

Consumer VC
Mike Gelb
Consumer VC takes a look into early-stage consumer investing and venture capital. If you are interested in learning about consumer trends, have a b2c business and interested in learning about the fundraising process at the early stage, you have come to the right place.Mike interviews some of the top venture capitalists in the world that focus on B2C and consumer type companies or have a deep track record investing in these categories such as marketplaces, SaaS, social, CPG and non-tech subscription.Mike also interviews founders that are building some of the most disruptive consumer facing companies in the world. The conversation usually includes the insight the founder discovered, fundraising strategy, and the pitch.This podcast also includes bonus episodes. Each bonus episode dives into a particular subject that might not have to due with the fundraise or venture capital, but still would be helpful to founders. For example, a bonus episode on brand strategy or how to construct a board of directors. All bonus episodes will be clearly labeled.For all episodes, please visit www.theconsumervc.com. For updates, you can follow @mikegelb on Twitter.
Episodes
Mentioned books

Jul 16, 2020 • 40min
Jesse Draper (Halogen) - Why Investing In Female Led Businesses is Such a Massive Opportunity, Los Angeles Consumer Tech Scene, and Consuming Meaningful Content
Our guest today is Jesse Draper, Founding Partner of Halogen Ventures. Halogen Ventures is a Los Angeles, California based Venture Capital fund focused on investing in early stage consumer technology startups with a female in the founding team. Some of their investments include Hop Skip Drive, Clover Letter, and Binti. Previously, Jesse was an actress and founded/hosted The Valley Girl Show, where she interviewed some of the biggest names in business, entertainment, government, and technology.One book that impacted Jesse personally is To the End of June: The Intimate Life of American Foster Care by Cris Beam. One book the inspired Jesse professionally is High Growth Handbook by Elad Gil.You can follow Jesse @jessedraper on Twitter. You can also follow your host, Mike, on Twitter @mikegelb. You can also follow for episode announcements @consumervc.Here are some of the questions I ask Jesse -Talk to me about your attraction to acting and why the shift to VC?What was the opportunity that you discovered that led you to starting Halogen?What types of businesses or areas do you focus on at Halogen?What makes you excited about Los Angeles as a venture hub?I know that every company that you invest in must have at least one woman in a leadership role. What are some ways that the VC community could be doing to be more inclusive?Talk to me a little bit about your due diligence process?What stage do you invest in and how are you thinking about the early stage landscape?COVID is very top of mind right now, has this shifted your strategy on what areas you should focus on?Has it been harder finding conviction since you have to meet founders remote?What's one thing that you would change when it came to venture capital?What's your most recent investment and what makes you excited about it?What's one company that you had the opportunity to invest in, didn't and in retrospect wish you did?What's one book that inspired you personally and one book that inspired you professionally?What's one piece of advice to founders?

Jul 14, 2020 • 46min
Soraya Darabi (TMV) - The Care Economy, Where Change Needs to Start In VC, and How to Approach Market Sizing
Our guest today is Soraya Darabi, General Partner at Trail Mix Ventures where she focuses on the future of living well. Previously, she worked at the New York Times, co-founded Foodspotting (acq. by OpenTable) and Zady. Some of her investments include Classtag, The Wing, and Alleyoop. Lots of insights on this episode as Soraya shares her amazing experiences both as a founder and investor, so without further ado, here's Soraya.And there you have it. It was really great chatting with Soraya, I highly recommend following her on Twitter @sorayadarabi. You can also follow your host, Mike, on Twitter @mikegelb. You can also follow for episode announcements @consumervc.Some of the questions that I ask Soraya -What attracted you first to media and then becoming an entrepreneur?Why the switch to VC and how did TMV come together?Diligence process for founders?What’s your check size? How do you think about the different fundraising stages and the overall early stage investing ecosystem?I heard in a previous interview that you invest in the “care economy”. What is the care economy if you could break that down for us?Since you invest in both enterprise and consumer, is your diligence process and milestones different for each type of business?How do you approach market sizing?Wanted to talk about COVID -Is it harder finding conviction in founders when meeting virtually rather than in person?Are you seeing more or less new companies during COVID?Has working from home been more difficult?What is one thing that you would change when it came to venture capital?What’s one company you had the opportunity to invest in, didn’t, and in retrospect wish you did?

Jul 9, 2020 • 34min
Meera Clark (Obvious Ventures) - How COVID led to a Crossroads in Healthy Habits, Milestones at Series A, and How She Thinks About Sustainability and Consumer Centric
Thank you Sumeet Shah for the introduction to today's guest, Meera Clark, Senior Associate at Obvious Ventures. Obvious Ventures invests in startups that combine profit and purpose for a better world. Some of their investments include Beyond Meat, Carezone, Goodeggs and Medium.I highly recommend following Meera on twitter @itsmeeraclark. You can also follow your host, Mike, on Twitter @mikegelb. You can also follow for episode announcements @consumervc.A book that inspired Meera is Setting The Table by Danny Meyer.Here are a few questions that I asked Meera -Tell me a bit about your journey. What attracted you to finance, consumer and early stage companies?Obvious Ventures is a B-Corp. Tell me about your investment criteria?Walk us through your due diligence process?What are some qualities in a founder that you pay attention to the most?One of the areas that you are focused on is healthy living. What’s your thesis around both physical and mental health?Something we also spoke about before is the future of social and how we’re at the end of the hype cycle. How do you see folks interacting online changing?The amount of social interaction online has dramatically accelerated due to COVID, do you think that this will continue post-COVID?How are you thinking about the future of the influencer?There’s now so many brands out there that are trying to appeal to Gen Z and really have to be authentic in order to do so. Lots of buzz words that get thrown around are “sustainability” and “customer centric”. What do those words mean to you?“The Gratification Migration” discusses the changes in consumer behavior during COVID and how we’re at a crossroads of healthy habits. What do you mean by that?What are some other consumer trends that you are excited about?What is one thing that you would change when it came to venture capital?What’s one piece of advice for founders?

Jul 7, 2020 • 49min
Eric Paley (Founder Collective) - Why Most Successful Companies Struggle To Convince VCs of Their Market Size, The Biggest Risk After Finding Product-Market Fit, and Why Pro-Rata Only Benefits Investors, Not Founders
I would like to thank Adelle Archer for introducing me to today's guest, Eric Paley, who is one of the Managing Partners at Founder Collective. Founder Collective's mission is to be the most aligned VC for founders at seed. Eric is a pretty legendary seed stage investor, some of his investments include Uber, CoverWallet, Seat Geek, Whoop, Thred Up and so many other incredible companies.One book that inspired Eric is Fooled By Randomness by Nassim Nicholas Taleb.You can follow Eric on Twitter @epaley. You can also follow your host, Mike, on Twitter @mikegelb. You can also follow for episode announcements @consumervc. If you’re enjoying the show, if you could leave a review on the apple podcast app as that helps other folks find it, that would be really helpful. For all episodes, please visit theconsumervc.com.Here are some of the questions that I ask Eric -Now you have pre-seed and other emerging stages at the early stages, what’s your definition of seed?Why did you choose to create a seed fund originally?Why are platforms so popular with VCs and how do you think about different types of businesses (platform, product)?What’s some advice for a startup that is building a vertical product, since VCs typically want to see platforms that have large TAMs?You mention in a piece you wrote for Techcrunch - “products and platforms are mutually exclusive at early-stage startups. It is nearly impossible to offer a high-quality use case while also being a platform”. What do you actually mean by that?It seems like the size of a market is often quite different amongst founders and investors (i.e. founder might think the market size is $30 billion, investor believes it’s $1 billion).What are some of the mistakes when thinking about how big a market is?How should founders think about TAM and market size if they are building a new market? If it’s a blue ocean opportunity?I wanted to talk about COVID, which I’m sure is very top of mind. A couple of other investors I had on say that they are more worried about companies that are trying to raise their series A rather than seed round during these times.What has been some of the changes in seed over these past few months in relation toValuationTraction/milestones achieved for investmentShift in attractive vs. mediocre marketsIs it harder to find conviction in a ounder when you meet with the person remotely rather than in person?How has your team adjusted to remote work as well as your portfolio companies?What makes a market attractive to invest in?When you were a founder, you’ve mentioned how there were VCs that didn’t think your technology would work (so they didn’t invest) and they were right. This ended up in a pivot. However, for those that did invest, they were extremely happy with their returns from the 3M acquisition and ultimately were successful in providing value by pivoting. It seems as though what made you successful was your obsession with the problem rather than your initial solution.When analyzing founding teams, how do you know that they are fixated on the problem?Have you ever invested in companies where you were unconvinced with what they were building (their solution), but had such conviction in the team and how they thought about the problem they were addressing?Great marketHow do you analyze founding teams?(I remember Joe said you invest in founders that are All Over It, but what does that mean to you?)I know you’ve talked alot about the pitfalls of over-fundraising. When you are at the seed stage, is this a conversation that you have with founders when you are thinking about investing?When pitching, what are some of the most common mistakes that founders might make?I wanted to talk about Go-to Market strategy and distribution, which is as important as product. How should founders think about a unique distribution strategy?Is there a difference when evaluating a B2C company vs. a B2B business at seed?I know you’ve spoken a bunch on the topic of pro-rata and how pro-rata doesn’t help entrepreneurs. How real is signaling? I know lots of investors have said on this show founders need to do their own diligence on investors, should that diligence start with how investors approach executing pro-rata rights?What are consumer trends are areas that you are currently focused on?One piece of advice for B2C founders?

Jul 4, 2020 • 17min
Office Hour 1. Jason Shuman (Primary Ventures) - Recorded Live June 9th
*Please note Office Hour episodes are not edited and the sound quality will not be as good as other episodes as they are recorded on one track.*Office Hours are opportunities for listeners to ask past guests questions themselves. We will be releasing the recorded versions each Saturday.This Office Hour with Jason Shuman was recorded live on June 9th. Jason Shuman is a Principal at Primary Ventures, a seed-stage venture capital firm responsible for backing NYC’s most promising founders. Some of their investments include Ticketfly, Jet, Deliveroo, and Package Free.If you enjoyed Jason, feel free to check out his full podcast episode here.

Jul 2, 2020 • 1h 38min
Alex French (Bizzy Coffee) - The Cold Brew Competitive Landscape, Becoming #1 on Amazon, and Some of The Differences Raising from VCs and Family Offices
Our guest today is Alex French, founder and CEO of Bizzy Coffee, the #1 seller of cold brew coffee on Amazon. We discuss Alex's initial approach to entrepreneurship, how they've been able to maintain #1 Best Seller on Amazon, how he approached fundraising and was able to raise, and COVID's effects on Bizzy. Without further ado, here's AlexA couple books that inspired Alex are The 4-Hour Workweek by Tim Ferris and How To Win Friends and Influence People by Dale Carnegie.Here are some of the questions that I asked Alex -What initially attracted you to entrepreneurship and your early entrepreneurial efforts?What were some of your learnings when you were at General Mills?Why did you decide to focus on Coffee?What was the problem that you saw that you wanted to address or the particular insight?It seems like you wanted to be an entrepreneur, but didn’t have or know what product to launch. There is no right or wrong way to approach entrepreneurship but I wanted to know if you have thoughts around how you thought about it?How were you able to validate ideas?How did you approach your supply chain? What was the hardest part?How did you approach fundraising? DNVBs have been out of favor with investors, did you get that sense when you were fundraising?You’ve raised both from VCs and Family Offices, what has been some of the differences when seeking investment from these two groups?How were you able to grow to become #1 on Amazon?What are some of the benefits to Amazon and some of the limitations?In the beginning, how did you think about brand and your differentiation when you were evaluating the market?How has COVID affected Bizzy?How are you thinking about post-COVID and the changes in consumer behavior?What is one book that inspired you professionally and one book that inspired you personally?What’s one piece of advice that you have for founders?You can also follow your host, Mike, on Twitter @mikegelb. You can also follow for episode announcements @consumervc.

Jun 30, 2020 • 38min
Pippa Lamb (Sweet Capital) - Why Consumer Habits Developed During COVID Are Here To Stay, 99% Execution & 1% Vision, and Defining A Founder's Unfair Advantage
Thank you Alex Pattis for the introduction to today's guest Pippa Lamb who is a partner at Sweet Capital. Sweet Capital in an early stage investment fund built by the founders of King.com (Candy Crush), following their sale to Activision Blizzard in 2015. Pippa focuses on early stage consumer technology investments ranging from software and next generation social communities to fintech. This is was fun and fascinating conversation as we talked about gamification in social, why she splits her time in LA and London, how she evaluates opportunities and her focuses.I highly recommend following her on Twitter @pippalamb. You can also follow your host, Mike, on Twitter @mikegelb. You can also follow for episode announcements @consumervc.Some of the questions that I ask Pippa -What attracted you initially to become a consumer investor and transition from the world of later stage private equity down to venture capital?Tell me about Sweet Capital.How it came togetherInvestment focusWhy located in Los Angeles, London. What are some of the differences in ecosystems since you travel back and forth?Where do you invest geographically?What qualities or traits in founders do you look for?For folks looking to start companies, what are some questions they should be asking themselves to analyze and see if they do have an unfair advantage and if they should be the ones founding the businesses?Does unfair advantage simply mean experience?How do you think about early traction?Walk me through your due diligence process. You are pre-series A / Seed fund. What type of metrics are you looking for in a consumer tech company?Are you focused primarily on ad rev, marketplace, or SaaS type businesses?Want to discuss COVID, as that’s top of mind for everyoneHave you changed your investment strategy?Is it harder to find conviction when meeting with founders virtually?Has COVID changed how you thought about remote teams in companies?What are you seeing in the future of mobile technology or trends that you are paying attention to?Los Angeles has become one of the hubs of consumer technology, in your view, why has that been the case?I’ve heard some folks say on this show it’s a contrarian time to be investing in consumer. Why do some folks think that and do you believe it?What is one thing that you would change when it came to venture capital?What is one book that inspired you personally and one book that inspired you professionally?What is your most recent investment and what makes you excited about it?What’s one piece of advice for B2C founders?If you’re enjoying the show, if you could leave a review on the apple podcast app as that helps other folks find it, that would be really helpful. If you are a founder and working on something innovative, have a question you’d like to hear VCs or founders answer on the show you can DM me and follow me on Twitter @mikegelb. You can also follow for episode announcements @consumervc. For all episodes, please visit theconsumervc.com. Thanks again for listening.

Jun 25, 2020 • 32min
Compilation: Fundraising from the Founder Perspective
This is a compilation episode about fundraising from the founders perspective. Some of their tactics, strategies when evaluating investors and how they reached out to investors. The founders featured are Kate Boyle, who is the founder of Banjo Robinson, Nadine Habayeb from Bohana, Adelle Archer from Eterneva, George Milton from Yellowbird Sauce, an amazing hot sauce company, and Jessica Rolph and Rod Morris, co-founders of Lovevery.

Jun 22, 2020 • 48min
Dan Graham (Springdale Ventures) - How He Scaled buildasign.com to over $100 million, The Opportunity He Saw Investing in CPG in Austin, and the Differences Analyzing DTC and Retail Brands
I'd like to thank Adelle Archer for introducing me to today's guest Dan Graham, one of the co-founders and General partners of Springdale Ventures. Some of their investments include Eterneva, Literati, and Beatbox beverages. Previously, Dan co-founded BuildASign.com in 2005 and grew it to an over $100 million dollar CPG, Ecommerce business that was purchased by Cimpress (VistaPrint) in 2018 for $280M. This episode we talk all things Austin and CPG - the opportunity he saw to form Spingdale, why he didn't need to fundraise when building Buildasign.com and how he thinks about brand in relation to ecommerce and retail.If you’re enjoying the show, if you could leave a review on the apple podcast app as that helps other folks find it, that would be really helpful. If you are a founder and working on something innovative, have a question you’d like to hear VCs or founders answer on the show you can DM me and follow me on Twitter @mikegelb. You can also follow for episode announcements @consumervc. For all episodes, please visit theconsumervc.com. Thanks again for listening.A couple of books Dan recommends are Give and Take by Adam Grant and Never Split the Difference by Chris Voss.Some of the questions I asked Dan -What attracted you to entrepreneurship and what was the opportunity that you saw when founding BuildaSign?Why did you choose not to fundraise for BuildaSign and bootstrap?Talk to me about what attracted you to investing?Why did you switch from being an angel investor to actually raising your own fund and building Springdale Ventures?NaturelyWhat was the opportunity that you saw in Austin?What makes Austin so compelling as a startup hub? How is it different from New York and the bay area?Talk to me about your due diligence and decision making process and how do you establish conviction that the brands you invest in will break through the noise?Are there specific metrics that you pay most attention to?How do you judge brand authenticity?Growth marketing - organic vs. paidWhat are some qualities you like to see in founders?How do you think about first mover advantage when it comes to consumer brands?Has COVID changed how you invest?Have you shifted your focus from/to any particular verticals?What categories have been disrupted most?Are you spending more time with portfolio companies as opposed to making new investments?What are some consumer trends that you are paying attention to?What’s one thing that you would change when it came to venture capital?What’s one piece of advice for founders of B2C companies?

4 snips
Jun 18, 2020 • 45min
Jessica Rolph and Roderick Morris (Lovevery) - Building Toys For Different Stages of a Child's Development, Advice When Co-Founding A Company, and Their Approach to Fundraising
Jessica Rolph, Co-founder and CEO of Lovevery, and Roderick Morris, Co-founder and President, discuss their journey in creating developmental toys for babies and toddlers. They delve into the significance of interactive play in child development and share insights on navigating fundraising in the early childhood market. The duo reveals how customer feedback shapes their brand and reflects on the challenges of working from home during the pandemic. They also highlight the importance of building relationships and their experiences with hiring talent in secondary markets like Boise.


