Building for the Long Tail
๐๐พ Welcome Back! What to Expect in This Month's Newsletter
Happy Monday, folks! We have some exciting news at The SMB Syndicate - we're growing! Tessa Flippin has joined the team as a core contributor. She has a unique SMB focus for her newly minted fund, Capitalize VC, and we are so lucky to have her! Austin will be stepping back as an advisor and collaborator. We're so grateful for all of his contributions over the past year!
๐ What's New With the Crew?
Jen and Sydney's alma mater, Berkeley Haas, just ranked #3 for MBA programs that produce the most unicorns per 1000 students. With plenty more in the hopper we expect to take over the #1 spot soon.
Tessa launched her venture capital firm Capitalize VC this week! She'll be investing in both high-growth technology ventures through traditional venture capital structures and scalable lifestyle brands (SMBs!) through a revenue-based financing model. Using this unique model, Capitalize VC aims to deliver both traditional VC returns and the opportunity for earlier liquidity for investors.
๐ฐ SMB News Roundup
GGV Capital will host their 3rd annual SMB tech summit virtually on Tuesday, October 26th to celebrate SMBs and the technology that powers them! They'll bring together the SMBTech community of founders, leaders, investors to discuss the massive opportunity ahead for SMB tech. You can learn more and RSVP here!
The Instagram and Facebook outage earlier this month that lasted more than six hours made SMBs question their reliance on the the platforms. "The impact of the outage on businesses who use Facebook products has yet to be quantified, but early estimates of the cost to the social media giant put the losses at $100 million." Instagram's Outage Convinced Small Business Owners That They Need Their Own Websites
Fintech and payments platforms must continue to evolve as the complexity of SMB business needs deepen. SMBs Demand Banking, Payments, Software
Congrats to The Mom Project on raising their $80M Series C. The Mom Project is a marketplace connecting its community of over 500,000 moms, dads and allies with flexible work opportunities at F500s and SMBs.
Congrats to eVisit on raising their $45M Series B. eVisit is a telemedicine patient engagement platform for SMB healthcare practices.
โ๐พDeep Diligence
This month, we're excited to cross post something that one of our own - Sydney Thomas - wrote for her firmโs Substack. Long Tail investing is something we think a lot about here at SMB Syndicate and we're excited to share some lessons learned with this post.
Key Diligence Questions for Companies Building for the Long Tail
"Today, I want to talk to you about why I am so excited to invest in companies that are building for the long tail and share my process for doing diligence on these companies with the intention of inspiring other investors to explore this space.
What is the โlong tailโ? Well, it can mean a lot of things to different people. To me, the long tail is a shorthand for describing this chart which has stubbornly stood the test of time1.
When I refer to the long tail, Iโm literally referring to my family. I am someone who proudly identifies as having family across the entire income ladder. A short-hand that writer Tressie McMillan Cottom uses for this is, โIโm someone with cousinsโ2. Wal-Mart shoppers, social workers, teachers, truck drivers, small business owners, construction workers, Dunkin Donuts lovers, rentersโฆ. Iโm interested in companies that are making life better for these folks.
If you've spoken with me before, you know that this work is a minor - ok major - obsession of mine. Iโve spent my entire decade-long career on this work and with this focus. I started my career interning for Congresswoman Barbara Lee where I was thrust into healthcare reform - it was the summer the ACA was passed. I moved on to working on tax legislation, which meant lobbying for a more progressive tax bill. I then moved on to help fundraise $50M to support NYC public schools. From there, I worked across mission-driven companies both large and small where I wore a lot of hats - helping with launch strategies, R&D and marketing.
After that, I started at Precursor where I worked with the founder, Charles, to build, launch and invest 3 funds totaling $100M+ in AUM and including 250+ companies. While early in my career, I have now spent the past 5 years researching, learning and reviewing companies that are building for the long tail. Over that time, I have reviewed thousands of companies in this space, made a podcast featuring some of them and invested in many of them as well.
Ok, letโs dig into how I do diligence on these companiesโฆ
1) Are you building on top of a broken legacy system or building a new system?
This is the first question I ask myself when reviewing a company building for the long tail. I have talked to a few folks who are building companies in this space that have accepted as true, the status quo. And what they're building is a way to make the status quo more palatable for the long tail.
I think this is short-sighted. If you think the system is messed up, why not create a new one? We are in business to make exponential returns which means taking bets on companies taking large swings at the bat. Iโm only interested in the big swings.
A great example of a company in the portfolio that Iโve invested in that speaks to this isย Mira. Healthcare insurance is so expensive for so many that it is no longer available to provide preventative services for many people. So Mira built an entirely new system that does not rely on healthcare insurance to offer preventative services for many who previously had no other options.
When you decide to enable the status quo, instead of disrupt it, you are asking outsiders to invest in the status quo. And you are also investing in a system that has a capped outcome of returns. When you are disrupting the system, you provide an opportunity to the long-tail consumer to tap into exponential wealth instead of just a capped take rate, or rent, that was extracted from (and relies on) an imperfect system.
If you want to go deeper on this topic, another place to start is Meera Clarkโs recent post onย Identity Aligned Interventions. I loved how what she wrote spoke to the importance of building better systems from the ground up can decrease costs and improve outcomes.
2) How does what youโre building fit into its historical context?
This leads us well into the second point. When you are building for the long-tail, history is your friend. Because the communities you are targeting have long been exploited, there is unfortunately a long history of distrust.
According to Pew Research Center, people in the long tail generally have lower levels of personal trust than other Americans.
So when you are building something that is supposed to help this community, you are building something that is speaking in concert with that history. A company that I think does this well isย Loop. The co-foundersย talk openlyย about how legacy auto insurance has been created to discriminate against people for silly things like not being married. So they built a new insurance company from scratch. Another company in the portfolio that I think does this well isย Guava. Kelly, the founder, has spent years studying how legacy financial products have disenfranchised Black small business owners and so she decided to build a new one from the ground up.
Which leads me easily into the next point...
3)ย Has the founder built significant empathy for the core user?
Who is selling is just as important as what you're selling. How have you incorporated people from the communities you hope to serve into your leadership team? If you haven't, how do you expect people from the communities you hope to serve to trust you? The leadership team must reflect the demographics of the communities you are selling to. Due to the historical distrust and general savviness of who you are selling to, the sale needs to be based more on a true relationship, not just an advertisement. Google and Facebook ads aren't going to work here. The marketing strategy needs to look more like Stacey Abrams' Fair Fight Campaign in GA and less like a retargeting campaign.
I remember when I was an intern at Kimberly Clark. I worked on their toilet paper brand and spent basically the entire summer interviewing different people in each department. I remember when I spoke to a sales representative who did in-person store-to-store sales and reviewed his deck. He openly shared that the brand manager teams were not a fan of his deck, but it didn't matter because he wasn't selling toilet paper to brand manager teams. He was selling it to small business owners of independent retailers. They needed to hear a different message. I think so much of that story applies here. Know who your customer is and figure out how to meet them where they are. Your customers are not VCs or other tech people, so don't build for them.
Jimmy atย Providersย is a great example of someone who has done this well. Iย interviewed him almost 4 years agoย and was impressed with how genuinely curious and humble he was when interviewing and learning from his consumer. It led him to build a truly magnificent company that Iโve been really impressed with since his early days.
I hope this is helpful context of how I think about the long-tail companies I diligence. If you are an investor in companies here, I'd love to hear how you think about in your diligence process! Please e-mail me atย sydney@precursorvc.com. I plan to do additional posts on this topic and would love to feature you.
Thank you Nicole Jarbo, Austin Clements, Jennifer Richard & Marina Girgis who reviewed and offered feedback on earlier versions of this article.ย Thank you also to Cindy Heredia who created the beautiful image I used at the top of the article.
https://hbr.org/2002/04/wealth-happens
"Having cousins is a stand-in for culture, of course. It could be something else, like โโฆpeople who know someone who owes a cash-checking spot money.โ But I like cousins. It captures something at the intersection of race, ethnicity, nationality, citizenship, class, and identity.โ - Tressie McMillan Cottom in her Substack, Essayingย
Thatโs all for this month, folks! Would love to hear your comments below.
Jen, Sydney & Tessa