Today, the investors look like geniuses because we invested in “alternative energy” before it was cool. Really, we did nothing of the sort. We invested in an academic paper in material science that was attempting to take a process and turn it into a product. But trust me, we will never tell that to the case writer from the Harvard Business School.
In the early days (circa 2001), the company was little more than a piece of licensed technology from MIT. Three years later, one of the earliest investors, Anderson’s own YankeeTek Ventures, would close its doors after a disappointing fundraising campaign.
Maybe that’s too bad. Much of the VC fundraising over the last several years has ended up in digital media, web-based startups, which have shown very little traction in the exit market save for a spat of online ad-networks acquisitions in 2007. As the venture industry slims down and returns to its high-tech roots, LPs may find themselves stuck with a lot of the high-glitz funds, wondering what happened to the geeky VC firms like YankeeTek–the kind that would fund a company named for a mathematical formula.