A former partner with two major Silicon Valley law firms, Allen Morgan, Managing Director of Mayfield Fund, tells Exec why the move into venture capital was fairly seamless.
Written by John O’Hanlon
Not many individuals have published ten commandments. Not having the internet at his disposal, God did the best thing he could at the time, but it’s fortunate that tablets of stone are no longer required because, on his blog, Allen Morgan frequently adds afterthoughts to the decalogue he issued in 2005 as a guide for entrepreneurs pitching to VCs.
Still, his precepts retain lapidary brevity. A lot of his suggestions relate to time. With a caseload as long as your arm, he is a very busy man. Be on time is his second commandment; get to the point – fast is his fifth, so I felt honored to be the recipient of his full attention.
There at the start
Allen is a Managing Director of Mayfield Fund, at 40 years Silicon Valley’s oldest venture capital company, and of course a major player, with more than $2.4 billion under management. Among the notable notches on its bedpost are Compaq, Silicon Graphics, 3COM, Amgen, Genentech and Millennium Pharmaceuticals.
Allen Morgan takes a particular interest in enterprise software applications and infrastructure, “particularly innovative solutions that enhance knowledge-worker productivity, as well as on start-ups in the area of consumer internet services, interactive entertainment, online advertising and new media.” Allen’s notable investments include Jotspot (acquired by Google), PlanetOut, Serious Magic (acquired by Adobe) and Varsity Group.
Before joining Mayfield in 1999, Allen was a partner with two major Silicon Valley law firms, Latham & Watkins and Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati, but the move into venture capital was fairly seamless.
“People become venture capitalists in a lot of different ways. In fact as an industry it’s a very idiosyncratic market. My background is that I was a corporate lawyer in Palo Alto California for about 20 years representing software entrepreneurs. In the course of a nearly 20 year career, one finds that one tends to be as much of a business to them. Most of my clients were early internet companies doing online entertainment, educational software or things in the media…
May 08, 2008
Click here to read the full interview with Allen Morgan
Bookmark with:
- Digg
- Reddit
- Del.icio.us
- Facebook
- Newsvine
Sign Up to Exec UK now for FREE!