Last night, we kicked off Tech Founders NYC at AOL Ventures (AOLV) and it was awesome. Josh from GoodCrush literally called it “the best thing to happen to the NYC tech scene ever!” In all seriousness, it was great to see the huge turnout of engineers and I can’t thank Francis and Jake enough for including me in helping bring it to life.
A quick aside - when I started at AOLV a few months ago I was really happy to be given a ton of freedom around bringing events to our offices to add value back to the NYC ecosystem and help get AOLV out there. After a few months, it’s become pretty clear to me that the biggest resource needs are out of the engineering/technical community. As a result and other than the current things that I’m helping out with, we’re likely to only host engineering/technical meetups going forward (it’s all I can handle).
Roughly 2 weeks ago I left the mother of all innovative brands - Virgin - to start working for arguably the least relevant brand in technology anymore - AOL - to help them launch a new venture fund and incubator. This was met with mostly support and excitement from friends but also solicited a variety of hilarious responses:
My reasons for joining were fairly simple. I’m a firm believer in the new strategy and am fascinated by the rebirth of AOL as a company and brand. To be a part of a team that could potentially make AOL relevant again is huge to me. In addition, many of you know I’m an internet junkie at heart and at Virgin was on the sidelines most of the time. Sure we did some cool stuff in the digital media space but nothing at this scale. This was a natural move as now I can help AOL shape an early stage investment vehicle that is squarely focused on technology innovation. We’ll lead with our products and services, but this can be a solid extension towards making us relevant again.
The next 60 days will be getting the fund vehicle up and running (entity, allocation, process for investing, investment committee, website, blah, blah, blah) and then we’ll look to take minority positions with great syndicates in interesting businesses focused around areas we can add serious value: content, advertising, local, comm/mobile and paid services. Overall it’s already been a blast and I look forward to hopefully creating a ‘not-lame’ corporate VC unit that is a meaningful part of the NYC early stage ecosystem.
In closing I’ll say this - I think the AOL spinoff is huge for the NYC technology community and broader early-stage ecosystem. A lot has already been said about the closing of the funding gap in NY and we’re obviously excited to be a new part of that. However I think there is something bigger here in that many of us come from start-ups, are good friends with start-ups and VCs, have invested in the early stages of businesses ourselves and/or have a passion for creation and get excited looking at new technology. Consider the power in adding another big player to the game that has significant assets to leverage and is open and willing to work with the early stage community. I think this is huge.
Oh, and, I owe a serious debt of gratitude to mentors who helped me make this choice like Dan, Andy, Chris, Tony, Mark, Paul, Jon and some others in the NY venture community that make this place so awesome.