Monday Morning Partners Meeting

Entrepreneurs in the market for venture capital dread Mondays.  Why?  Because it is the day of the all-deciding, all-encompassing Monday Morning Partners Meeting.  For all their differences, every VC firm seems to have the same rhythm – no matter how many different directions everyone is heading during the week, they all sit and meet as a group on Monday and make the big decisions:  who gets the money and who doesn’t, who gets the job offer and who doesn’t, who gets the term sheet under what terms and who gets the terse email or voice mail that says, simply, "we’ve decided to pass on the opportunity."

When entrepreneurs are invited to attended Monday morning partners meetings, they are instructed to pound through their 30-40 PowerPoint slides in 45 minutes, field tens of questions from all sides, shake hands and be escorted out for the next party.  It can have a little bit of a Hollywood pitch meeting flavor – at the end, the VCs excuse the team, have a brief discussion, and, when the deliberations are complete, give a simple thumbs up or thumbs down.  Robert Altman would feel right at home.

After four years of sitting in on the inside of Monday morning partners meetings, I’ve observed a few interesting dynamics.  First, unless the firm is run by a single managing general partner who makes the ultimate decision, all decisions are typically made as unanimous, consensus-driven.  This means anyone can veto a deal if they don’t react well to it.  Entrepreneurs thus need to be careful to think through how to sell an entire partnership on their opportunity, not just the sponsoring partner.  Get to know each of the decision-makers before the meeting and draw out their hot-buttons.  Don’t be afraid to ask for direct meetings with a subgroup of the partners to try to win them over.  It’s better to head into the Monday Morning Meeting with multiple, knowledgeable advocates, not just one.

Another observation I have is that the key diligence issues on each deal typically get boiled down to a rational set of "top 3" issues. Entrepreneurs should ask their sponsoring partner exactly what these key issues are heading into the partners meeting, what their personal stance is, and if there’s any additional information or analysis that can help influence the meeting.  If you get your 45-60 minutes of fame, focus the time on the areas your sponsoring partner guides you to focus on – don’t provide a long, drawn-out dissertation on the grand theory of the technical aspects of your product.  Instead a focused dissection of the key issues and risks and how you’ll overcome them.   

Finally, the timing of the callback coming out of the Monday partners meeting is often a clue as to how likely you are to get to a "yes".  Partners typically file out at the end of the meeting and immediately place the phone calls for the top priority projects that are moving forward – a sense of momentum is established and the last few diligence items get identified and checked off.  The projects that are to be turned down or put on the backburner fall lower down on the VC call back list.  Therefore, it can be Wednesday or Thursday before the entrepreneurs receive the "gentle pass".  If you get the call back late in the week, it is fair to question whether the interest is sincere or whether the partner is stringing you along in order to simply "hang around the rim" (that’s VC jargon for avoiding turning something down because you’re afraid of missing it if others jump on board, but at the same time not being gutsy enough to push it aggresively forward).

Above all, pick something important to do all day Monday and Tuesday.  There’s nothing worse than waiting around for the phone to ring!

3 thoughts on “Monday Morning Partners Meeting

  1. Jeff:
    Great post. What strikes me is the importance to the VC firm, given the consensus-/collegial-culture, of picking the right partners into the firm. You guys have done an amazing job of that. But your post reminded me of times when I’ve pitched VCs and there was one guy (not always even a partner) who thought he knew the space (and didn’t) and killed the deal (I can imagine what his bombastic personality said behind closed doors after we left). Shame on me (as you point out) for not knowing that and prepping for that in advance; however, I have to shake my head at what having someone like that around the table has meant for that firm. Pick your partners wisely.
    Thanks,
    Eric

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  2. Manic Mondays – VC Partner Meetings

    Jeff Bussgang of IDG Ventures wrote an interesting article this week about the venerable VC Monday Morning Partners Meeting. As a serially-offending entrepreneur, Ive had plenty of VC meetings over the years and thought Id expand on one o…

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