
E365: Stanford GSB Professor on Venture Capital’s Manager Incentives
How I Invest with David Weisburd
Governance fixes for follow-on bias
Ilya suggests governance mechanisms—structured follow-on rules and investment committees—to counter escalation biases.
Highlights:
- Why incentives—not fees—drive investment behavior
- How higher carry structurally increases risk-taking
- The difference between gross returns and net returns
- Why diversification works differently in venture
- The concept of style drift and why it destroys persistence
- How LPs underestimate correlation across managers
- Why follow-on decisions matter more than initial investments
- The bias that leads VCs to double down on bad investments
Guest Bio:
Ilya Strebulaev is a tenured chaired Professor of Finance and Private Equity at Stanford Graduate School of Business and a leading expert in venture capital, private equity, and innovation. He is the founder and faculty director of the Stanford GSB Venture Capital Initiative and has published extensively in top academic journals, with his work featured in major media outlets. Ilya teaches courses on venture capital and private equity at Stanford and has received the Distinguished Teacher Award, while also advising global investors and institutions on investment strategy and decision-making.
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Sponsor:
AlphaSense is the AI-powered market intelligence platform trusted by 85% of the S&P 100, helping investment professionals make faster, more confident, data-driven decisions. Built for hedge funds, asset allocators, private venture capital firms, and investment bankers, AlphaSense uses advanced AI and powerful search across premium proprietary content to surface the insights that matter most—before the market moves. Elevate your research and stay ahead of the competition. Visit https://www.alpha-sense.com/howiinvest/ to learn more.
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Stay Connected with Ilya Strebulaev:
LinkedIn:https://www.linkedin.com/in/ilyavcandpe/
Questions or topics you want us to discuss on How I Invest? Email us at david@weisburdcapital.com.
Disclaimer:
This podcast is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment, financial, legal, or tax advice. Nothing in this episode should be interpreted as an offer to buy or sell any securities or to participate in any investment strategy. All opinions expressed by the host and guests are their own and do not represent the views of Weisburd Capital. Participants may hold positions or have financial interests in the companies, funds, or investments discussed. Any references to specific investments are for illustrative purposes only. Investing involves risk, including the potential loss of capital. Past performance is not indicative of future results, and any forward-looking statements are subject to risks and uncertainties. Any third-party data or opinions have not been independently verified. Listeners should conduct their own research and consult their own advisors before making any investment decisions.
(0:00) Why “2 and 20 vs 2.5 and 30” Is the Wrong Question (2:43) How Higher Carry Quietly Changes Investor Behavior (4:15) The Hidden Risk Behind “Top Performing” Fund Managers (5:54) Why LPs Misunderstand Performance Persistence (8:16) The Dangerous Incentive Shift From 20% to 30% Carry (9:53) Why Great Investors Suddenly Change Strategy (Style Drift) (12:10) Venture Might Be the Only Asset Class With True Persistence (16:08) Why You Can’t Access the Best Venture Funds (Even If You Want To) (18:12) The Biggest Mistake LPs Make When Diversifying Venture (30:58) The One Bias That Destroys More VC Returns Than Bad Deals

