“Whatever needs to get done, I get it done.” One Year in VC

In the less common post-MBA roles, graduates often find themselves in positions they never expected to be in. The following is an excerpt from After School where a venture capitalist associate gave me her honest assessment of her first year out.

 

When people ask you “What do you do?” what do you say?

Well, it depends on who asks me. But, if it’s my parents I say I’m a Venture Capitalist. They ask, “What is that?” and I say it’s like Shark Tank. I’m the investor, you know, but without all that extra drama.

If it’s the MBA crowd or my colleagues or I say I work at a Venture Capital Fund. My responsibilities include deal sourcing, taking first, second, third meetings for companies, due diligence, and providing investment recommendations to my team. Then once we decide to invest, I doing everything from the whole closing process that happens afterwards with the lawyers and the accountants to working with our portfolio companies to make sure we do everything we can to make them successful. I also fill the fridge, move around furniture, and hammer the Ethernet cord into the wall. Whatever needs to get done, I get it done.

I actually work a lot for two reasons. One, because I can. Two, because I want to.

What are your hours like?

I don’t have any hours. What I love about this job and what is stressful about this job is that we don’t have any hours. We don’t have any vacation time. I actually work a lot for two reasons. One, because I can. Two, because I want to. Typically I can get in whenever, but I usually get in around 7:30 or 8:00, and I leave around 5… 6:00?

That’s if I have no events. I typically have an event every single night, so probably around 8:00. I would say probably around 12 hours a day. If I don’t have an event, I’ll go home and have dinner, but I’ll still check my emails. I’m still logged in on Friday night if I have to be.

With that said, I try to unplug on Saturdays. I check my emails, but people know that I won’t respond unless it’s an emergency. I can’t calculate how many hours…The job is always in my head and I know that I’m always talking about it because I enjoy it.

 

Do you like it?

Love it. The good outweighs the bad by far. This is the first job that I’ve actually loved in a long time. I have so much autonomy. I get challenged every single day; every single day I learn something new. I get to deal with entrepreneurs. I get so many different personalities. I’ve had entrepreneurs fucking yelling at me and screaming at me, and then I’ve had entrepreneurs say “Thank you so much for your advice. It just changed my world.”

 

What’s the best part of the job?

I hate being told what to do and I love being challenged. I go in there and I have no idea how I’m going to do something. For example, my second day on the job, the following happened:

Partner: Go there and just tell us what you think.

Me: OK. [Slightly confused]

Partner: We need this to happen. Go figure it out.

Me: What? [Thinking] I have to read a 30-page legal doc and I don’t understand what I’m doing.

I love being thrown in any random situation where I just have to figure it out. I’m the third person in the group, so if I don’t figure it out, it’s not like anybody else is going to figure it out. You create the rules. You create the structure, and you can change them when you want.

I’ve had entrepreneurs fucking yelling at me and screaming at me, and then I’ve had entrepreneurs say “Thank you so much for your advice. It just changed my world.”

What’s the worst part of the job?

The worst part about it is that I am the only one so although I do all these great things and I go to investor dinners and close deals – I have to fill the water in the fridge. I have to work with our back office and give them receipts for what we’ve done. If the water’s leaking, I have to find somebody.

 

If you would like to participate/be interviewed for the blog, contact me at nkem.nwankwo@lifeafterschool.co.

19 Things You Might Not Know About Me

I wanted to take a quick break from the serious stuff and tell you a little more about me. Hopefully this give you some insight on where I’m coming from in some of my posts. Enjoy!

  1. I was born in Nigeria. My parent and I moved to the US when I was a little over a year old. I lived in Peabody, MA till I was 9 years old when I moved to Miami, FL. I lived in Miami till I graduated from high school.
  2. My first introduction to computers was playing snake on my dad’s Apple at his job. I always wondered how circuits somehow made the images and interactions I was seeing.
  3. I once got a beating for cutting our phone cord in an attempt to see how it worked.
  4. Terminator 2 is my favorite movie of all time, hands down. The mix of action, human and robot interaction, desperation, and incredible visual effects mesmerized me as a kid.

  5. When I was 9, my parents separated and I moved to Miami with my dad. I lived with my father till college.
  6. I’m the oldest of 3 siblings.
  7. Top 3 candies: gummy bears, gummy worms, and Mambas.
  8. I love basketball. I haven’t played at all in 2016 however, which is a shame.
  9. Nigerian parents are really strict. I was never allowed to go to parties like my friends did in high school. I often jumped out of my bedroom window to sneak off.
  10. I’m a huge rap and hip hop fan. Nas is my favorite rapper.
  11. To this day, graduating from Georgia Tech is the hardest thing I’ve ever done.
  12. If I didn’t have my cousins helping me out financially while I was in undergrad, I probably wouldn’t have made it out.
  13. I didn’t realize pickles were cucumbers until my 20s.

  14. I’m the complete opposite of a foodie. I can literally eat the same thing every day for the rest of my life. I also eat food incredibly fast, so cooking has no value for me. It’s actually an activity I really despise.
  15. I love my friends, but I hate going out. I’d rather be at home. I somehow end up going out semi-frequently.
  16. I didn’t learn to swim until I was 26 years old.
  17. I sleep horribly. I wake up often thinking about why I’m not “successful” yet.
  18. I’m a pretty cost-sensitive guy. I get it from my father. I hate being in debt. I hate spending a lot of money on anything.

  19. Speaking of things I get from my father…I have the WORST short term memory ever. More often than I’d like, I’ll lose my train of thought in the middle of a sentence and have to backtrack to regain it. My brother is the same way, but it seems to have skipped over my sister.

 

If you would like to participate/be interviewed for the blog, contact me at nkem.nwankwo@lifeafterschool.co.