fundraising process for me…..ah, we are getting there

    12. The #1 scale up in MENA

    (files to upload: everything you got, + your entire data room)

    ok, Claude, write me a two-page strategy for how to become the #1 scale up in MENA!. Study our data room and all our materials. Tell us what we need to do to  win!

    Feed your AI

    These ten prompts were what we covered in the Scale Up MENA! Masterclass. Feel free to experiment and find your own path. One thing is sure – everyone will soon be using AI tools to scale.

    Big shoutout to Rumbi Makanga , Mohammed Al Rasbi & the entire Falak Startups team! Can’t wait go be back again, Cairo.

    ]]>
    The Fund Journey: LP Outcome Canvas: EPF Investment in Meridian Ventures Fund III (Part IV) https://www.strategytools.io/blog/the-fund-journey-lp-outcome-canvas-epf-investment-in-meridian-ventures-fund-iii-part-iv/ Tue, 30 Dec 2025 11:51:49 +0000 https://www.strategytools.io/?p=276229 From Fund I to Fund III Aisha and Rizal navigate nearly a decode on the fund journey. For Fund III, they run into the LP Outcome Canvas at one of Malaysia’s leading pension funds. (case based, fictional fund)

    Read the full story, The Fund Journey: An Emerging Manager’s Story from Kuala Lumpur to South-East Asia, Part I (years T-2 -1), Part II (years 2-5) and Part III (years 6-7).

    Fund: Meridian Ventures Fund III Fund Strategy: Early-stage B2B software, AI and fintech across South-East Asia (Malaysia, Indonesia, Vietnam, Philippines) Recommendation: Invest Date: October 5th

    Commitment: $5,000,000 In % of total fund size: 10% Our role with the fund: Limited Partner with Advisory Committee seat

    MV Fund III Pitch deck It’s strong.

    Investment Context

    Employees Pension Fund (EPF/KWSP) is evaluating a $5M commitment to Meridian Ventures Fund III as part of our emerging manager allocation within the alternative investments portfolio. This represents our first commitment to Meridian, though we have tracked the firm since Fund II.

    Why Meridian Fund III:

    • Malaysian-based GP aligns with our mandate to support domestic asset managers
    • Strong Fund I performance (2.8x TVPI, 0.6x DPI at Year 5)
    • IFC co-investment provides institutional validation
    • Proven team stability through challenging early years
    • Clear thesis in B2B/fintech aligned with Malaysia’s digital economy priorities

    Our Due Diligence Findings:

    • GP team demonstrates resilience and discipline (DataSync write-off handled well)
    • Differentiated GTM value-add through Venture Partner
    • Conservative fund sizing relative to opportunity
    • Strong LP re-up rates from Fund I/II (>80%)
    • Institutional-grade reporting and governance already in place

    Analyzing Fund III with the LP Outcome Canvas

    Outcome analysis for LPs, something most GPs are ill-prepared to discuss on the spot. Unless they’ve trained for it.

    Outcome Models

    1. Terrible

    Scenario Description: Multiple portfolio failures due to regional economic downturn or systemic startup ecosystem collapse. Fund deploys capital but majority of companies fail to reach Series A. No meaningful exits. GP team potentially breaks up under pressure.

    What would cause this:

    • Severe regional recession impacting startup funding environment
    • Key GP departure (key person event)
    • Systematic misjudgment in investment selection
    • Follow-on funding market collapse preventing portfolio companies from scaling

    Metric Value

    Years to 1x DPI Never

    Years to Full Distribution 12+ (wind-down)

    Fund Multiple 0.4x

    Our Net TVPI0.4x

    Our Net DPI 0.3x

    Probability 5%

    Our outcome: $5M invested → ~$1.5M returned over 12 years. Significant loss but limited to committed capital.

    2. Disappointing

    Scenario Description: Fund performs below expectations. Some exits occur but at modest valuations. Winners don’t scale as hoped. J-curve extends longer than projected. Returns below hurdle rate, no carried interest paid.

    What would cause this:

    • Mediocre portfolio company performance across the board
    • Regional exit market remains challenging (limited strategic acquirer appetite)
    • Fund I outperformance was partially luck, not fully repeatable
    • Competition from larger funds compresses Meridian’s deal access

    Metric Value

    Years to 1x DPI Year 9

    Years to Full Distribution 12

    Fund Multiple 1.5x

    Our Net TVPI 1.5x

    Our Net DPI 1.4x

    Probability 15%

    Our outcome: $5M invested → ~$7M returned over 12 years. Positive but below our target returns for venture allocation. Opportunity cost versus other alternatives.

    3. Performing

    Scenario Description: Fund delivers solid, median-quartile returns. Portfolio construction works as planned with expected winner/loser distribution. 2-3 strong exits, several modest outcomes, typical write-off rate. GPs execute their strategy competently.

    What would cause this:

    • Normal portfolio distribution: 20% winners, 50% modest outcomes, 30% failures
    • Regional exit environment functions adequately
    • Fund I success was real but Fund III faces more competition at larger size
    • Team executes well but without breakout positions

    Metric Value

    Years to 1x DPI Year 7

    Years to Full Distribution 11

    Fund Multiple 2.2x

    Our Net TVPI 2.2x

    Our Net DPI 2.0x

    Probability 35%

    Our outcome: $5M invested → ~$10M returned over 11 years. Meets our baseline expectations for emerging manager venture allocation. Acceptable risk-adjusted return.

    4. Overperforming

    Scenario Description: Fund outperforms expectations with strong portfolio company development. Multiple successful Series A/B raises, 3-4 meaningful exits including at least one at 10x+. DPI generation ahead of schedule. Clear Fund IV momentum.

    What would cause this:

    • GTM value-add genuinely accelerates portfolio company growth
    • 1-2 portfolio companies achieve regional leadership positions
    • Favorable exit environment with active strategic acquirers
    • Strong follow-on investor interest validates portfolio quality
    • Team cohesion and capability continues to strengthen

    Metric Value

    Years to 1x DPI Year 5

    Years to Full Distribution 10

    Fund Multiple 3.0x

    Our Net TVPI 3.0x

    Our Net DPI 2.8x

    Probability 30%

    Our outcome: $5M invested → ~$14M returned over 10 years. Strong performance justifying emerging manager risk. Would support increased allocation to Fund IV.

    5. Market Leader

    Scenario Description: Fund establishes Meridian as the definitive early-stage firm in ASEAN ex-Singapore. Multiple breakout portfolio companies. At least one potential unicorn. Strong DPI from strategic acquisitions by global tech companies. Fund III becomes a reference point for regional emerging manager success.

    What would cause this:

    • 1-2 portfolio companies scale to $100M+ valuations
    • Major strategic exits (Google, Microsoft, Grab, Sea acquiring portfolio companies)
    • Meridian brand becomes synonymous with quality SEA early-stage deals
    • Fund I fully distributed at 3.5x+, validating long-term track record
    • Strong global LP interest in Fund IV at $100M+

    Metric Value

    Years to 1x DPI Year 4

    Years to Full Distribution 9

    Fund Multiple 4.0x

    Our Net TVPI 4.0x

    Our Net DPI 3.8x

    Probability 12%

    Our outcome: $5M invested → ~$19M returned over 9 years. Exceptional returns. Strong relationship for preferred access to future funds. Case study for our emerging manager program.

    6. Outlier

    Scenario Description: Extraordinary outcome driven by a generational company in the portfolio. One investment becomes a regional or global category leader with $1B+ outcome. Fund returns driven primarily by single massive winner, similar to early Sequoia or a]16z funds with breakout companies.

    What would cause this:

    • Portfolio company becomes the “Grab” or “Sea” of its category
    • IPO or $500M+ acquisition of lead position
    • Timing alignment with massive market expansion (e.g., regional fintech infrastructure buildout)
    • Everything goes right for one extraordinary founder

    Metric Value

    Years to 1x DPI Year 3

    Years to Full Distribution 8

    Fund Multiple 6.0x+

    Our Net TVPI 6.0x+

    Our Net DPI 5.5x+

    Probability 3%

    Our outcome: $5M invested → ~$27.5M+ returned over 8 years. Transformational return. Would significantly impact our alternatives portfolio performance. Extremely rare but possible given early-stage venture dynamics.

    Summary Analysis

    Probability-Weighted Expected Outcome

    Scenario Probability Fund Multiple Weighted Multiple

    Terrible 5% 0.4x 0.02x

    Disappointing 15% 1.5x 0.23x

    Performing 35% 2.2x 0.77x

    Overperforming 30% 3.0x 0.90x

    Market Leader 12% 4.0x 0.48x

    Outlier 3% 6.0x 0.18x

    Expected Value 100% 2.58x

    Probability-weighted expected return: 2.58x net multiple on our $5M commitment

    Expected dollar return: ~$12.9M over 10-year average holding period

    Risk Assessment

    Downside Risk (Terrible + Disappointing scenarios): 20% probability of returns below 1.5x

    Base Case (Performing): 35% probability of solid 2.2x returns meeting our venture allocation targets

    Upside Potential (Overperforming + Market Leader + Outlier): 45% probability of 3.0x+ returns

    Risk/Reward Assessment: Asymmetric return profile typical of venture capital. Limited downside (maximum loss = committed capital), significant upside potential. 45% probability of strong outperformance justifies the allocation.

    Recommendation

    INVEST $5,000,000 in Meridian Ventures Fund III

    Rationale:

    1. Expected returns justify risk: 2.58x probability-weighted return exceeds our 2.0x threshold for emerging manager venture allocations.

    2. Downside is bounded: Even in terrible scenario, loss limited to committed capital. 80% probability of returning at least 1.5x.

    3. Strategic alignment: Malaysian-domiciled GP supports our mandate. B2B/fintech thesis aligns with national digital economy priorities.

    4. Institutional validation: IFC’s $8M commitment provides comfort on GP quality and governance standards.

    5. Relationship value: Establishing relationship now provides access to Fund IV at larger scale if Fund III performs.

    6. Portfolio fit: $5M commitment represents appropriate sizing for emerging manager allocation—meaningful enough to matter, small enough to absorb potential loss.

    Conditions:

    • Advisory Committee seat to maintain visibility into fund operations
    • Quarterly reporting at institutional standards (already confirmed)
    • Co-investment rights on deals above $2M (standard LP terms)
    • MFN on any preferential terms granted to other LPs
    Not every pension fund will announce the commitment on TikTok

    LP Outcome Canvas by Strategy Tools. Get yours at www.strategytools.io

    Read the full story, The Fund Journey: An Emerging Manager’s Story from Kuala Lumpur to South-East Asia, Part I (years T-2 -1), Part II (years 2-5) and Part III (years 6-7).

    About the Author:

    Christian Rangen is a strategy advisor and business school faculty. He works with ambitious ecosystem developers, innovation agencies, venture funds, national fund-of-funds and governments on building better VC firms and VC ecosystems. He runs GP Accelerators and GP Masterclasses globally.

    ]]>
    The Fund Journey: An Emerging Manager’s Story from Kuala Lumpur to SEA. Part III: Value Creation, Fund III, and Institutional Arrival (Years 6-7) https://www.strategytools.io/blog/the-fund-journey-an-emerging-managers-story-from-kuala-lumpur-to-sea-part-iii-value-creation-fund-iii-and-institutional-arrival-years-6-7/ Tue, 30 Dec 2025 11:24:23 +0000 https://www.strategytools.io/?p=276219 Continued from Part I (years T-2 -1). Read part I here, and Part II here.

    Through the lens of Aisha Rahman, Founding Partner, Meridian Ventures With insights from: Rizal Tan, Co-Founder & General Partner And: Ahmad Ismail, CFO, PayMalaysia (Portfolio Company)

    By Year 5, we had deployed most of Fund II and were generating the track record that would define our institutional future. The question was no longer whether we could survive—it was whether we could scale.

    Year 6: Fund I Harvest Mode and Fund III Preparation

    Fund I Portfolio Status:

    Company Total Investment Status Current Value Multiple

    DataSync $400K Exited (failure) $32K 0.08x

    PayMalaysia $650K Series B prep $6M 9.2x

    CloudSEA $700K Acquisition talks $2.5M 3.6x

    SecureKL $400K EXITED $550K 1.38x

    LogiTech Asia $600K Growing $1.2M 2.0x

    HealthTech MY $550K Growing $1.4M 2.5x

    PropTech.asia $500K Profitable $900K 1.8x

    AgriTech ASEAN $350K Exited (failure) $50K 0.14x

    EduScale ID $500K Series A complete $1.8M 3.6x

    FinFlow $650K Series A complete $3.2M 4.9x

    Year 6 Fund I Metrics:

    Portfolio value: $17.5M (8 remaining companies)

    Total distributions: $632K

    TVPI: 2.8x

    DPI: 0.13x

    Net IRR: ~32%

    CloudSEA Acquisition:

    In June, Year 6, CloudSEA was acquired by a regional enterprise software company for $8M. Our proceeds: $2.2M on $700K invested (3.1x).

    This was our second meaningful exit and dramatically improved our DPI story.

    Fund I Post-CloudSEA:

    Total distributions: $2.85M

    DPI: 0.57x

    TVPI: 3.0x

    Fund III: The Institutional Leap to $50 Million

    Fund III represented our transition from emerging to established manager. At $50M, we could finally access the institutional capital that had been out of reach for our first two funds. But doing so, required next level fundraising strategy.

    Fundraising Strategy Canvas: Meridian Ventures Fund III ($50M)

    Fund Name: Meridian Ventures Fund III Completed by: Aisha Rahman & Rizal Tan Completed date: May 5th

    Fundraising strategy, leaps and bounds from fund I

    Content Marketing (Your key message)

    Our Fund III content strategy builds on five years of thought leadership. Aisha publishes monthly insights on South-East Asian venture trends via LinkedIn and our firm blog, reaching 15,000+ followers across the region. We co-author research with FoF’s on emerging manager performance in ASEAN markets. Rizal speaks regularly at AVCJ, SuperReturn Asia, and regional LP convenings. Our quarterly LP letters have become known for transparent, detailed portfolio analysis—several prospective LPs cited these as reasons for taking initial meetings. For Fund III, we’re producing a signature report on “The Next Wave: AI Opportunities Shaping the future” to position our revised thesis.

    LP Construction (200 Names vs 3000 Names)

    Fund III targets 20-25 LPs with an average commitment of $2-2.5M. Our construction starts with warm relationships: 12 re-up conversations with Fund I/II LPs (targeting 80% re-up rate), plus 8 qualified new institutional prospects. We’re not casting wide—we’re going deep on LPs where we have genuine fit.

    Our primary list includes: IFC and ADB (DFI mandate alignment), 4 fund-of-funds with emerging manager programs (Sarona, Speedinvest, HarbourVest, Adams Street), 3 regional pension funds beginning SEA allocations, 2 American foundations with Asia impact mandates, and 3 corporate VCs seeking regional deal flow access. Secondary list adds 15 family offices across Singapore, Hong Kong, and the Gulf.

    Sequencing (Game Plan)

    Pre-marketing (Months 1-3): Soft conversations with Fund I/II LPs to gauge re-up appetite and gather reference feedback. Update all materials, refresh data room, finalize Fund III terms.

    First Close Target (Months 4-8): Secure anchor commitments from Jelawang Capital ($6M target) and one DFI (IFC at $8M). These two anchors unlock the rest of the raise.

    Second Close (Months 9-12): Convert fund-of-funds and re-ups. Target $35M cumulative.

    Final Close (Months 13-16): Complete pension fund and foundation conversations. Close at $50M.

    Extended Team (Who?)

    We’re not raising alone. Our extended team includes: Jim, the ex-ADB (warm introductions to DFI network), our advisory board member from a major Malaysian family office (opens doors across Gulf family offices), Jelawang Capital’s LP relations team (co-hosting events where we’re featured), our Fund II co-anchor LP who now sits on two foundation boards (direct introductions), and a placement agent for European institutional LPs only (Eaton Partners, success-fee basis).

    As always, Andrew Senduk and his army of AI agents supports by presenting our GTM value-add story to LPs evaluating our portfolio support capabilities. We also brought in people like Jen Braswell and Paola Ravacchioli to guide us into the world of institutional readiness.

    The biggest difference, now we have a full capital formation team, full-time. That’s a game-changer.

    Timeline (6 Weeks vs 4 Years)

    Target: 14-16 months from launch to final close. We’re raising institutional, so we accept longer cycles. DFIs like IFC require 6-9 months from first meeting to IC approval. Pension funds need 4-6 months minimum. We’ve built relationships with target LPs over the past 2 years specifically to compress these timelines. Fund II closed in 14 months; we’re targeting similar pace for Fund III despite larger size because our LP relationships are now mature and our track record is proven.

    Amplifying LPs (Value-Add LPs)

    Three LPs serve as active amplifiers for Fund III:

    Jelawang Capital: As anchor, they’re actively referring us to their LP network and co-hosting a webinar on SEA emerging managers where Meridian is featured.

    Grace Choo  (IFC): Beyond their commitment, IFC’s involvement signals institutional validation. We’ll reference their due diligence process and commitment in all LP conversations.

    Fund I HNWI (exited founder): Now a respected angel investor, he’s made personal introductions to three family offices in his network who are exploring VC allocations.

    Geography (Focus)

    Primary: Singapore, Kuala Lumpur, Hong Kong (in-person intensive). These three cities cover 70% of our target LP base.

    Secondary: Dubai (6 trips planned for Gulf family offices and sovereign-adjacent capital), Washington DC (IFC HQ, 4 trips), San Francisco (2 American foundations, 5 trips).

    Tertiary: European fund-of-funds handled primarily via placement agent with 3 Rizal trips to London/Amsterdam.

    We’re not trying to cover the world. Geographic focus means deeper relationships in fewer places.

    Incentives (Incentives to Close)

    First Close Incentive: LPs committing by first close receive most-favored-nation status on any future side letter terms and priority co-investment allocation on the first three Fund III deals.

    Anchor Incentive: Jelawang Capital’s $6M anchor commitment came with a seat on our Advisory Committee and quarterly strategic calls with GPs beyond standard LP updates.

    No fee discounts. We learned from Fund I that fee discounts create LP management complexity and signal desperation. Our 2/20 terms are firm. Value-add comes through access and relationships, not economics.

    Summary: Why Fund III Will Close

    Fund III succeeds because we’ve built the infrastructure over four years:

    1. Track Record: Fund I at 2.8x TVPI with 0.6x DPI; Fund II performing at 1.6x TVPI in Year 2

    2. LP Relationships: 80%+ expected re-up rate from existing LPs

    3. Institutional Readiness: IFC-grade reporting, ESG frameworks, governance already in place

    4. Anchor Momentum: Jelawang and IFC commitments create herd effect for remaining LPs

    5. Team Coverage: All 8 GP Fundraising Team roles systematically covered

    6. Geographic Discipline: Focused presence in 3 primary cities, not scattered globally

    We’re not hoping to raise $50M. We have a plan to raise $50M.

    Closing LP in deep capital markets

    The Fund III LP roster showed our journey from emerging to institutional:

    LP Type Commitment

    IFC (International Finance Corporation) $8M

    Jelawang Capital (top-up) $6M

    Fund-of-Funds (top-ups x3) $10M

    Employees Provident Fund (EPF / KWSP) $5M

    Regional pension fund (1) $1M

    American Foundations (2) $5M

    Corporate VCs / Strategics (3) $8M

    Fund I/II Re-ups $7M

    TOTAL $50M

    IFC: The Institutional Validation

    When IFC committed $8M to Fund III, it represented the culmination of a eight-year relationship.

    Grace’s guidance during Fund I and II had prepared us for IFC’s due diligence process—one of the most rigorous in the industry. When the IFC team reviewed our fund, they found:

    •            ESG frameworks already in place

    •            LP reporting that met institutional standards

    •            A governance structure that could scale

    •            A track record of transparent, disciplined decision-making

    •            A clear investment thesis with demonstrated execution

    “Meridian had done the hard work of institutionalization before they needed to,” an IFC investment officer noted during our closing celebration. “That’s rare for emerging managers. Most try to retrofit institutional practices after they want institutional capital. Meridian built the foundation first.”

    Analyzing the LP outcome scenarios for EPF / KWSP

    One particularly valuable preparation was the extended masterclass we did on the LP outcome scenarios. This actually happened in Lausanne, Switzerland, where we participated in IMD’s Venture Asset Management program. Here we met Jim and Heidi, from ZKB. We got to develop and then truly practice using the LP outcome canvas. Enrique pushed us hard on this. This was truly transformative.

    We did not know it at the time, but just months later we would find ourselves in exactly the same position, when the investment team at EPF/KWSP started discussing their LP outcome analysis with us. Suddenly, we realized we could hold our ground and discuss, even negotiate with them on LP outcome models. Looking back, that was probably the moment it clicked, ‘now we are truly institutionally ready’.

    Read the full LP outcome analysis from EPF/KWSP here.

    The 20-Month Fundraising Cadence

    Fund III closed in early Year 7, meaning we had raised three funds in seven years—a new fund approximately every 20 months.

    This aggressive pace was only possible because of the fundraising infrastructure we’d built:

    •            LP relationships maintained continuously (not just during fundraising windows)

    •            Data room always updated and ready

    •            Fundraising team roles clearly defined across our small team

    •            AI and automation tools accelerating LP research and outreach

    •            Process-driven approach to LP conversion

    Year 7: The Firm Today

    By the end of Year 7, Meridian Ventures managed $85M across three funds:

    Fund Size Vintage Status

    Fund I $10M Year 0 Harvesting

    Fund II $25M Year 2 Value Creation

    Fund III $50M Year 4 Deploying

    Our team had grown from 2 founders to 8 people: 2 GPs, 1 Venture Partner (Andrew Senduk), 2 Principals, 2 Associates, and 1 Operations Manager, as well as a full team of AI agents.

    We’d invested in 32 companies across South-East Asia. Four exits completed. One potential unicorn in the making (PayMalaysia, now valued at $60M+ and heading toward Series C).

    We were no longer emerging managers. We were an established firm with institutional credibility, consistent returns, and a platform that would outlast any individual partner. Of course, with three funds, we now need to start generating exits and DPI back to our LPs. That’s the next step of the journey.

    From fund I to institutional; and still just getting started

    Key Recommendations for Emerging Fund Managers in South-East Asia

    Having navigated the journey from concept to $85M under management, here are the recommendations we would give to emerging managers starting today in South-East Asia:

    1. Start Smaller Than You Think

    Our original target of $30M for Fund I would have been impossible to raise. $10M was achievable—barely. In emerging markets, fund size credibility must be earned gradually. A successfully deployed $10M fund opens doors that no amount of pitch materials can open for a $50M first fund.

    2. Understand the Economics Brutally

    A 2% management fee on a $10M fund is $200,000 per year. After fund administration, legal, office, and travel, you’ll be paying yourselves poverty wages. Plan for this. Either have personal runway, alternative income sources, or extremely understanding life partners. The economics only work at scale—which means Fund II and III are not optional; they’re survival requirements.

    3. Invest in Fundraising Infrastructure Early

    Use the GP Fundraising Team canvas to build systematic fundraising capability, even if you’re just two people. Define who covers each role. Use AI and automation tools aggressively. Define your LP personas. Nail your LP Value proposition. Maintain your LP CRM continuously. The difference between our Fund I scramble and Fund II execution was entirely about infrastructure.

    4. Leverage Ecosystem Builders

    Organizations like IFC, ADB, Cradle Fund, and Jelawang Capital exist to support ecosystem development. They want emerging managers to succeed. Engage with them early—not for capital, but for guidance, connections, and credibility. Our relationships with Grace Choo  at IFC and Craig and Ian at ADB were transformative years before they led to any investment.

    5. Build Value Creation Capabilities

    South-East Asian founders often need more support than capital. Andrew Senduk’s GTM expertise became a genuine differentiator for our fund. Think about what operational value you can genuinely provide, and build that capability deliberately. LPs increasingly want to see portfolio support, not just deal access.

    6. Accept the LP Evolution Timeline

    Fund I will likely be friends, family, HNWIs, and angels. Fund II will add some early institutional elements—fund-of-funds, emerging manager programs. Fund III is when major institutional capital becomes accessible. Don’t fight this progression; plan for it. Each fund stage prepares you for the next.

    7. Maintain a Fundraising Cadence

    Raising a new fund every 20-24 months sounds aggressive, but it’s actually survival strategy. It keeps LP relationships warm, demonstrates traction, and builds the AUM necessary for sustainable GP economics. Start thinking about Fund II long before Fund I even closes.

    8. Be Transparent About Challenges

    Our first write-off was painful to communicate to LPs. But our transparent handling of that failure—and our discipline in not throwing good money after bad—built credibility that paid dividends in Fund II and III. LPs expect some failures. What they’re watching for is how you handle them.

    9. Invest in Education Continuously

    The Fund Manager! Masterclass transformed our approach. Strategy Tools’ LP AI platform sharpened our pitching. Industry conferences, peer networks, and continuous learning aren’t luxuries—they’re requirements for staying competitive in a rapidly evolving industry.

    10. Remember It’s a 15-Year Journey

    The Fund Journey Map shows a 15-year cycle from idea to final distribution. We’re only at Year 7. The hardest part—converting paper gains to actual DPI—is still ahead. This is a career commitment, not a quick path to wealth. Make sure you’re in it for the right reasons and with the right partners.

    Final Reflections

    Rizal’s reflection:

    “Six years ago, Aisha and I were two people in a converted shophouse, maxing out credit cards and wondering if anyone would ever trust us with institutional capital. Today, we manage $85M across three funds with IFC as an LP and genuine institutional credibility. Fund I’s emerging returns aren’t the highest in the industry, but they’re solid, repeatable, and built the foundation for everything that followed. The Fund Journey Map captures the phases, but what it can’t capture is the emotional journey—the anxiety of Year 0, the relief of first close, the devastation of our first write-off, the joy of our first major exit. This business is deeply human. That’s what makes it worth doing.”

    Aisha’s reflection:

    “If I could give one piece of advice to emerging managers starting today in South-East Asia, it would be this: the fund journey is a marathon, not a sprint. Every phase has its challenges and rewards. Year T-2 felt impossible; Year 4 felt like vindication; Year 6 feels like we’ve just begun. Through all of it, the constants were partnership stability, LP transparency, and founder-first investing. Those principles guided every decision. They’ll guide Fund IV and beyond.”

    The fund journey continues.

    Read Part I (years T-2 -1), I here, and Part II here.

    About the Fund Journey Map and GP Fundraising Team Canvas

    The Fund Journey Map by Strategy Tools visualizes the complete 15-year lifecycle of a venture capital fund, from early idea through final distribution. It captures the key decision points, risks, and milestones that define the GP experience. Based on work with 100’s of emerging fund managers, the Fund Journey Map is designed to help emerging managers successfully navigate the full fund journey.

    The Fund Journey Map. Get it at www.strategytools.io

    The GP Fundraising Team canvas identifies the eight roles that drive successful LP fundraising, from LP Researcher through LP Process & DD Guide. Both tools are part of Strategy Tools’ Venture Capital Series.

    Build your team with the GP Fundraising team

    Download the Fund Journey Map, GP Fundraising Team canvas, and explore our full suite of GP accelerators and venture capital programs  at strategytools.io

    Ready to start your fund journey?

    Join the Fund Manager! Masterclass to learn from experienced GPs, practice with our Fund Manager simulation, and build the skills needed to launch and manage successful venture capital funds. Learn more.

    This article is part of the Venture Capital Series at Strategy Tools, helping fund managers, LPs, FoFs and ecosystem builders develop better venture capital ecosystems around the world.

    About the Author:

    Christian Rangen is a strategy advisor and business school faculty. He works with ambitious ecosystem developers, innovation agencies, venture funds, national fund-of-funds and governments on building better VC firms and VC ecosystems. He runs GP Accelerators and GP Masterclasses globally.

    A huge thanks to Scott Newton Rick Rasmussen Efe (Braimah) Barber Winnie Odhiambo Jen Braswell Paola Ravacchioli Jim Pulcrano Enrique Alvarado Hablützel Marijn Wiersma Jessica Low Jessica Espinoza Marième Diop Sanjana Raheja Rumbi Makanga for inspiring this 3-part story

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    The Fund Journey: An Emerging Manager’s Story from Kuala Lumpur to South-East Asia. Part II: Investment Period and the Birth of Fund II (Years 2-5) https://www.strategytools.io/blog/the-fund-journey-an-emerging-managers-story-from-kuala-lumpur-to-south-east-asia-part-ii-investment-period-and-the-birth-of-fund-ii-years-2-5/ Tue, 30 Dec 2025 11:12:25 +0000 https://www.strategytools.io/?p=276209 Continued from Part I (years T-2 -1). Read part I here, and Part III here.

    Through the lens of Aisha Rahman, Founding Partner, Meridian Ventures With insights from: Rizal Tan, Co-Founder & General Partner And: Priya Nair, CEO, DataSync (Portfolio Company)

    The investment period is where fund strategy meets market reality. For Meridian Ventures, Years 2-5 would test every assumption in our thesis—and force us to make decisions that would determine whether Fund I would succeed or fail. More importantly, it would teach us that building a world-class fundraising team was the key to our survival.

    Year 2: Building the Portfolio

    January-March: Deployment Accelerates

    Year 2 began with unfinished business—we were still seeking to fill out our Fund I portfolio while simultaneously supporting our initial five investments.

    The portfolio construction challenge:

    Fund I targeted 12-15 investments. With $10M and roughly 30% reserved for follow-ons ($3M), we had $7M for initial investments. Average initial check: $450K-$600K.

    Our investment period was 3-4 years, but best practice suggested deploying most capital in years 1-2 to allow adequate time for value creation before exits.

    Target deployment pace: 4-5 investments per year in Years 1-2, slowing in Years 3-4.

    Q1 investments:

    Investment #6: HealthTech MY (February, Year 2) — Digital health platform connecting patients with specialists. Strong team from the Malaysian healthcare system. Complex regulatory environment, but a genuine market need. $450K investment.

    Investment #7: PropTech.asia (March, Year 2) — Commercial real estate analytics. Data-driven approach to property valuation across South-East Asian markets. Two experienced founders from the real estate industry. $400K investment.

    April-June: First Portfolio Challenges Emerge

    By summer, reality started diverging from our investment memos.

    DataSync: The early warning signs

    Our first investment wasn’t developing as expected. The founding team—brilliant data scientists from Grab—struggled with go-to-market execution. Six months post-investment, they had built an impressive product with almost no customers.

    Our board seat gave us visibility, but limited control. We pushed for them to hire a commercial co-founder. They resisted, believing the product would sell itself.

    The VC’s dilemma:

    This is where active ownership gets complicated. We had conviction in the market and product, but growing concerns about execution. Do we push harder and risk damaging the GP-founder relationship? Do we stay hands-off and hope they figure it out? Do we write more about our concerns in LP reports, potentially signaling problems prematurely?

    We chose a middle path: supportive but direct feedback in board meetings, connected them with commercial advisors from our network, and documented our concerns internally while maintaining constructive external positioning.

    Rizal’s perspective:

    “DataSync taught us something important in Year 1: the gap between investment memo and portfolio reality. On paper, they were perfect—ex-Grab team, clear market need, technical excellence. In practice, they had a fundamental gap in commercial DNA. As investors, we could coach around the edges, but we couldn’t fix the team composition problem without their buy-in. That’s the limit of VC influence at the seed stage.”

    Hunting great deals, but not every deal is going to end well.

    July-December: Closing Out Year 2

    More investments:

    Investment #8: AgriTech ASEAN (August, Year 2) — Precision agriculture software for South-East Asian farms. Strong domain expertise from agricultural extension backgrounds. $350K investment.

    Investment #9: EduScale ID (October, Year 2) — EdTech platform for corporate training, Indonesia-focused. First-time founder, but she’d been a customer of this category for years and understood the pain points intimately. $400K investment.

    Investment #10: FinFlow (November, Year 2) — Subscription billing platform for regional SaaS companies. Two-time founder (previous exit to a strategic acquirer). More expensive than our typical deals—we paid a premium for founder pedigree. $550K investment.

    Year 2 Summary:

    Metric Value

    Investments made 10 total (5 in Year 0, 5 in Year 1)

    Capital deployed $4.1M (59% of initial allocation)

    Portfolio value (estimated) $4.5M (modest markups)

    Net IRR ~10%

    TVPI 1.10x

    DPI 0.0x (no distributions)

    LP feedback (first annual meeting):

    Our first annual LP meeting happened in November, Year 2. The feedback was mixed.

    Positives: LPs liked our pace of deployment, the quality of our deal sourcing, and our transparent reporting.

    Concerns: Multiple LPs questioned why we’d invested in 10 companies before having meaningful traction data from our earliest investments. Were we deploying too fast? Should we have waited to see DataSync progress before committing more capital? This was fair criticism. We defended our approach—the market window for seed deals doesn’t wait, and batch deployment is normal—but we heard the underlying anxiety.

    Year 3: The J-Curve Bites Hard

    January-March: Portfolio Divergence Accelerates

    Year 3 revealed the brutal reality of seed-stage investing: outcomes diverge fast.

    The winners emerging:

    PayMalaysia signed a partnership with a major Malaysian bank, gaining access to 25,000 SME customers. Their MRR jumped from $15K to $45K in a single quarter.

    CloudSEA landed their first enterprise customer and began generating real revenue. The founding team proved they could sell, not just build.

    FinFlow—our expensive bet on the serial founder—launched and acquired 80 paying customers within three months. Unit economics looked strong.

    The troubled middle:

    LogiTech Asia was progressing but slowly. Their pilot customers liked the product but were reluctant to commit to scaled rollouts. The solo founder was burning out, handling everything herself.

    SecureKL hit regulatory complexity we’d underestimated. Malaysian cybersecurity compliance required certifications that would take 12-18 months to obtain.

    AgriTech ASEAN was pre-revenue and burning cash on R&D. The founders were making technical progress but had no commercial traction whatsoever.

    The failures materializing:

    DataSync continued its slow death march. By March, Year 3, they had signed only two customers—both small, low-ACV deals that didn’t validate the business model. Cash was running low.

    The write-down conversation:

    For the first time, we had to discuss portfolio write-downs with our LPs.

    Our policy was to mark investments at fair value quarterly, based on either subsequent financing rounds or internal assessment. DataSync hadn’t raised follow-on capital, and our internal assessment suggested the company was worth significantly less than we’d paid.

    The decision: Mark DataSync down by 50%. Our $400K investment was now carried at $200K.

    This single write-down dropped our fund TVPI from 1.12x to 1.05x.

    Grace Choo’s perspective (LP advisor, though not yet an investor):

    “I remember Aisha calling to tell me about the DataSync write-down. She was clearly uncomfortable—admitting their first investment was struggling felt like a personal failure. But I actually gained confidence from that call. They weren’t hiding problems. They weren’t massaging valuations to look better. They were being straight about challenges. That’s exactly what I want to see from GPs.”

    April-September: The Capital Crisis and Critical Decision

    DataSync reaches the breaking point:

    By July, DataSync had 4 months of runway remaining. The founding team came to us with two options:

    Option A: Bridge financing to buy time for one more pivot attempt. They wanted $150K from existing investors to extend runway by 8-10 months.

    Option B: Shut down the company, preserve remaining capital for investor return, accept failure.

    This was our first major follow-on decision. The Fund Journey Map shows this moment clearly—the choice between doubling down and writing off.

    The analysis:

    We ran the numbers cold. DataSync had burned $500K (our $400K plus other investor capital) with almost nothing to show for it. The founding team had proven they couldn’t find early product-market fit despite multiple pivots. The market for SMB analytics was getting more competitive, not less.

    A $150K bridge would increase our exposure to $550K in a company we’d already written down 50%.

    Our decision: Don’t participate in the bridge. Let the company find other sources of capital or shut down.

    This was painful. We liked the founders personally. We’d championed them to our LPs. Walking away felt like failure.

    But the alternative was worse: good money after bad into a company that had demonstrated it couldn’t execute.

    The aftermath:

    DataSync couldn’t raise the bridge from other sources. In September, Year 3, they shut down and returned approximately $40K to investors. Our $400K investment became a $32K return—a 92% loss.

    Priya Nair (CEO, DataSync) perspective:

    “Looking back, Meridian made the right call. At the time, I was furious—I thought they were abandoning us. But we’d had 18 months to prove the model and hadn’t done it. Throwing more money at the problem wouldn’t have changed the fundamental issue: we were great at building product and terrible at selling it. I learned more from that failure than from anything else in my career. Two years later, I started a new company with a commercial co-founder from day one. That company is now doing $2M ARR. DataSync’s failure was my most important education.”

    The Hard Lesson: We Need to Get Better at Fundraising

    By late Year 3, with DataSync written off and the J-curve biting hard, we had a sobering realization.

    “If we’re going to survive as a firm,” Rizal said one evening in our Bangsar office, “we need to raise Fund II. And we can’t go through the same scramble we did for Fund I. That nearly broke us.”

    He was right. Fund I fundraising had been 18 months of desperation, cold outreach, and near-misses. We’d raised $10M through sheer determination, but we’d burned out in the process. And $10M wasn’t enough to build a sustainable management company.

    We needed a systematic approach to fundraising. We needed a real fundraising team.

    Building a World-Class Fundraising Team: The Game Changer

    Who’s on your capital formation team?

    The canvas identifies eight distinct roles that drive successful LP fundraising. We didn’t have eight people—we never would for Fund II—but we deliberately covered each function:

    Role Function Our Solution

    LP Researcher

    Leads all research on prospective LPs, fills top of funnel

    Part-time analyst using ADB’s LP database and conference materials

    LP Networks & Engagement

    Builds deep relationships through events, conferences

    Aisha – primary relationship builder through AVCJ, SuperReturn Asia

    Deck, Model & Dataroom Builder

    Builds and maintains all fundraising materials

    Outsourced structure using Strategy Tools templates; Rizal maintained

    AI & Automation

    Builds automation engine to make LP process 10x faster

    LP AI platform for persona practice + custom CRM workflows

    GP Leadership

    Overall leadership, joins and leads most LP meetings

    Rizal – led all key meetings, responsible for overall LP performance

    LP Closer

    Takes LPs from hello to signature, strong sales focus

    Split between Rizal and Aisha based on relationship warmth

    LP Whisperer

    Elder statesman with networks to top prospective LPs

    Advisory board member from major family office + Jim, ex-ADB

    LP Process & DD Guide

    Guides LPs through entire process from data room to IC

    Dedicated support from legal counsel + streamlined process docs

    This systematic approach transformed our fundraising capability. Where Fund I had been desperate scrambling, Fund II would be organized execution.

    From two GPs to a strong capital formation team and network

    Key changes we implemented:

    1. Continuous LP engagement: We didn’t wait until we “started fundraising.” We maintained quarterly touchpoints with all Fund I LPs and prospective Fund II LPs from Year 3 onward.

    2. Data room always ready: Instead of scrambling to build materials when an LP showed interest, we kept a perpetually updated data room.

    3. LP persona customization: Different pitch materials for different LP types, practiced extensively using the Strategy Tools LP AI platform.

    4. CRM discipline: Every LP interaction logged, follow-ups scheduled, relationship health tracked.

    5. Advisory leverage: Our advisory board member opened doors we could never have opened ourselves.

    The IFC Partnership: Becoming Institutional-Ready

    One relationship proved transformative during our Fund II preparation: our connection to Grace Choo , Regional Lead at IFC (International Finance Corporation).

    Grace had seen hundreds of emerging managers across Asia. She’d watched funds succeed and fail, scale and collapse. When we approached her in Year 3, we weren’t asking for investment (we knew our fund was too small for IFC at that stage). We were asking for guidance.

    “We got immense support from Grace to understand how to evolve from Fund I to Fund II, and becoming institutional-scale ready,” I later told other emerging managers at an AVCJ panel.

    Her guidance covered several critical areas:

    On portfolio reporting: Institutional LPs expected quarterly reports with specific metrics. IFC had templates we could adapt.

    On ESG integration: DFIs increasingly required ESG frameworks. Build these now rather than retrofit later.

    On governance: Have an Advisory Committee and LP reporting structure that would scale.

    On fund size: IFC typically couldn’t invest in funds under $50M, but if we performed well in Fund II, Fund III might qualify.

    “Think of Fund II as your audition tape for institutional capital,” Grace advised. “Every decision you make, every report you write, every portfolio company you support—assume that institutional LPs will scrutinize all of it when you come back for Fund III.”

    Andrew Senduk: Venture Partner for GTM Excellence

    As our portfolio grew, we recognized a gap in our capabilities: go-to-market (GTM) execution. Many of our founders were technical experts who struggled with sales, marketing, and commercial scaling.

    In Year 3, we brought on Andrew Senduk as a Venture Partner specifically to address this gap.

    Andrew had spent 15 years building and scaling businesses across Indonesia, Malaysia, and Singapore. He’d led GTM for two successful startups (one acquired, one IPO’d) and understood the unique challenges of selling across South-East Asia’s fragmented markets.

    Andrew’s perspective on joining Meridian:

    “What attracted me to Meridian was their recognition that early-stage investing isn’t just about picking winners—it’s about helping those winners actually win. Most seed-stage founders in South-East Asia are technical builders who’ve never sold enterprise software or scaled a consumer product across multiple countries. That’s where I could add genuine value.”

    Andrew worked with six of our Fund I portfolio companies on their GTM strategies:

    •            Sales process design for enterprise SaaS companies

    •            Market entry strategies for regional expansion

    •            Pricing and packaging optimization

    •            Customer success frameworks

    His involvement became a key part of our LP pitch for Fund II: we weren’t just providing capital, we were providing hands-on GTM expertise that could meaningfully accelerate our portfolio companies’ growth.

    Year 4: Portfolio Maturation and Fund II Launch

    Portfolio Performance at Year 4:

    Company Total Investment Status Current Value Multiple

    DataSync $400K Shut down $32K 0.08x

    PayMalaysia $450K Series A prep $2.2M 4.9x

    CloudSEA $600K Growing $1.5M 2.5x

    SecureKL $400K Bridge raised $350K 0.87x

    LogiTech Asia $500K Turnaround $550K 1.1x

    HealthTech MY $450K Growing $650K 1.4x

    PropTech.asia $400K Growing $500K 1.25x

    AgriTech ASEAN $350K Struggling $200K 0.57x

    EduScale ID $400K Growing $600K 1.5x

    FinFlow $550K Pre-Series A $1.8M 3.3x

    Year 4 Fund I Metrics:

    Total invested: $4.5M (65% of initial allocation)

    Current portfolio value: $8.4M

    TVPI: 1.55x

    DPI: 0.01x

    Net IRR: ~18%

    Fund II Strategy evolution

    It was a webinar in March that led to team to step back and reflect. “Our fund II is not just a replica of fund I. We need to think far more strategically”. On the webinar, the team was introduced to the Fund Strategy Canvas, developed by Strategy Tools. Carving out a full-day offsite, the team sat down to complete the Fund Strategy Canvas together.

    Fund Strategy Canvas: Meridian Ventures Fund II ($25M)

    Fund Name: Meridian Ventures Fund II

    General Partners: Aisha Rahman & Rizal Tan

    Use the Fund Strategy Canvas for your one-page, visual strategy

    THESIS, STRATEGY

    Thesis & Size

    Meridian Ventures Fund II is a $25M early-stage venture capital fund investing in B2B software and fintech companies across South-East Asia, with primary focus on Malaysia, Indonesia, Vietnam, and the Philippines.

    Our thesis is built on three convictions:

    First, South-East Asia’s digital economy is entering its enterprise phase. After a decade of consumer internet growth, the next wave of value creation will come from B2B infrastructure—payments, logistics software, enterprise SaaS, and vertical solutions that enable the region’s 70 million SMEs to digitize operations.

    Second, the best founders in ASEAN are increasingly emerging from non-traditional backgrounds and geographies outside Singapore. Malaysia, Indonesia, and Vietnam are producing world-class technical talent with deep local market understanding. These founders are systematically overlooked by Singapore-centric VCs who rarely travel beyond Changi Airport.

    Third, early-stage companies in emerging South-East Asian markets need more than capital. They need operational support—particularly in go-to-market execution, regional expansion strategy, and preparation for institutional follow-on rounds. GPs who combine capital with hands-on GTM expertise will generate superior returns.

    Fund II targets $25M, representing a 2.5x step-up from our $10M Fund I. This size allows us to lead seed rounds of $500K-$1.5M while maintaining meaningful follow-on reserves for winners.

    Strategy

    Stage: Pre-seed to Seed, with selective Seed+ participation

    Check size: $500K-$1.5M initial; up to $2M follow-on in winners

    Geography: Malaysia (40%), Indonesia (35%), Vietnam/Philippines (25%)

    Sectors: B2B software, fintech infrastructure, vertical SaaS, logistics tech

    Target portfolio: 18-22 companies over 3-year deployment period

    We invest at the earliest institutional stage—typically first or second money in after angels. Our sweet spot is technical founding teams with clear product vision but limited go-to-market experience. We help them build the commercial muscle to reach Series A.

    Unfair Advantage

    Our unfair advantage is the combination of three elements no other regional fund possesses:

    Operator-investor team: Rizal spent 8 years building and scaling startups across Malaysia and Indonesia before becoming an investor. He’s lived the founder journey and speaks the language of operators, not just financiers.

    Ground-level presence: We’re based in Kuala Lumpur, not Singapore. We travel to Jakarta, Ho Chi Minh City, and Manila monthly. We see deals 6-12 months before Singapore-based funds because we’re embedded in local founder communities.

    GTM value-add through Andrew Senduk: Our Venture Partner has 15 years of enterprise sales and regional expansion experience. He works directly with portfolio companies on sales process, pricing strategy, and market entry—capabilities that differentiate us from capital-only investors.

    TEAM & TRACK RECORD

    General Partners

    Aisha Rahman, Founding Partner

    12 years in venture capital and corporate development. Former Principal at a mid-sized regional VC where she led 15+ investments across ASEAN. Board experience across fintech, SaaS, and logistics companies. MBA from INSEAD. Leads fund strategy, LP relations, and serves on 6 portfolio company boards.

    Rizal Tan, Co-Founder & General Partner

    8 years as operator, 4 years as investor. Former VP Business Development at a Series B payments company (acquired). Founded and sold a B2B marketplace in Malaysia. Leads deal sourcing, investment decisions, and portfolio company operational support. Deep networks across Malaysian and Indonesian founder communities.

    Extended Team

    Andrew Senduk, Venture Partner

    15 years building and scaling businesses across Indonesia, Malaysia, and Singapore. Led GTM for two successful startups (one acquired, one IPO’d). Works with portfolio companies on sales process design, regional expansion, and commercial scaling. Not full-time but engaged across 6+ portfolio companies per fund.

    Two Associates: Handle deal sourcing, due diligence support, and portfolio monitoring. One based in KL, one in Jakarta.

    One Operations Manager: Fund administration, LP reporting, and back-office operations.

    Track Record

    Fund I Performance (as of Fund II launch):

    Vintage: 2023

    Size: $10M

    Investments: 12 companies

    TVPI: 1.55x

    DPI: 0.02x (one small exit)

    IRR: ~18%

    Notable Fund I positions: PayMalaysia (4.9x paper, Series A prep), FinFlow (3.3x paper, growing rapidly), CloudSEA (2.5x paper, acquisition discussions). One complete write-off (DataSync), demonstrating follow-on discipline.

    Prior Track Record (attributable deals from previous roles):

    Aisha: 4 exits from prior fund, including 2 at 3x+ returns

    Rizal: Personal angel portfolio of 8 investments, 2 exits at 5x+

    LP MIX

    Anchor LPs

    Jelawang Capital ($4M commitment)

    Regional thought leader in South-East Asian venture. Their rigorous due diligence and public commitment provides institutional validation. Jelawang serves on our Advisory Committee and actively supports our LP fundraising through introductions and co-hosted events.

    Sarona Asset Management ($3M commitment)

    Impact-focused fund-of-funds with emerging markets mandate. Their commitment signals ESG credibility and opens doors to other impact-oriented institutional LPs.

    LP Mix Structure

    LP Category    Target Allocation         Rationale

    Fund-of-Funds (emerging manager programs) $7M (28%) Jelawang Capital, Sarona, Speedinvest, regional FoFs with SEA mandates

    Regional Family Offices $6M (24%) Re-ups from Fund I plus new Singapore/Malaysian families

    Fund I Re-ups (HNWIs, angels) $5M (20%) Strong re-up rate demonstrates LP satisfaction

    Fund-of-fund $4M (16%) Dubai Future District Fund, SEA-MENA-oriented allocators

    Strategic / Corporate $2M (8%) Corporate VCs seeking regional deal flow

    GP Commitment$1M (4%), Increased from Fund I to demonstrate alignment

    Target LP count: 18-22 LPs

    Average commitment: $1.1-1.4M

    Minimum commitment: $250K (to maintain fund I relationships)

    LP Value Add

    Our LP base isn’t just capital—it’s a strategic network:

    Jelawang Capital: Portfolio company introductions, co-investment on larger rounds, thought leadership association

    Sarona: ESG framework guidance, impact measurement support, introductions to impact-focused follow-on investors

    Fund I HNWIs (exited founders): Direct mentorship to portfolio founders, customer introductions, hiring network access

    Dubai Future District Fund: Middle East expansion pathway for portfolio companies, sovereign wealth fund network

    Corporate LPs: Strategic partnership and M&A optionality for portfolio companies

    LP ECONOMICS

    Financial Terms

    Term     Fund II                Structure

    Management Fee

    2.0% on committed capital during investment period

    2.0% on invested capital thereafter

    Carried Interest 20%

    Preferred Return (Hurdle) 8%

    GP Commitment 4% ($1M)

    Waterfall European (whole-fund)

    Fund Life10 years + two 1-year extensions

    Investment Period 4 years

    Distribution Policy

    Distributions made as exits occur, subject to:

    Return of LP capital contributions first

    8% preferred return to LPs

    80/20 split thereafter (LP/GP)

    GP catch-up provision after hurdle achieved

    Fee Offsets

    100% of transaction fees, monitoring fees, and director fees received by GPs from portfolio companies are offset against management fees.

    LEGAL SETUP

    Fund Domicile: Labuan International Business and Financial Centre (IBFC), Malaysia

    Fund Structure: Labuan Limited Partnership

    Rationale for Labuan:

    Tax-efficient structure for regional investments

    Regulatory framework designed for investment funds

    Lower setup and administration costs than Singapore VCC or Cayman

    Acceptable to institutional LPs including DFIs

    Geographic alignment with our KL base

    Fund Administrator: Apex Fund Services (Singapore)

    Legal Counsel:

    Fund formation: Rajah & Tann (Singapore/Malaysia)

    Portfolio investments: Local counsel in each jurisdiction

    Auditor: Ernst & Young (Malaysia)

    Tax Considerations:

    Labuan entities benefit from 3% tax on net profits or flat RM20,000

    No withholding tax on distributions to non-Malaysian LPs

    Tax treaties in place with most LP jurisdictions

    DEALFLOW

    Primary Dealflow Channels

    1. Founder Networks (40% of pipeline)

    Rizal’s operator background generates direct founder referrals. Portfolio company founders introduce their peers. Our reputation for being “founder-friendly” creates inbound interest from founders who’ve heard about us through the ecosystem.

    2. Ecosystem Partners (30% of pipeline)

    Deep relationships with Cradle Fund (Malaysia), MDEC, 500 Startups (SEA), Antler, and regional accelerators. We’re the preferred follow-on investor for several accelerator programs because we move quickly and add operational value.

    3. Angel/Syndicate Networks (20% of pipeline)

    Co-invest relationships with AngelCentral Malaysia, Angel Investment Network Indonesia, and individual super-angels across the region. Angels bring us deals early; we bring them access to institutional rounds.

    4. Proactive Sourcing (10% of pipeline)

    Associates systematically track companies emerging from regional tech hubs, monitor funding announcements, and conduct outbound outreach to promising founders.

    Dealflow Expansion Strategy

    For Fund II, we’re expanding dealflow through:

    Quarterly “Office Hours” in Jakarta, Ho Chi Minh City, and Manila

    Content marketing (Aisha’s LinkedIn presence reaches 15,000+ regional followers)

    Deeper accelerator relationships in Vietnam and Philippines (underserved in Fund I)

    Investment Process

    Stage                   Timeline                         Activities

    Initial Screen                                                                                                         1 week

    Partner review of deck/intro, quick pass/proceed decision First Meeting           1-2 weeks

    60-minute founder meeting, both GPs attend, Deep Dive, Term sheet 1            1-3 weeks

    Market analysis, reference calls, product review, Investment Committee           1 week

    IC memo, partner discussion, decision, Term Sheet 2 & Close                        1-4 weeks

    Final terms negotiation, legal documentation, funding                                       1-4 weeks

    Total process: 2-14 weeks from first meeting to close

    Decision authority: Both GPs must approve; no solo deals

    PORTFOLIO & VALUE ADD

    Portfolio Construction Parameter

    Target Number of investments 18-22 companies

    Initial check size $500K-$1.5M

    Follow-on reserves 35% of fund ($8.75M)

    Target ownership 8-15% at entry

    Concentration limit

    No single investment >12% of fund

    Follow-on Strategy

    We reserve 35% of the fund for follow-on investments in winners. Follow-on decisions are made based on:

    Company performance against milestones

    Ability to maintain meaningful ownership

    Quality of incoming investors

    Risk/reward at new valuation

    We explicitly do NOT do pro-rata follow-ons across the portfolio. Capital is concentrated in top performers. Fund I experience: followed on in 3 of 12 companies; those 3 represent 60% of portfolio value.

    Investment Decision Framework

    All investments must meet threshold criteria:

    Team: Technical depth + commercial potential (or willingness to add commercial talent)

    Market: $500M+ addressable market in ASEAN

    Timing: Clear catalyst for why now

    Fit: B2B/fintech focus aligned with thesis

    Valuation: Entry price supporting 10x+ return potential

    Value Add: How We Support Portfolio Companies

    Board Engagement

    GPs take board seats on all lead investments. Active participation in strategy, hiring, and fundraising decisions. Monthly check-ins with all portfolio CEOs.

    GTM Support (Andrew Senduk)

    Hands-on work with portfolio companies on:

    Sales process design and optimization

    Pricing and packaging strategy

    Enterprise sales playbook development

    Regional expansion planning

    Customer success frameworks

    Andrew engages with 6-8 companies per fund on structured GTM programs.

    Talent Network

    Curated network of 200+ executives and operators across ASEAN. Direct introductions for key hires. Quarterly portfolio talent events connecting companies with candidates.

    Follow-on Fundraising

    Warm introductions to Series A investors (Sequoia SEA, Vertex, East Ventures, Openspace, etc.). Preparation support for institutional fundraising. Data room and pitch coaching.

    Peer Network

    Quarterly portfolio CEO dinners. Slack community for real-time peer support. Annual offsite bringing together all portfolio founders.

    EXIT STRATEGY

    Value Creation & Exit Strategy

    Value Creation Focus Areas:

    During Years 1-3 (building phase):

    Product-market fit validation

    Initial revenue traction ($100K-$500K ARR)

    Team building beyond founders

    Market positioning establishment

    During Years 3-5 (scaling phase):

    Revenue acceleration ($500K-$3M ARR)

    Unit economics optimization

    Geographic expansion within ASEAN

    Series A/B fundraising

    During Years 5-8 (exit preparation):

    Path to profitability or clear growth trajectory

    Strategic relationship cultivation

    Board composition optimization for exit

    Financial and legal housekeeping

    Exit Pathways:

    Exit Type            Expected % of Exits Typical Timeline

    Strategic M&A (regional) 20%              Years 4-7

    Strategic M&A (global)        5%             Years 5-8

    Secondary sale                     10%           Years 4-6

    IPO (rare at our stage)          5%            Years 7-10

    Write-off                            60%              Years 2-8

    Exit Preparation Process:

    Starting Year 2, we work with portfolio companies to:

    Identify potential strategic acquirers

    Build relationships with corporate development teams

    Prepare management for M&A processes

    Clean up cap table and legal structure

    Develop exit-ready financial reporting

    Exit Experience

    GP Exit Track Record:

    Aisha Rahman:

    4 exits at prior fund, including 2 M&A transactions she led

    Managed LP distributions and exit accounting

    Board member through 3 acquisition processes

    Rizal Tan:

    Founded and sold B2B marketplace to strategic acquirer

    Personal angel portfolio: 2 exits (1 acquisition, 1 secondary)

    Operator perspective on founder exit psychology

    Fund I Exits (to date):

    SecureKL: Acquired for $2M (1.38x return)—managed full M&A process

    DataSync: Orderly wind-down with capital return—demonstrated discipline

    AgriTech ASEAN: Wind-down in progress

    FUND ECONOMICS

    Fund Model Summary

    Item     Amount

    Fund Size $25,000,000

    Management Fee (annual, investment period) $500,000

    Management Fee (annual, post-investment period) $400,000 (on invested capital)

    Total Management Fees (10-year life) $4,400,000

    Available for Investment $20,600,000

    Target Gross Multiple 3.0x

    Target Net Multiple2.5x

    Target Net IRR20%+

    Management Company Economics

    Annual management fee of $500K supports:

    2 GP salaries (market-rate for regional VCs)

    2 Associate salaries

    1 Operations Manager salary

    Office (KL headquarters + hot desks in SG, Jakarta)

    Travel (significant—we’re on the ground across 4 countries)

    Fund administration, legal, audit

    LP relations and reporting

    Cash Flow Reality:

    Unlike Fund I (where we paid ourselves poverty wages), Fund II economics allow for sustainable GP compensation. This is critical for partnership stability and long-term firm building.

    Carried Interest Distribution

    Assuming 3.0x gross return ($75M exit proceeds) on $25M fund:

    Distribution     Amount

    Return of LP Capital  $25,000,000

    8% Preferred Return to LPs $8,000,000

    Remaining Proceeds $42,000,000

    LP Share (80%)$33,600,000

    GP Carried Interest (20%)$8,400,000

    Total LP Returns: $66.6M on $25M invested (2.66x net)

    GP Economics: $8.4M carried interest + ~$4.4M management fees over fund life

    Working Capital

    Fund II includes a modest working capital facility to bridge timing gaps between capital calls and expenses. This prevents the personal financial stress that characterized Fund I operations.

    Structuring a series A with four co-investors, what are the return profile on this deal?

    SUMMARY: WHY FUND II WILL SUCCEED

    Meridian Ventures Fund II is positioned to deliver top-quartile returns because:

    Proven Team: GPs with complementary skills, demonstrated partnership stability through Fund I challenges, and relevant operating experience.

    Differentiated Strategy: Ground-level presence in underserved markets, combined with genuine GTM value-add through Andrew Senduk.

    Strong Fund I Foundation: 1.55x TVPI with clear winners emerging, disciplined write-off decisions, and institutional-quality reporting already in place.

    Right-Sized Fund: $25M is large enough to lead meaningful rounds but small enough to generate strong returns from regional exit valuations.

    Institutional LP Base: Anchor commitments from Jelawang and Sarona provide validation and strategic value beyond capital.

    Clear Path to Fund III: Fund II performance sets up institutional fundraise at $50M+, accessing DFI capital and achieving sustainable firm economics.

    Fund II isn’t just an investment vehicle—it’s the foundation for building a permanent institution in South-East Asian venture capital.

    Fund II Fundraising Begins

    By mid-Year 3, we formally launched Fund II fundraising with a $25M target—2.5x our Fund I size.

    The LP composition evolved significantly from Fund I:

    LP Type Commitment

    Jelawang Capital (anchor) $4M

    Sarona Asset Management $3M

    Dubai Future District Fund $2.5M

    Speedinvest Emerging Manager Program $2M

    Regional Fund-of-Funds (2) $5M

    Fund I Re-ups (Family Offices, HNWIs) $6M

    New HNWIs and Angels $2.5M

    TOTAL $25M

    Jelawang Capital: A Thought Leader Partnership

    Among our Fund II LPs, Jelawang Capital stood out not just for their commitment size but for their role in the ecosystem.

    Jelawang had established themselves as thought leaders in South-East Asian venture, publishing research on emerging manager performance, hosting convenings for GPs and LPs, and advocating for ecosystem development across the region.

    Their due diligence process was rigorous—more intensive than any other LP we’d encountered. But that rigor came with genuine partnership. Once they committed, they became active supporters of our firm, making introductions to other LPs, providing feedback on our portfolio strategy, and including us in their thought leadership events.

    “Having Jelawang as an anchor LP gave us credibility that we couldn’t have purchased at any price,” Rizal later reflected. “When other LPs saw that Jelawang had done deep due diligence and committed, it reduced their perceived risk in backing us.”

    Fund II closed in 14 months—4 months faster than Fund I. The difference was our systematic fundraising approach. We had LP coverage across every major category. We had materials ready. We had a process. We weren’t scrambling; we were executing.

    Fund II announced at SuperReturn Asia

    Year 5: Fund II Deployment and Fund I Value Creation

    Fund II First Investments:

    With $25M to deploy, Fund II allowed us to write larger checks ($500K-$1.5M) and target slightly later-stage opportunities (seed+ to Series A).

    Fund II investments (Year 5):

    •            Investment #1-3: Three seed rounds averaging $800K

    •            Investment #4-5: Two Series A participations averaging $1.2M

    •            Total deployed Year 5: $5.2M (21% of fund)

    Fund I Portfolio Events:

    PayMalaysia closes Series A (October, Year 5): $5M round led by Jungle Ventures, a top-tier regional VC. Our follow-on: $200K to partially maintain position. PayMalaysia was now valued at $18M; our position worth approximately $3.5M on $650K invested (5.4x).

    SecureKL acquired (November, Year 5): In a surprise development, SecureKL was acquired by a regional cybersecurity company for $2M. Our $400K investment returned $550K—a modest positive outcome (1.38x) after years of struggle. First actual exit and DPI generation!

    AgriTech ASEAN shuts down (December, Year 5): After 3+ years with no commercial traction, AgriTech’s board and founders decided to wind down the company. Our $350K investment returned approximately $50K from remaining cash. Second complete write-off.

    Year 5 Fund I Metrics:

    Total invested: $5.2M (75% of initial allocation)

    Current portfolio value: $11.5M

    Distributions (DPI): $600K (SecureKL exit + DataSync wind-down + AgriTech wind-down)

    TVPI: 2.15x

    DPI: 0.12x

    Net IRR: ~26%

    Key Takeaways from Part II

    For fund managers in their investment period:

    1. The J-curve is real and painful. Years 2-5 will feel like failure even when you’re building a successful portfolio. Communicate this to your LPs early and often.

    2. Portfolio mortality is normal. Expect 30-80% of seed investments to fail completely. The key is limiting exposure to losers while maximizing exposure to winners.

    3. Follow-on decisions define returns. Our Fund I returns were driven by concentrated follow-on in PayMalaysia and FinFlow. Spray-and-pray follow-on destroys returns.

    4. First exit matters more than its size. SecureKL’s 1.38x return was modest, but generating actual DPI established our credibility for Fund II.

    5. Build your fundraising team before Fund II. Use the GP Fundraising Team canvas to systematically cover all eight roles, even with a small team.

    6. Fund II timing is strategic. Starting Fund II in Year 3-5, before Fund I exits, is standard practice. LPs understand the cycle.

    Grace Choo’s final perspective on Part II:

    “By Year 5, I’d moved from cautious optimism to genuine confidence in Meridian. They’d made hard decisions, communicated transparently, and generated reasonable paper returns. More importantly, they’d maintained partnership stability through challenging years. Fund II felt like a natural evolution, not a leap of faith. I told them we’d be interested in exploring a Fund III commitment if they could reach $50M.”

    Read part III: Value Creation, Fund III, and Institutional Arrival (Years 6-7).

    If you have not already read it, check out part I, the early years.

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