Absolutely outstanding piece on 
the history of the venture capital industry. The whole thing is worth reading just for the quotes across the decades, but I'll post the final two paragraphs here:
Saying VCs used to take high technical risk and now take high market 
risk is both an overly optimistic view of the past–the mythical golden 
age of heroic VCs championing the development of new technologies–and an
 overly optimistic view of the present–gutsy VCs funding radical 
innovations that create entirely new markets. Neither of these things is
 true. VCs have never funded technical risk and they are not now funding
 market risk.
 The VC community is purposely avoiding risk because we think we can 
make good returns without taking it. The lesson of the 1980s is that no 
matter how appealing this fantasy is, it’s still a fantasy. 
Tomorrow 
People in the VC industry talk about the ’60s, when institutional 
venture capital took off. They talk about the ’70s, when iconic 
companies like Apple and Genentech were founded and the microcomputer 
industry emerged. They talk about the ’90s and the Internet bubble. They
 don’t talk about the ’80s; the ’80s are the missing piece of the 
puzzle. You can have lots of plausible theories about what venture 
capitalists as a class can do to get good returns, until you take the 
1980s into account. Then you can only have one: the only thing VCs can 
control that will improve their outcomes is having enough guts to bet on
 markets that don’t yet exist. Everything else is noise. 
The 1990s are not our map, the 1980s are. Don’t worry about 
irrational exuberance fueling a bubble, that is not what is happening. 
Worry about fear of risk. We know where that leads: once again straight 
into the ditch.
What's creating new markets?
 
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