Sharon Vosmek, CEO & Managing Accomplice, AstiaPhoto by Irja Tannlund. Stylized by Zoë Mariotti.
I’ve been within the startup and enterprise capital world since February 1995, to be exact. Sure, I’ve acquired the gray hair, but in addition the identical fireplace for innovation. Whereas I’ve all the time recognized that I wasn’t constructed to be a founder, I deeply respect those that are. I thrive within the chaos of entrepreneurship, keep calm within the storm, and see early-stage investing as a option to form the longer term. So, changing into a VC simply made sense.
WHAT TO EXPECT
I’m writing for Forbes as a result of I’ve seen quite a bit over these previous 30 years – and I believe it’s value sharing. My lens is private: the wins, the losses, the teachings. I’m not right here to echo what you’ve already heard.
You see, I’m not from the same old mould:
However right here is the kicker: my funding course of has simply an 11% failure fee. So perhaps… don’t ignore me.
What I promise:
Honesty (non-negotiable)
Transparency (the place I can)
Empathy (as a result of startups are laborious)
LEARNING AS I WENT
I started my journey at Astia in 2005, creating applications to help founders—regardless of by no means having been one myself. I immersed myself of their world, studying what entrepreneurship really demanded by listening intently, observing rigorously, and paying shut consideration when actions didn’t align with phrases.
My columns will discover:
What it takes to start out an organization
What it takes to lift capital
What it takes to scale
I’ll share what 20 years at Astia has taught me. You carry your truths to the feedback. Let’s study from one another—and assist extra founders and buyers win.
Onwards.