Venture

VCs flock to TikTok to reach the next generation of founders and investors

Comment

Image Credits: Bryce Durbin / TechCrunch

In January, Redpoint Ventures gave Rashad Assir one task: Make TikToks about venture capital.

At the time, Assir ran his own TikTok account, creating satire about corporate life and tech trends, amassing more than 56,000 followers and 2.4 million likes in the process. Meanwhile, Redpoint Ventures had just launched a media operation to connect with the next generation of founders and VCs. The firm figured TikTok was the place to make those associations and Assir would be the one to do it for them.

Six months later, Redpoint’s account has collected more than 1 million views on its videos and gained nearly 9,000 followers and more than 200,000 likes. It’s expanded to create an account for its podcast, Cartoon Avatars, which now has more than 5,000 followers and 78,000 likes. Amid increasing interest, the plan is to launch more accounts and shows on the platform and use it to recruit talent and promote their portfolio companies, Redpoint Ventures Partner Josh Machiz told TechCrunch. Their next TikTok show will profile founders, the firm revealed.

“We get tons of requests for internships and a number of people who are interested in working at the companies we invested in,” Machiz added.

VCTok is slowly but steadily growing. TikTok has more than 1 billion users — the majority of whom are under the age of 30. Experts told TechCrunch that the increased presence of VCs allows for the democratization of industry knowledge that will inspire the next generation of investors and founders. There’s already an audience for VCs to tap into if they wish — #founder has roughly 232 million views, #entrepreneurship has nearly 800 million views, #investor has 1.2 billion views, #techtok has 12.4 billion and #entrepreneur has 22 billion views, for example.

Other VCs on TikTok told TechCrunch that using the platform has allowed them to source unexplored talent, find new businesses to fund and attract fresh audiences to their firms, portfolio companies and profiles on other social media platforms. Right now, Redpoint Ventures and the others sit comfortably knowing they have little competition on VCTok. But all agree that’s about to change.

“[TikTok is] where people’s eyeballs are,” Assir told TechCrunch. “There’s a new wave of founders and leaders in the world, and this is an opportunity to connect with them.”

A new way to find talent

TikTok remains new for many established players in the VC industry, who are probably less likely than their younger counterparts to jump onto a platform filled with dance videos and memes. But the VC players who have been convinced to try TikTok say the platform shows great returns in connecting with new talent and providing consumer research.

A woman creates a TiKTok about VC
Image Credits: Julia Maltby

Julia Maltby, a senior associate at Flybridge Capital, opened her account last August to first learn more about the creator economy. She started mainly posting satirical content about her life as a VC and now has nearly 6,000 followers and over 47,000 likes. People reach out to her, saying her content piqued their interest in Flybridge Capital, while entrepreneurs now connect to discuss potential funding. She says creating VCToks is a very effective, low-effort source of top-of-funnel marketing.

“It can be a little intimating to reach out cold to a fund,” Maltby told TechCrunch. “The nice thing about TikTok is that it’s extremely candid and often self-deprecating. It humanizes people and by virtue of that, firms.”

Harry Stebbings, founder of 20VC, has a similar story. In January, he created his TikTok to post clips of his interviews with influential founders and VCs. His account gained 67,000 followers, 663,000 likes and millions of views in six months. Recently, he says he was sent a unicorn deal from a founder he’s never met but claimed to watch his TikToks.

“I went, wow,” Stebbings told TechCrunch. “This is happening because of my TikTok? That’s pretty cool.”

A screenshot of Arra Malekzadeh's TikTok
Image Credits: Arra Malekzadeh

Paige Finn, a co-founder of Behind Genuis Ventures, plans to launch an official VC TikTok account later this year after seeing great success on her private profile. Scrolling through the platform is how she discovered one of the latest companies to add to her firm’s portfolio, and she plans to share investor tips and day-in-the-life videos, as well as clips from her podcast to further engage with her audience.

Craft Ventures Partner Arra Malekzadeh is also building out a brand on TikTok, calling herself a “SaaSy venture capitalist,” a play on the shorthand for the term software as a service. Launched in January, her account has nearly 10,000 followers and 56,000 likes. She posts VC recruiting guides, thoughts on tech valuations and advice on operating companies in economic downturns. She said her TikTok presence has allowed her to connect with possible founders in whom to invest.

“These are really smart, capable young people who will do great things in the future,” Malekzadeh told TechCrunch. “I want to capture their interest and attention early in their lives, so when they do decide to become entrepreneurs or investors, I’ll be someone they know to come to.”

Democratizing VC knowledge

When Jonathan Chang, an investor at Brex HQ, created his TikTok account in November 2020, he said there were hardly any other VCs on the platform.

His videos add a humorous element to VC concepts and trends to provide tips on how to break into the industry. He says the most rewarding part of his account is seeing all the students reach out, thanking him for teaching about a subject that was once opaque to them.

Image Credits: Jonathan Chang

Chang said he relates to them: He didn’t know much about VC until he went to college and believes creating TikToks increases the number of accessible resources that allow people to better navigate the industry.

Machiz and Maltby echoed that, saying that the world of VC remains a black box for many people. As TikTok remains one of the easiest and most accessible social platforms, Banana Capital investor Turner Novak — who also has a growing presence on VCTok — told TechCrunch that providing entertaining and educational content about the VC space can have a domino effect decades later.

He has a point. Think of how all those coding videos and cooking tutorials on YouTube spurred a new class of computer programmers and chefs. Maybe more women or minorities would grow up wanting to be investors if they knew that profession existed. Then, their influx into the industry could increase investments in minorities and women — or even perhaps the number of top-level job opportunities given to these underrepresented groups.

“A 19-year-old will see it, and she’ll be like, ‘Oh, venture capital,’” Novak said. “Then, 15 years later, she’ll start a company because she learned about venture capital on TikTok.”

The TikTok of Redpoint Ventures
Image Credits: Redpoint Ventures

The view from VC Twitter

Although much of the VC community remains on Twitter, there is no harm in trying to expand one’s reach. In fact, Malekzadeh noted a common misconception is that only young people are on TikTok, but that couldn’t be further from the truth.

“All age groups are on TikTok these days,” she said.

The hard part is gaining traction on TikTok, which requires a certain sense of authenticity, humor and exposure that many people might not feel comfortable with, Maltby said.

Chang agreed, saying people can hire ghostwriters to craft Twitter threads or quickly draft content, but TikTok is much different.

“TikTok is showing parts of your personality,” he said. “It takes work to become more comfortable in front of a camera.”

That’s why Stebbings said it’s worth it for firms to look at hiring heads of content and creating special teams to focus on TikTok — similar to Redpoint Ventures. And Novak pointed out that TikTok is already overtaking YouTube in some ways as the go-to video platform.

“TikTok is a massive opportunity,” Machiz said. “You don’t think of the next generation as your customer today. They’re your customer tomorrow.”

More TechCrunch

SpaceX President Gwynne Shotwell made a public plea to one of Brazil’s top judicial figures on Thursday, asking him to “please stop harassing Starlink” amid the ongoing battle in the…

‘Stop harassing Starlink,’ SpaceX president tells Brazilian judge

OSOM always had a difficult road, with plans to launch a privacy-focused handset.

Osom is shutting down on Friday, as it had ‘no customers for a mobile phone’

Salesforce has acquired Own Company, a New Jersey-based provider of data management and protection solutions, for $1.9 billion in cash. Own is Salesforce’s biggest deal since buying Slack for $27.7…

Salesforce acquires data management firm Own for $1.9B in cash

The U.S. government indictment demonstrated deep knowledge of the Russian spies’ activities, including their real-world meetings at a cafe in Moscow.

US charges five Russian military hackers with targeting Ukraine’s government with destructive malware

Welcome back to TechCrunch Mobility — your central hub for news and insights on the future of transportation. Sign up here for free — just click TechCrunch Mobility! Short week,…

Lyft restructures its micromobility business and Volkswagen brings ChatGPT to US vehicles 

The advancement of generative AI tools has created a new problem for the internet: the proliferation of synthetic nude images resembling real people. On Thursday, Microsoft took a major step…

Microsoft gives deepfake porn victims a tool to scrub images from Bing search

The new business-to-business division is a bet on what co-founder and CEO Thomas von der Ohe thinks is the future of mobility.

Driverless car-sharing startup Vay steers toward B2B services

Drip Capital has raised $113 million in a combination of $23 million in equity and $90 million in debt to provide credit to more small businesses in India and the…

Drip Capital, a fintech that provides working capital to SMBs, picks up $113M

Google said the feature could be used for more than just photo retrieval alone; users would also be able to ask questions to get helpful answers.

Google’s AI-powered Ask Photos feature begins US rollout

The stealthily operating startup thinks it can narrow the gap by helping miners extract more copper from their mines.

Endolith is using ‘Olympic-caliber’ copper microbes to address the copper shortage

Featured Article

A comprehensive list of 2024 tech layoffs

A complete list of all the known layoffs in tech, from Big Tech to startups, broken down by month throughout 2024.

A comprehensive list of 2024 tech layoffs

As with many open source startups, All Hands AI expects to monetize its service by offering paid, closed-source enterprise features.

All Hands AI raises $5M to build open source agents for developers

Mintlify offers a collection of documentation-authoring tools, including tools that can auto-generate docs from codebases.

Mintlify is building a next-gen platform for writing software docs

Europe doesn’t have many large language model (LLM) makers but one of these rare AI beasts — Germany’s Aleph Alpha — appears to be preparing to rule itself out of…

German LLM maker Aleph Alpha pivots to AI support

Featured Article

The AI industry is obsessed with Chatbot Arena, but it might not be the best benchmark

LMSYS’ Chatbot Arena is perhaps the most popular AI benchmark today — and an industry obsession. But it’s far from a perfect measure.

The AI industry is obsessed with Chatbot Arena, but it might not be the best benchmark

Every automaker is aiming to build and sell the so-called software-defined vehicle. Rivian may have actually done it, but getting there wasn’t easy. Just ask Rivian’s chief of software Wassym…

Rivian’s chief software designer is coming to TechCrunch Disrupt 2024

Google announced Thursday that it expanded its generative AI-powered virtual try-on tool to support dresses, allowing users to virtually wear thousands of dresses from hundreds of brands, including Boden, Maje,…

Google expands AI-powered virtual try-on tool to include dresses

Until six years ago, many e-commerce and SaaS businesses could have avoided paying sales tax to states where they had customers, but no physical presence. But as online shopping grew,…

Zamp targets growing demand for sales tax solutions

TechCrunch Disrupt 2024, which takes place from October 28-30 at Moscone West in San Francisco, is rapidly approaching. Today we’re thrilled to announce the 200 startups selected to participate in…

Announcing the Startup Battlefield 200 at TechCrunch Disrupt 2024

YouTube is going to limit teens’ exposure to videos that promote and idealize a certain fitness level or physical appearance, the company announced on Thursday. The safeguard first rolled out…

YouTube to limit teens’ exposure to videos about fitness and weight across global markets

Also of note, YouTube is in the early stages of coming up with a solution to address the use of its content to train AI models.

YouTube is developing AI detection tools for music and faces, plus creator controls for AI training

We’re not very close to any specifics on how, exactly, AI regulations will be implemented and ensured, but today a swathe of countries including the U.S., the U.K. and the…

US, UK and EU sign on to the Council of Europe’s high-level AI safety treaty

With a fresh $35M in the bank, French cleantech startup Calyxia has profitability within sight. But it’s just getting started.

French clean tech startup Calyxia nets $35M to tackle microplastics pollution

Hiring platform ZipRecruiter is launching a new tool, called ZipIntro, to let employers schedule introductory calls with potential candidates at a set time. The tool will also help recruiters suggest…

ZipRecruiter’s new tool will quickly match and schedule an intro call with potential candidates

This week at IFA in Berlin, DJI is once again going small with the new Neo. Like the Spark before it, the drone’s ability to land in the palm of…

DJI takes another crack at palm-sized drones, and this one is $199

Brittany Ennix launched Portex, a company that allows SMBs to connect with freight partners and manage shipments and operations in one place.

Portex founder Brittany Ennix learned the importance of supply chains from Uber and Flexport

Verizon’s big interest in Frontier is its fiber business and the fact that it extends to places that Verizon does not currently cover as well.

Verizon bets on fiber’s staying power as it acquires Frontier for $20B

For financial institutions, complying with regulations is becoming a costlier proposition. According to a recent poll, 76% of financial services firms increased their compliance expenditure from 2022 to 2023, with…

Sedric monitors the communications of employees at financial institutions to ensure compliance

Over a year ago, former Session M exec Eben Pingree received the news that his mother was diagnosed with Alzheimer’s. Two days later, his father-in-law was given the same diagnosis. …

Kinsome aims to bridge the generation gap with its new app for kids and grandparents

European regulators are pushing hard for greener energy. The REPowerEU plan calls for 10 million additional heat pumps to be added by 2027, and solar panels are also on the…

Reonic raises €13 million to help small installers of green tech like heat pumps and solar panels