Search
Twitter
LinkedIn
Reddit
WhatsApp
Email

21 Lessons from Erik Serrano (CEO @ Stable Asset Management)

This weekโ€™s piece is on Erik Serrano, CEO @ Stable Asset Management.

ย 

Stable is an allocator that invests into investment firms, and Erik has been head of the ship since starting the firm 15 years ago.

ย 

I first heard of Erik last month when he went on โ€˜Invest Like the Bestโ€™. Everything that came out of his mouth on that podcast was gold, so I wanted to dive deeper.

ย 

Here are 21 lessons from Erik.

Free resources to help you on your VC journey:

ย 

Erik Serrano (Stable Asset Management)

Lessons

  • Every investment firm has a limit to scale. Finding that limit is an expensive process.

ย 

  • The career risk of an asset owner forces AUM scale. Larger funds bet more on the front end (fees); smaller funds bet more on the back end (carry).

ย 

  • Most investors underappreciate life experiences. The more you get to know a person, the better you can underwrite them.

ย 

  • All hard problems go up. Resilience needs to be there or else you give up when things get hard.

ย 

  • Adversity at an early age is a good indicator of future success. โ€œChips on shoulders put chips in pockets.โ€

ย 

  • Being average is beta. You have to see things that other people don’t see yet.

ย 

  • Extreme variance perception is a bad thing. You have to constantly take new information into account.

ย 

  • Communicating is underrated. Ironically, more communication tools has created fewer great communicators.

ย 

  • Seeding comes from high-trust relationships. Raising a first-time fund is almost entirely reliant on the trust a person has built up until that point.

ย 

  • Focusing more on the strategy and less on the person is too one-dimensional. Looking at the portfolio and not looking at the business is lazy thinking.

ย 

  • Founders can get away with being less likable in public markets. This doesn’t fly in private markets.

ย 

  • Likability is a proxy for being reliable. Likability works in private markets.

ย 

  • Fund managers with flashier cars give up sooner during a drawdown. If you’re motivated by the wrong thing, you won’t stick around long.

ย 

  • Great GPs want the freedom to not think about money. Good GPs just want to make money.

ย 

  • Referencing is powerful. Erik’s go-to question to GPs is โ€œWhat is a piece of feedback you got that surprised you?โ€

ย 

  • Changing strategies is punished. It’s okay to lose money, but you HAVE to do it the way you said you were going to.

ย 

  • In the investing world, LPs often buy something more than returns. โ€œPoor people buy entertainment; wealthy people buy information.โ€

Quotes

โ€œPeople donโ€™t give money to the best returners. They give money to the people they like.โ€

โ€œThe IP of humans is what drives an investment fund. The code drives companies.โ€

โ€œChips on the shoulders put chips in pockets.โ€

โ€œYou need to lose money the way you said you would lose money.โ€

One Place to Learn the Different Parts of Venture Capital

ย 

We started our careers in venture. After about a week, we had a realization.

ย 

We had no idea what we were doing.

ย 

Turns out, we werenโ€™t alone.

ย 

Junior VCs donโ€™t get training. Youโ€™re forced to figure it out on your own.

ย 

Learning the rules, tools, and players takes FOREVER to learn. Thatโ€™s why we made the ultimate VC resource library to speed up the learning curve.

ย 

Our best VC resources … FREE