Hadrien Comte

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Hadrien Comte

Hadrien Comte

@hadriencomte

Tech Growth Investor @Revaia_Cap

Paris, France Se unió Mart 2018
2.1K Siguiendo725 Seguidores
Hadrien Comte retuiteado
Patrick OShaughnessy
Patrick OShaughnessy@patrick_oshag·
Lead Edge has built one of the most unique LP bases in venture, with over 800 founders and executives who are actively engaged across the entire investment lifecycle. They represent 95% of the firm's total capital. "All of these people invest in funds and never get asked for help. The reason we did it is because the returns in tech flow to the top 10% of funds. When I was starting Lead Edge, I asked "why is anybody going to take my money?" Had I been the global head of HR at P&G and my partner had been the global head of HR at Microsoft, when I called Workday 80 times at Bessemer, Dave Duffield would've engaged with me because he would've known that I could've introduced him to those companies. In a world that's super crowded and undifferentiated, and I think it's exponentially the case more today even than what it was 15 years ago, it differentiates us and we do what we say we're going to do."
Patrick OShaughnessy@patrick_oshag

Mitchell Green is the co-founder and managing partner of Lead Edge Capital, a $9B growth equity firm he founded in 2011. For 15 years, he and his partners have built one of the most disciplined investment machines in the business, designed to deliver consistent returns by hitting doubles and triples rather than chasing power law outcomes. He obsesses over avoiding zeros and is constantly underwriting investments to know exactly when to sell. He has built a unique culture at Lead Edge, sending handwritten thank you notes to nearly everyone he meets and sitting down one on one with every person at the firm once a year. He is, by his own admission, one of the most persistent and competitive people you will meet. After the episode, he told me he believes the most important thing in life is to be memorable. You will find, listening to this conversation, that he very much is. We discuss: - Why it’s the best time to buy public software companies - Lessons from 10,000 cold calls - His unique LP base - Why consistency of returns matters more than home runs - The art of knowing when to sell - How culture is built from the top + the importance of follow-through - What skiing taught him about risk and competition Enjoy! Timestamps: 0:00 Intro 1:00 The Hierarchy of BS 2:20 Lessons From 10,000 Cold Calls 9:05 Base Hits vs. Grand Slams 15:24 The 8 Buying Criteria 17:24 Pricing and the AI Exit Multiple Trap 19:24 Software as a Game of Distribution 23:20 Creative Deal Structuring 26:27 The Framework for Focus 29:01 The Art of the Investigative Cold Call 34:24 Culture of Hustle 35:34 The Annual One-on-One Process 37:59 Playing to Strengths 39:43 The Mount Rushmore of Investment Machines 42:05 Fears and Excitement Around AI 48:54 Ski Racing 52:29 Advice for Starting a Firm 54:35 The Kindest Thing

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Deedy
Deedy@deedydas·
2026 has been a generational year for us at Menlo already. — Anthropic is the fastest growing company of all time adding $4.5B run rate in 42 days after the $380B round. We put ~$1B into it starting from the Series C — Suno reaches 100M users and $300M ARR — Lovable is the 5th most adopted and 2nd fastest growing AI vendor, going 0 to $200M in a yr — OpenRouter grew 2.5x in 1.5 months. On track to 1 quadrillion token annual run rate. — Higgsfield hits $200M run rate with creative tools and a $1B+ valuation. — Wispr Flow continues to grow 40% MoM with a 70% 1 year retention and wins some massive enterprise contracts — Clerk becomes #4 fastest growing vendor in the league of Google, Atlassian and Replit — Inception launches the first and best reasoning diffusion model that is the fastest for its intelligence at 1000tokens/s — Goodfire, Anthropic's first direct investment, hits $1B+ val and discovers novel biomarkers for Alzheimer's Most VCs don't believe in this model of being picky, low volume investors. We do very few investments (up to 2/partner/yr) and we go early. 5 of these were partnerships since the Seed. It's been working for us so far (even though we've missed a lot too!) It's an privilege to work with founders who run through walls and take on so much risk to bring new things into the world. And we're very lucky to play a small part in that! Still a lot of work to do.
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Bryan Johnson
Bryan Johnson@bryan_johnson·
I'm traveling to Paris...who should I meet?
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Shane Legg
Shane Legg@ShaneLegg·
AGI is now on the horizon and it will deeply transform many things, including the economy. I'm currently looking to hire a Senior Economist, reporting directly to me, to lead a small team investigating post-AGI economics. Job spec and application here: job-boards.greenhouse.io/deepmind/jobs/…
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Turner Novak 🍌🧢
Turner Novak 🍌🧢@TurnerNovak·
POV you’re about to be pitched the world’s first quadruple-layered Anthropic SPV
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BuccoCapital Bloke
BuccoCapital Bloke@buccocapital·
Man the sentiment on software as an investment here is pretty bombed out. Some various thoughts from having spent a couple decades working in software: - This was the easiest market for a long time. Greenfield opportunity everywhere - A few sub-problems flow from this. A) That didn’t exactly nurture what I would describe as “operational rigor.” B) I also wouldn’t describe many of these executive teams as killers C) People are used to operating in an inbound environment with weak competition. Very much not the case today - Similarly, gross margins hid a bunch of lazy, bad habits - And investors have never given a shit about real profit, so that is baked into how these companies operate. - You would think 2022 would have washed a lot of these bad habits away. For some companies, like I would say Shopify is a great example, it absolutely did. For other companies it did for a little, but muscle memory is strong, and times got good again. Some didn’t even really try. So you are going from an environment with a ton of tailwinds, minimal competition, low interest rates, investors who didn’t care about profit, and high gross margins to… Incredibly intense competition, needing to sacrifice margins to compete in AI, knife fights everywhere as tailwinds vanish and operating surfaces converge, higher rate environment, investor concerns on terminal value due to AI disruption risk, and a bunch of other real, structural issues that would make this post way too long to read And almost all these companies aren’t cheap even after this de-rating. And they’re not growing that fast anymore either. And AI native app layer companies are stealing their incremental customer LTV. And the management aren’t really killers because they haven’t had to be. So do I think a lot of the bear cases are extreme? Yes. But is there a lot, a lot of truth here? Also yes.
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sarah guo
sarah guo@saranormous·
If I interviewed some of the capital providers of this AI era (credit or infrastructure funds, sovereigns, masa son, family offices) who would you most be interested in hearing from?
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Vinod Khosla
Vinod Khosla@vkhosla·
Juniper returned $7b+ to Kleiner's ~$500m fund ... I think it was 2500X but often ignored. Only player doing TCP/IP for the public internet in 1996 when every telco customer wanted ATM. If Juniper had not started the internet likely wasn't going to be TCP/IP. The CTO of @Cisco told me they would never do a router above OC12! wsj.com/articles/winni…
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Josh Coyne@josh_coyne

Think Juniper remains the greatest VC investment of all time. >2000x return in 3yrs. @vkhosla

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Hadrien Comte
Hadrien Comte@hadriencomte·
"We have to make sure we're taking enough risk... and that usually comes in the form of evaluate the entrepreneur and the company on the magnitude of their strength [...] I think it's always a mistake to rule out somebody who's truly world class on a weakness."
Jack Altman@jaltma

a16z just announced their newest fund - $15 billion! I had @bhorowitz on Uncapped to discuss how they run the firm, how he thinks about venture talent, a16z's overall investment approach, deploying capital at scale, media, and more. He's easily one of the most impressive people I've gotten to have on the podcast. Hope you enjoy.

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Danel Dayan
Danel Dayan@DanelDayan·
1/ After 6 years of publishing the State of OpenCloud to capture the trends and operational frameworks from the best founders we speak to, we are making a change. Introducing the @BatteryVentures State of AI 2025 Report. It’s a reflection of how AI continues to reshape the software stack, from how applications are built and deployed to how they are priced and adopted.
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Alex Konrad
Alex Konrad@alexrkonrad·
DEEP DIVE: VC firms are building their own AI tools to compete for the best startup deals. And for founders, that's changing the relationships game. Here's what the AI-ification of venture capital means for startups, in my new @UpstartsMediaCo feature. upstartsmedia.com/p/deep-dive-vc…
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Ricardo Sequerra Amram
Ricardo Sequerra Amram@ric0seq·
The biggest hoax in euro tech right now is that you need to move to the US to make it. Yes the bay area is great and defo a place to learn and over time build a team there as you scale. No doubt the 50y of tech expertise and talent density need to be leveraged. No place like it on planet earth. But it has never been EASIER to build from Europe. There is no comparison to 10-20y ago where the option to stay could compromise your business Today that is not the case. The arc of time is delivering. IT IS HAPPENING. The algo on this platform, the bot farms are all playing against this narrative. Why? Because they need our talent. Go to the US, get an O1, get funded. succeed? A win for the US. Fail? More talent for US companies. Even US personalities like marc andreesen or YC folks don’t want you to believe you can build from Europe. Remember Sam Altman’s post? Jakub and Szymon. Hello CEE. How many of our killer math olympiads have we shipped to the US? Fight the hoax. Resist the anti-euro engagement farming machine. Trust the system. Build in hard mode.
Seb Johnson@SebJohnsonUK

The fastest growing company of all time is being built in Europe. Don't fall for the propaganda that you can't build amazing companies here. @vriparbelli is doing it with @synthesiaIO @nicolasosharp is doing it with @attio @alanchanguk is doing it with @fuseenergy @MaxJunestrand is doing it with @WeAreLegora And of course @antonosika and @FabianHedin are doing it with @Lovable. Last week the company celebrated it's 1 year anniversary and announced hitting $200m ARR. I made this video to celebrate the occasion. Lovable is truly one of the most incredible businesses of all time, and in Europe we should do do a better job of celebrating our successes. Congrats to the lovable team - you're flying the flag for European Tech and we LOVE to see it. Shoutout to @HarryStebbings for letting me use his voice and video clips to put this together.

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Nikita Andersson
Nikita Andersson@nikitaandersso3·
Guess the office 👟👞🥿👡👠
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