A reflection from one of our Founders
Brian Litvack, the founder of LeagueApps and one of our portfolio companies, reflects on his first investment check from Scout Ventures.
Wednesday, August 3, 2022
We live in uncertain times. Between the global pandemic, an ongoing climate crisis, turbulent markets, and endless political turmoil both foreign and domestic, it’s now more important than ever that America’s entrepreneurs have access to the funding they need to solve our nation’s toughest challenges. This requires new ways of thinking about how to channel financial resources to startups in order to align public goals and private sector incentives.
In practice, the best way to reclaim American dynamism is by providing founders with non-dilutive capital that supports technological innovation in the public interest. Historically, the United States has been the undisputed leader of global innovation, a position it maintained through the strategic deployment of public funds to entrepreneurial scientists and engineers. But in a globalized world where founders have access to unprecedented amounts of capital from sovereign wealth funds and foreign investors, the government can’t take it for granted that our brightest minds will decide to build the next world-changing company in the United States.
Fortunately, the US government has spent decades developing financial infrastructure designed to support our nation’s innovators and direct their talents toward solving problems of vital interest to our national security. The US military, the national labs, and standalone initiatives like the Small Business Innovation Research program all represent deep pools of non-dilutive capital meant for startups working on deep tech. Yet for many founders, accessing this funding can be a mystifying process that saps time and energy that could be spent building. Here are five reasons why improving access to this funding is more important than ever:
Technology doesn’t exist in a vacuum. While many deep tech startups are building technologies that are explicitly for national security purposes, the technological breakthroughs that happen along the way inevitably result in new consumer products that improve the lives of everyday people. One only needs to look at the incredible technology transfer programs at NASA and our national laboratories to see this in action. Non-dilutive government funding for entrepreneurs can activate a similar process in the private sector by incentivizing the creation of deep tech startups that will benefit both the government and consumers.
An abundance of non-dilutive funding is arguably the single most important differentiator the United States has in the war for innovation. It incentivizes founders to work on new solutions to increasingly difficult problems by ensuring they can capture the asymmetric upside if they’re successful, while mitigating the time or budgetary constraints of purely public or private financing. At a time when defense budgets are increasing to meet a litany of geopolitical threats posed by Russia and China, it’s crucial that we lower the barriers to accessing these resources and unleash the vast reserves of American talent. We have a unique lever for innovation. Now it’s time to use it.
At Scout, we pride ourselves on providing the founders we work with access to non-dilutive funding to help support our mission of making the world a better, safer place.
We live in uncertain times. Between the global pandemic, an ongoing climate crisis, turbulent markets, and endless political turmoil both foreign and domestic, it’s now more important than ever that America’s entrepreneurs have access to the funding they need to solve our nation’s toughest challenges. This requires new ways of thinking about how to channel financial resources to startups in order to align public goals and private sector incentives.
In practice, the best way to reclaim American dynamism is by providing founders with non-dilutive capital that supports technological innovation in the public interest. Historically, the United States has been the undisputed leader of global innovation, a position it maintained through the strategic deployment of public funds to entrepreneurial scientists and engineers. But in a globalized world where founders have access to unprecedented amounts of capital from sovereign wealth funds and foreign investors, the government can’t take it for granted that our brightest minds will decide to build the next world-changing company in the United States.
Fortunately, the US government has spent decades developing financial infrastructure designed to support our nation’s innovators and direct their talents toward solving problems of vital interest to our national security. The US military, the national labs, and standalone initiatives like the Small Business Innovation Research program all represent deep pools of non-dilutive capital meant for startups working on deep tech. Yet for many founders, accessing this funding can be a mystifying process that saps time and energy that could be spent building. Here are five reasons why improving access to this funding is more important than ever:
Technology doesn’t exist in a vacuum. While many deep tech startups are building technologies that are explicitly for national security purposes, the technological breakthroughs that happen along the way inevitably result in new consumer products that improve the lives of everyday people. One only needs to look at the incredible technology transfer programs at NASA and our national laboratories to see this in action. Non-dilutive government funding for entrepreneurs can activate a similar process in the private sector by incentivizing the creation of deep tech startups that will benefit both the government and consumers.
An abundance of non-dilutive funding is arguably the single most important differentiator the United States has in the war for innovation. It incentivizes founders to work on new solutions to increasingly difficult problems by ensuring they can capture the asymmetric upside if they’re successful, while mitigating the time or budgetary constraints of purely public or private financing. At a time when defense budgets are increasing to meet a litany of geopolitical threats posed by Russia and China, it’s crucial that we lower the barriers to accessing these resources and unleash the vast reserves of American talent. We have a unique lever for innovation. Now it’s time to use it.
At Scout, we pride ourselves on providing the founders we work with access to non-dilutive funding to help support our mission of making the world a better, safer place.
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