In startup investing, the big mistake is not choosing startups that fail (that's inevitable) but turning down the big winners.
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@paulg does that mean that its better spread your capital to many small rounds rather that some big ones ? -
Not beyond a certain point. Fundamentally you just cannot screw up and miss the big ones.
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@paulg and I guess that "certain point" comes with experience. -
I believe the portfolio size you need is more math than experience.
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math lowers the risk too.
End of conversation
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"past forms"? Isn't investing in new business ideas the original form of investing?
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the obvious problem exists in the fact that a viable
#opportunity is often mistaken for a "big idea" which is BIG mistake!Thanks. Twitter will use this to make your timeline better. UndoUndo
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startup investing is actually very much like trend following. A few big winners pay for all your losers and then some.
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what about predictability of future CF? Still the same concept for investing?
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