The number of โoperator VCsโ โ former founders turned VCs โ in Europe in recent years. This is common in the U.S., where the majority of VCs are former founders. The reverse is true in Europe, where most come from banking or finance. Recent examples in Europe include Wise founder Taavet Hinrikus, Glovo founder Oscar Pierre (Yellow Fund), and Pitch founder Christian Reber.
After exiting MuleSoft to Salesforce in 2018 for a cool $6.5 billion, founder Ross Mason set up DIG Ventures initially as a family office and later transitioning it to VC. He did this with co-founder and general partnerย Melissa Klinger, the former U.K. sales lead at MuleSoft. DIG has now launched its second โย and first institutional โ fund closing out at $100 million, to invest in B2B SaaS, AI, and cloud infrastructure startups, at pre-seed and seed stages, mainly across Europe, but also considering startups located in Israel and the U.S.
The new fund is backed by LPs including The Hillman Company, Granite Capital,ย Sofina,ย andย Grove Street.ย The round also drew participation fromย Datadog founderย Olivier Pomelย and a number ofย MuleSoft executives, among others.ย
With the idea that it is a fund built by former startup operators, DIG positions itself as a hands-on, operator-led fund capable of a range of things, such go-to-market strategy and execution.
Mason and Klinger are joined by:ย Rytis Vitkauskas, founder ofย YPlanย (acquired by Time Out) and former partner at Lightspeed; andย Scott Grimes, co-founder ofย Stackinโย andย Uproxxย (acquired by Warner Music).
The portfolio currently includesย People.aiย andย Karat, as well asย Bubble,ย ComplyAdvantage,ย PlanetScale,ย Rasa,ย Taktile,ย Rossum,ย Flock,ย andย Prophecy.ย
This second fund has already started deploying capital from the fund, investing in such companies as observability platformย Dash0, AI orchestration platformย Nexos.ai, and enterprise middleware offeringย PolyAPI.
โAfter MuleSoft, I saw a big opportunity to come back to Europe and build an operator-led fund,โ Mason told TechCrunch. โAnd we managed to figure out a strategy where we could pick and meet founders quicker and earlier than most other funds.โ
โFounders tell us that we just engage with them on a conversational level, because weโve come out of MuleSoft โฆ We like taking very technical products and selling them well. And that is half the battle in this space,โ Klinger added.
She said highly technical products are the fundโs sweet spot, but that โgo to marketโ is also something DIG knows intimately. โGoing from zero to one and actually helping package that and selling it is not something any VC can do โ but we can,โ Klinger said.
Mason said he sees the next big shift being in enterprises building their own AI. โItโs a new arms race, especially with LLMs being built and run within enterprises โฆ The foundation layer isnโt done yet, even though every vendor would love you to think it is. A lot will become packaged Open Source because they donโt want to send their data off to an LLM in the cloud where they have no control over where the information goes.โ
Klinger said she thinks Europe has unrealized strengths in AI. โI think Europeโs a real dark horse in AI. Weโve got the talent at half the cost of the US. A lot of the brilliant research is coming out of our universities. The challenge we have is raising the amount of money that some of these AI-driven plays will need.โ
In the U.S., former founders/operators (e.g. Peter Thiel, Paul Graham, Marc Andreessen) have become highly influential venture capitalists. And with geopolitics playing havoc with economies at the same time as strong early-stage momentum appearing in Europe, this might well become the โoperator VCโ market.ย


