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July 26, 2005

Investing in Clusters

We've just closed three investments at London Seed Capital that revolve around a central theme: Children.

The first company is Fifth Dimension, a children's video games publisher. They are responsible for the Teletubbies games you've suffered through 10,000 times.

The next one is Baby TV. The company currently has screens installed in 25% of all maternity wards in the UK. This puts advertising (and maternity information) in front of a captive, receptive audience.

The third company is mTrack, trading as KidsOK, which allows parents to check up on their child's whereabouts via SMS. It's not quite as Orwellian as it might initially sound.

As a VC, you invariably see similar, or related, businesses cross your desk in clusters. Months can pass without seeing any Enterprise Software, and then suddenly you'll get five in a row. This is one of the real advantages of being a VC - each of those five businesses focus on explaining the market, technology and opportunity differently (and usually incompletely).

By piecing together the information, this is immensely helpful in getting to grips with a market and evaluating investment opportunities. It is even better when your investments build on and complement each other. This style of investing was championed by Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers, following the keiretsu philosophy.

I'll go into why we invested in a later post, but the main investment case was built around the classic pillars of venture investing:

1. Management

2. Large Market

3. Sustainable Competitive Advantage

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Comments

Hey Jason, I'm enjoying your blog. If you'd be interested appearing as a guest on The VC Show (www.thepodcastnetwork.com/vc), please let me know.

Sounds like fun. Email me at techbytes at mac dot com and we'll set up a time to talk.

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