Categories: Tech & Society

Exclusive: Google Ventures Beefs Up Fund Size to $300 Million a Year

Google will increase the cash it allocates to its venture-capital arm to up to $300 million a year from $200 million, catapulting Google Ventures into the top echelon of corporate venture-capital funds.

Access to that sizeable checkbook means Google Ventures will be able to invest in more later-stage financing rounds, which tend to be in the tens of millions of dollars or more per investor.

It puts the firm on the same footing as more established corporate venture funds such as Intel’s Intel Capital, which typically invests $300-$500 million a year.

“It puts a lot more wood behind the arrow if we need it,” said Bill Maris, managing partner of Google Ventures.

Part of the rationale behind the increase is that Google Ventures is a relatively young firm, founded in 2009. Some of the companies it backed two or three years ago are now at later stages, potentially requiring larger cash infusions to grow further.

Google Ventures has taken an eclectic approach, investing in a broad spectrum of companies ranging from medicine to clean power to coupon companies.

Every year, it typically funds 40-50 “seed-stage” deals where it invests $250,000 or less in a company, and perhaps around 15 deals where it invests up to $10 million, Maris said. It aims to complete one or two deals annually in the $20-$50 million range, Maris said.

LACKING SUPERSTARS

Some of its investments include Nest, a smart-thermostat company; Foundation Medicine, which applies genomic analysis to cancer care; Relay Rides, a carsharing service; and smart-grid company Silver Spring Networks. Last year, its portfolio company HomeAway raised $216 million in an initial public offering.

Still, Google Ventures lacks superstar companies such as microblogging service Twitter or online bulletin-board company Pinterest. The firm’s recent hiring of high-profile entrepreneur Kevin Rose as a partner could help attract higher-profile deals.

Soon it could have even more cash to play around with. “Larry has repeatedly asked me: ‘What do you think you could do with a billion a year?'” said Maris, referring to Google chief executive Larry Page.

Via: Reuters

Prateek Panda

Prateek is the Founder of TheTechPanda. He's passionate about technology startups and entrepreneurship and enjoys speaking to new founders every day. Prateek has also been consistently regarded as one of the top marketing experts in the region.

Recent Posts

Big AI Is Getting Bigger: Tech Giants Double Down as the Stakes & Scale Explode

The AI race has moved on from experimentation to scale, control, and dominance. From massive…

3 hours ago

Funding alert: Tech startups that raked in moolah this month

The Tech Panda takes a look at recent funding events in the tech ecosystem, seeking…

1 day ago

AI Launches: Enterprise Productivity, Cloud, Fintech, Sales Development Representative & Agent Protector

The Tech Panda takes a look at recent launches in the superfast field of Artificial…

2 days ago

AI Investment Enters a Reality Check as Risk Appetite Cools

The enterprise AI boom isn’t slowing, but the way companies are investing in it is…

2 days ago

Why Every User Sees a Different System in the Same Data Platform

We built one platform. They experience six. I thought I understood how our data platform…

3 days ago

How Global Policies Are Reshaping Indian Startups Expanding to the US

India’s startup journey has moved quickly. In just the last decade, it has grown into…

3 days ago