Lightspeed Partner, Alex Taussig – At the Intersection of Fintech and Online Marketplaces
Coming soon… 21 Leaders podcast!
As many of you know, August will be my last month at the Wharton Fintech podcast - so I want to invite you to follow and subscribe to my next adventure.
21 Leaders, a weekly podcast where I will sit down with today’s global leaders that will dominate the 21st century in fintech, business, and beyond.
Join me and follow 21 Leaders today on Apple, Spotify, or your favorite podcast app!
---
This article is part of Fintech Leaders, a newsletter with over 26,000 dreamers, entrepreneurs, investors, and students of financial services. I invite you to share and sign up here: Substack
I sit down with Alex Taussig, Partner at Lightspeed Ventures, a global multi-stage VC with over $10B in AUM, focused on accelerating disruptive innovations and trends in the Enterprise and Consumer sectors. They’ve backed some amazing companies, including Snap, Affirm, and GrubHub.
Alex focuses on online marketplaces and co-leads Lightspeed’s investment efforts in Latin America. He is also the author of the popular weekly newsletter, DRINKING FROM THE FIREHOSE, in which he writes about recent trends in commerce, media, tech, climate, science, and popular culture.
In this episode, we discuss
Alex’s story and why he decided to stop pursuing a Phd and left academia to join the tech investing world. For as long as he can remember, Alex always wanted to be a scientist. He continued pursuing his scientific curiosity in college and attended Harvard where he majored in physics and later started his PhD in materials engineering at MIT. But during his time at MIT, he realized a life in a laboratory was not for him.
“I remember when the guy who named the Higgs Boson got his Nobel Prize, he was 74, and it just occurred to me that this is going to be a very long path to impact… And at the same time, there were people who I went to college with, who had gone on to start Facebook or they were all having these very fast rocketship careers, and they seemed to be having a lot more impact than I was working in a laboratory.”
Soundcloud: https://bit.ly/3AW5lhU
The intersection of marketplaces and fintech and why payment technology is the motor oil that makes transactions flow smoothly. Mr. Taussig is an expert marketplace investor and recognizes the importance of fintech in every single one of his companies. He explains that the key ingredient in a marketplace is liquidity, but if you can’t easily make a transaction, that liquidity is not as valuable – which is why having excellent payments and fintech capabilities is at the core of marketplaces.
“I wrote this piece titled Payment Tech is Motor Oil… And the point I was trying to make is essentially that the engine is the marketplace, but the thing that lubricates it is financial services and FinTech… because in a marketplace, if you can't transact with other people then the marketplace just has too much friction and it slows down.”
Apple: https://apple.co/3yUL0J3
Why in Venture Capital it’s very important to ask the best possible questions and pay close attention to the answers that reveal an underlying truth.
“Founders should know significantly more than you do as an investor. There is this persistent myth that gets promulgated by these ‘cult of personality’ individuals that VCs are like these truth-sayers that know stuff that other people don't…. The reality is that if you talk to some of these great investors, they will tell you they actually know very little. And what makes them good is that they just know how to listen really well.”
Early investing mistakes and the importance of focus. Most VCs will admit their biggest mistakes are companies they passed on and that ended up doing really well. Alex is no different, but he’s convinced being extremely focused helps him avoid missing great opportunities. Not only is it important to understand an industry, but it’s also crucial to being able to spot amazing founders. In his experience, the best operators have five similar characteristics:
1. Incredible attention to detail
2. Clarity of vision from a very early stage
3. Amazing communication skills
4. Growth mindset
5. Grit and determination
Spotify: https://spoti.fi/37XgLWa
Lessons from several years of writing a successful newsletter… and a lot more!
Alex Taussig
Alex joined Lightspeed in 2016 as a partner on the consumer investment team and has spent 12+ years in venture capital. He is passionate about partnering with founders who are reimagining major categories of commerce using technology.
At Lightspeed, Alex has led investments in startups disrupting massive industries like food (Daily Harvest, Frubana), retail (Faire), education (Outschool), and weddings (Zola). He also co-leads Lightspeed’s investment efforts in Latin America. Prior to joining Lightspeed, Alex was a partner at Highland Capital Partners, where he led investments in and supported over a dozen companies, including thredUP (IPO TDUP, 2021), Carbon Black (IPO CBLK, 2018), 2U (IPO 2014, TWOU), and RentJuice (acquired by Zillow, 2012).
Alex is a trained research scientist and breaks down business problems with deductive logic and analytical rigor. He originally studied physics at Harvard College, where he graduated summa cum laude, and then went on to receive a Master’s degree in materials engineering from MIT, where he was part of a research group building the first fully optical computer chip. Alex also received an MBA from Harvard Business School, where he was a Baker Scholar, an honor given to the top 5% of the graduating class.
Alex publishes a popular weekly(ish) newsletter called DRINKING FROM THE FIREHOSE, in which he writes about recent trends in commerce, media, tech, climate, science, and popular culture. He lives in San Francisco with his wife and two children and enjoys baking, anime, and heavy metal music.
Full interview --> Spotify | Soundcloud | Apple
About Lightspeed Venture Partners
Lightspeed Venture Partners is a multi-stage venture capital firm focused on accelerating disruptive innovations and trends in the Enterprise and Consumer sectors. Over the past two decades, the Lightspeed team has backed hundreds of entrepreneurs and helped build more than 400 companies globally, including Snap, Nest, Nutanix, AppDynamics, MuleSoft, OYO, Guardant, Affirm, and GrubHub. Lightspeed and its affiliates currently manage $10.5B across the global Lightspeed platform, with investment professionals and advisors in Silicon Valley, Israel, India, China, Southeast Asia, and Europe.
Previous Episodes You May Enjoy:
Fabrice Grinda, Founding Partner at FJ Labs – Serial Entrepreneur & Investor in 700 Startups!
Revolutionizing Working Capital Financing - Sandy Kemper, Founder & CEO of C2FO
Anish Acharya, General Partner at Andreessen Horowitz - Doubling Down on Fintech
Building Unicorns and Redefining Online Banking - Renaud Laplanche, Upgrade CEO/Co-Founder
Building Big Things and Moving Fast - Allison Barr Allen, Co-Founder/COO at Fast
Jackie Reses - Leadership Lessons, Fintech Innovation, & Helping Small Businesses
Entrepreneurship Lessons with Brian Requarth, Co-Founder of VivaReal & Latitud
Miguel Armaza is Co-Host of the Wharton Fintech Podcast and Co-Founder of Gilgamesh Ventures, a seed-stage investment fund focused on fintech in the Americas.