Signal Strength
With stronger marketing efforts, VC firms are making sure their message gets heard.
Looking for signs of a VC rebound? Take a second glance at those
press releases in your company mailbox. VC firms are ramping up
their marketing efforts twofold by hiring PR firms to promote their
own portfolio companies and full-time marketing people to get their
company names before prospective entrepreneurs. "I would
estimate that the number of dedicated marketing professionals who
work on staff or [on] a consultant basis for venture capital firms
has more than doubled in the past four years," says Emily
Mendell, director of public affairs at the National Venture Capital
Association.
As VC firms try to raise new funds from limited partners,
they've discovered that brand recognition is becoming more
important. VCs are growing more aggressive so they can be the first
to discover a hot deal or get a shot at the most promising
entrepreneurs. This is especially true at smaller, regional firms
that don't already have high visibility within the
entrepreneurial community.
"This trend is saying that many venture capital firms have
picked their heads up from the triage mode they were in from 2000
to 2002," says Mendell. "Now they have the time to look
ahead and think strategically about positioning. It's a
positive sign."
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VCs are also realizing the need to selectively target certain
sectors and then create brand awareness to appeal to entrepreneurs
in that space. Says Jennifer Jones, marketing director at Mayfield, a top-tier
VC firm in Menlo Park, California, "The industry has grown
from a cottage industry to something much more sophisticated and
mature."
The push toward increased marketing efforts is by no means
uniform throughout the industry. Some VC partners still prefer to
work behind the scenes and leverage the visibility of their
portfolio firms. "We see very disparate strategies throughout
the industry," says Mendell. "It varies firm to firm
depending on the philosophy of the partners."