The enterprise capital world has at all times had a hot-and-cold relationship with the Midwest. Buyers rush in throughout growth instances, then retreat to the coasts when markets flip bitter. For Columbus, Ohio-based Drive Capital, this cycle of consideration and disinterest performed out towards the backdrop of its personal inner upheaval a number of years in the past — a co-founder break up that would have ended the agency however could have in the end strengthened it.
At a minimal, Drive achieved one thing newsworthy in right this moment’s enterprise panorama this previous Could. The agency returned $500 million to traders in a single week, distributing almost $140 million price of Root Insurance coverage shares inside days of cashing out of Austin-based Considerate Automation and one other undisclosed firm.
It could possibly be seen as a gimmick, positive, however restricted companions had been undoubtedly happy. “I’m unaware of another enterprise agency having been in a position to obtain that form of liquidity just lately,” mentioned Chris Olsen, Drive’s co-founder and now sole managing associate, who spoke to TechCrunch from the agency’s workplaces in Columbus’s Brief North neighborhood.
It’s a outstanding turnaround for a agency that confronted existential questions simply three years in the past when Olsen and his co-founder Mark Kvamme — each former Sequoia Capital companions — went their separate methods. The break up, which shocked the agency’s traders, noticed Kvamme ultimately launch the Ohio Fund, a broader funding automobile targeted on the state’s financial improvement that features actual property, infrastructure, and manufacturing alongside know-how investments.
Drive’s current success stems from what Olsen calls a intentionally contrarian technique in an trade preoccupied with “unicorns” and “decacorns” — corporations valued at $1 billion and $10 billion, respectively.
“In case you had been to simply learn the newspapers or hearken to espresso retailers on Sand Hill Street, everybody at all times talks concerning the $50 billion or $100 billion outcomes,” Olsen mentioned. “However the actuality is, whereas these outcomes do occur, they’re actually uncommon. Within the final 20 years, there have solely been 12 outcomes in America over $50 billion.”
In contrast, he famous, there have been 127 IPOs at $3 billion or extra, plus tons of of M&A occasions at that degree. “In case you’re in a position to exit corporations at $3 billion, then you definately’re in a position to do one thing that occurs each single month,” he mentioned.
That rationale underpinned the Considerate Automation exit, which Olsen described as “close to fund-returning” regardless of being “under a billion {dollars}.” The AI healthcare automation firm was bought to personal fairness agency New Mountain Capital, which combined it with two other companies to kind Smarter Applied sciences. Drive owned “multiples” of the standard Silicon Valley possession stake within the firm, mentioned Olsen, who added that Drive’s typical possession stake is round 30% on common in comparison with a Valley agency’s 10% — actually because it’s the sole enterprise investor throughout quite a few funding rounds.
“We had been the one enterprise agency who invested in that firm,” Olsen mentioned of Considerate Automation, which was beforehand backed by New Mountain, the PE agency. “About 20% of the businesses in our portfolio right this moment, we’re the only enterprise agency in these companies.”
Portfolio Wins and Losses
Drive’s monitor report contains each huge successes and likewise stumbles. The agency was an early investor in Duolingo, backing the language-learning platform when it was pre-revenue after Olsen and Kvamme met founder Luis von Ahn at a bar in Pittsburgh, the place Duolingo relies. Right this moment, Duolingo trades on NASDAQ with a market cap of almost $18 billion.
The agency additionally invested in Huge Information, a knowledge storage platform final valued at $9 billion in late 2023 (and is reportedly fundraising proper now), and Drive made cash on the current Root Insurance coverage distribution regardless of that firm’s rocky public market efficiency since its late 2020 IPO.
However Drive additionally skilled the spectacular failure of Olive AI, a Columbus-based healthcare automation startup that raised over $900 million and was valued at $4 billion earlier than ultimately promoting parts of its enterprise in a fireplace sale.
“You might have to have the ability to produce returns in unhealthy markets in addition to good markets,” Olsen mentioned. “When markets actually get examined is when there’s not as a lot liquidity.”
What units Drive aside, Olsen argues, is its give attention to corporations constructing exterior Silicon Valley’s hyper-competitive ecosystem. The agency now has staff in six cities — Columbus, Austin, Boulder, Chicago, Atlanta, and Toronto — and says it backs founders who would in any other case face a alternative between constructing close to their clients or their traders.
It’s Drive’s secret sauce, he suggests. “Early-stage corporations which might be primarily based exterior of Silicon Valley have the next bar. They must be a greater enterprise to garner a enterprise funding from a enterprise agency in Silicon Valley,” Olsen mentioned. “The identical factor applies to us with corporations in Silicon Valley. For us to spend money on an organization in Silicon Valley, it has the next bar.”
A lot of the agency’s portfolio facilities not on corporations attempting to give you one thing solely novel, however as a substitute on these making use of tech to conventional industries that coastal VCs would possibly overlook. Drive has invested in an autonomous welding firm, for instance, and what Olsen calls “next-generation dental insurance coverage” — sectors that arguably symbolize America’s $18 trillion financial system past Silicon Valley’s tech darlings.
Whether or not that focus — or Drive’s momentum — interprets into an enormous new fund for Drive stays to be seen. The agency is at present managing property that it raised when Kvamme was nonetheless on board, and in keeping with Olsen, it has 30% left to speculate of its present fund, a $1 billion vehicle introduced in June 2022.
Requested about cash-on-cash returns thus far, Olsen mentioned that with $2.2 billion in property beneath administration throughout all of Drive’s funds, all are “high quartile funds” with “north of 4x internet on our most mature funds” and “persevering with to develop from there.”
Within the meantime, Drive’s thesis about Columbus as a reputable tech hub obtained additional validation this week when Palmer Luckey, Peter Thiel, and different tech billionaires introduced plans to launch Erebor, a crypto-focused financial institution headquartered in Columbus.
“Once we began Drive in 2012, folks thought we had been nuts,” Olsen mentioned. “Now you’re seeing actually the folks I consider as being the neatest minds in know-how — whether or not it’s Elon Musk or Larry Ellison or Peter Thiel — transferring out of Silicon Valley and opening huge presences in several cities.”