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A123 Systems
In 2004, Northbridge and Sequoia offered Rob Chandra an opportunity to invest in the A123 Series C financing. Rob thought the world would have to freeze over before GM and Ford would seriously support battery powered cars. Sure enough, in 2008 Lehman collapsed, the world nearly froze over, GM restructured itself and emerged from bankruptcy with an appetite for building an electric car. A123 went public in 2009 with a $1.3 billion valuation.
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Apollo Computer (acquired by Hewlett Packard) BVP's
Felda Hardymon was offered a small position in the company's last
private round, and waved it away: too small a position, he thought, at
too high a price. In less than a year it was worth 17x. |
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Apple Computer BVP
had the opportunity to invest in pre-IPO secondary stock in Apple at a
$60M valuation. BVP's Neill Brownstein called it "outrageously
expensive." |
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Check Point In
1994, Gil Schwed pitched his idea to BVP's David Cowan, who said that
Gil would never get distribution in the US. The next year, Check Point
got a huge Sun OEM deal and sold $25M of firewall software. |
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eBay "Stamps? Coins? Comic books? You've GOT to be kidding," thought Cowan. "No-brainer pass." |
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Federal Express Incredibly, BVP passed on Federal Express seven times. |
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Google Cowan’s
college friend rented her garage to Sergey and Larry for their first
year. In 1999 and 2000 she tried to introduce Cowan to “these two
really smart Stanford students writing a search engine”. Students? A
new search engine? In the most important moment ever for Bessemer’s
anti-portfolio, Cowan asked her, “How can I get out of this house
without going anywhere near your garage?” |
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Ikanos Rob
Chandra met these guys in 2000 at the start of the telecom meltdown,
and remembers saying something like, “Rajesh, I like you a lot but do
you really want to build a communications semiconductor business right
now?” He looked at Rob in a sort of funny way and then raised money
from Greylock, Sequoia and others. They reached a $60
million revenue run rate by focusing 90% of their effort on the telecom
boom in China. |
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Intel BVP's
Pete Bancroft never quite settled on terms with Bob Noyce, who instead
took venture financing from a guy named Arthur Rock. |
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Intuit Along
with every venture capitalist on Sand Hill Road, Neill Brownstein
turned down Intuit founder Scott Cook. Scott managed to scrape together
only $225K from friends, including HBS classmate and Sierra Ventures
founder Peter Wendell, who personally invested $25K to get Scott off
his back. |
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Lotus and Compaq Ben
Rosen, one of the founders of Sevin Rosen, offered Felda Hardymon the
chance to invest in both Lotus and Compaq Computer on the same day.
Says Hardymon: "Lotus wasn't proven yet, and I was worried
about the situation there. As for Compaq, I told him there was no real
future in transportable computers since IBM could do it." |
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Paypal David
Cowan passed on the Series A round. Rookie team, regulatory nightmare,
and, 4 years later, a $1.5 billion acquisition by eBay. |
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StrataCom (acquired by Cisco) Felda
Hardymon: "[Sierra's] Pete Wendell asked if I'd like to look at
Stratacom, which was doing a 'fast packet switch.' I gave him a blank
stare." |
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