
The Butter Thesis
At USV, we talk a lot about our investment thesis. The USV thesis is a set of ideas that has guided our investing over the years. It is a tool we u...
From Crypto-Native to Crypto-Enabled
I’m not one to make big annual predictions, but one thing that seems likely to me is that 2024 will mark the emergence of mainstream apps powered by ...
You Never Know When You've Had a Good Day
Many years ago, when I had just started working at USV, I remember there was kind of a complicated situation that unfolded in a seemingly bad way, and I'll never forget what Brad said in response. He said:you never know when you've had a good dayI didn't really understand what that meant, so he told me a story that went something like: back around the year 2000 at the height of the dot-com boom, there was a guy who was a senior exec at a successful startup. That person had a falling out with ...

The Butter Thesis
At USV, we talk a lot about our investment thesis. The USV thesis is a set of ideas that has guided our investing over the years. It is a tool we u...
From Crypto-Native to Crypto-Enabled
I’m not one to make big annual predictions, but one thing that seems likely to me is that 2024 will mark the emergence of mainstream apps powered by ...
You Never Know When You've Had a Good Day
Many years ago, when I had just started working at USV, I remember there was kind of a complicated situation that unfolded in a seemingly bad way, and I'll never forget what Brad said in response. He said:you never know when you've had a good dayI didn't really understand what that meant, so he told me a story that went something like: back around the year 2000 at the height of the dot-com boom, there was a guy who was a senior exec at a successful startup. That person had a falling out with ...
Share Dialog
Share Dialog
I had lunch yesterday with someone who has been investing in the crypto / token space recently -- having pooled together a small "fund" from friends and family. It's a short-term vehicle (like, 6 months), and a large part of the goal is simply to become hands-on familiar / capable investing in token sales / ICOs, and dealing with issues like custody and security. At least for the moment, there are so many odd aspects of working in this space (handling private keys, exchanging tokens on various exchanges, downloading wallet software, etc.) that actually a large part of the value that a fund manager offers is handling all of that stuff. Over time, this will change, as infrastructure and new financial vehicles (e.g., ETFs) come to market. But for now, it's actually really complicated and hard to do this stuff, and there's no better way to learn it than by doing it. More generally, I just love the idea of learning-by-doing. It's the best way. Right after college, when I thought I wanted to be an architect, the first thing I did was get a job with a construction company, building homes. I spent the better part of a year shoveling gravel, jack-hammering old driveways, and sealing foundations, but I also got to do some more interesting / complicated building work over time. My reasoning at the time was that I didn't want to be that jackass, know-it-all architect (believe me, that's often how they are perceived by builders) who didn't know how things really worked at the ground level. Same thing when I got into programming. There are two really beautiful things about learning to code: 1) you can learn everything you need to learn at basically zero cost online, and 2) you're making as you're learning. I think that's great as a learning mechanism, and it's also really great in terms of motivation. Nothing like wanting to finish making something as motivation for learning how to do it! Learning-by-doing is harder to do when it comes to investing. Because, of course, in order to invest, first and foremost you need capital. But it doesn't need to be a lot, especially in the cryptocurrency space. So it's possible to learn to be an early stage tech investor by actually doing it. I think that's pretty exciting. (as always, buyer beware!)
I had lunch yesterday with someone who has been investing in the crypto / token space recently -- having pooled together a small "fund" from friends and family. It's a short-term vehicle (like, 6 months), and a large part of the goal is simply to become hands-on familiar / capable investing in token sales / ICOs, and dealing with issues like custody and security. At least for the moment, there are so many odd aspects of working in this space (handling private keys, exchanging tokens on various exchanges, downloading wallet software, etc.) that actually a large part of the value that a fund manager offers is handling all of that stuff. Over time, this will change, as infrastructure and new financial vehicles (e.g., ETFs) come to market. But for now, it's actually really complicated and hard to do this stuff, and there's no better way to learn it than by doing it. More generally, I just love the idea of learning-by-doing. It's the best way. Right after college, when I thought I wanted to be an architect, the first thing I did was get a job with a construction company, building homes. I spent the better part of a year shoveling gravel, jack-hammering old driveways, and sealing foundations, but I also got to do some more interesting / complicated building work over time. My reasoning at the time was that I didn't want to be that jackass, know-it-all architect (believe me, that's often how they are perceived by builders) who didn't know how things really worked at the ground level. Same thing when I got into programming. There are two really beautiful things about learning to code: 1) you can learn everything you need to learn at basically zero cost online, and 2) you're making as you're learning. I think that's great as a learning mechanism, and it's also really great in terms of motivation. Nothing like wanting to finish making something as motivation for learning how to do it! Learning-by-doing is harder to do when it comes to investing. Because, of course, in order to invest, first and foremost you need capital. But it doesn't need to be a lot, especially in the cryptocurrency space. So it's possible to learn to be an early stage tech investor by actually doing it. I think that's pretty exciting. (as always, buyer beware!)
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