As just about everyone should know by now, the seeds of what grew into Facebook were planted at Harvard. Might there be a bunch of mini-Zucks lurking in the dorms of Cambridge? If so, a new venture capital firm — the first housed right on the Harvard campus — wants to find them.
Dubbed The Experiment Fund, the firm describes itself as “a bridge between America’s oldest universities and storied venture capital firms.” Backed by New Enterprise Associates (NEA), the firm is made up of Hugo Van Vurren, NEA co-head Patrick Chung, and NEA General Partner Harry Weller — all of whom have a degree of some form from the school.
When I say it’s “right on the Harvard campus”, I’m not kidding — it’s going to be based out of 33 Oxford Street, which is Harvard’s School Of Engineering And Applied Sciences. It’s a bit more than a stone’s throw from Harvard Yard. With that said, the fund operates with complete independence from the university.
And if you’re not a Harvard student? Don’t sweat it too much. The fund says they’re open to anyone, “regardless of university affilation, nationality, age, or prior experience.” Being a Harvard student (or at least a Cambridge local) probably wouldn’t hurt, though.
While it seems the size of the fund isn’t set in stone yet (or at least, it wasn’t disclosed — I’ll look into it. Update: they’re not setting a cap at this point), the team says they expect to seed “several” companies with up to $250k each over the next two years.
COMMENTARY: I have a feeling that The Experiment Fund is swamped with executive summaries and business plans right about now. I wonder if the founding of The Experiment Fund right inside the campus of a major university like Harvard, will start a major trend among VC firms. Will angels do the same? A lot of VC's are feeling the pressure of "Super Angels," so being conveniently located on campus has the added advantage of creating a lot of deal flow "first dibs" and access to the Mark Zuckerberg's of tomorrow.
Courtesy of an article dated January 27, 2012 appearing in TechCrunch
very interesting , thanks for sharing
Posted by: collaboration solutions | 02/01/2012 at 09:38 PM