What is a venture?
A venture, in the startup and investment context, is a new business undertaking that combines uncertainty, ambition for non-linear growth and (typically) external capital. The word is etymologically tied to “adventure” — a willingness to bear risk for a disproportionate potential return. Venture capital (VC), venture-backed company, joint venture and corporate venture all stem from this core meaning.
What makes something a “venture” rather than a “business”
- High uncertainty: the team is creating new value where the product, market or both are unproven.
- Non-linear ambition: the target is exponential growth, not steady linear progress.
- External capital: the cash flow profile (loss for years, then large returns) requires patient capital — typically institutional venture funds.
- Power-law outcomes: most ventures fail; a few generate outsized returns that pay for the rest. This shapes the entire investor risk model.
Venture vs. related concepts
- Venture vs. startup: startup describes the company at its formative stage; venture describes the type of undertaking. A bootstrapped startup is still a startup; a venture-backed one is a venture.
- Venture vs. SMB: small and medium businesses target sustainable, often local profitability; ventures target scalable, often global growth.
- Venture vs. joint venture: a joint venture is a specific structure where two or more parties co-invest in a single project or company.
The venture financing model
Venture capital funds raise capital from limited partners (LPs) — pensions, endowments, family offices — and deploy it across a portfolio of high-risk, high-potential companies. Each fund typically targets 20–30 investments, expecting 70%+ to fail and 1–3 to return more than the full fund. This power-law shape drives the willingness to accept high failure rates in pursuit of unicorn outcomes.
Implications for founders
Choosing the venture path is choosing a specific risk profile and investor expectation set. Venture capital is not free money — it commits the company to grow at a pace and to an outcome size that justifies the LPs’ allocation. For business models that cannot reach venture-scale returns, alternative capital (debt, revenue-based financing, bootstrapping) preserves more optionality.
Do: understand the implicit growth and exit expectations of any venture funding round before signing the term sheet.
Don’t: raise venture capital for a business that cannot plausibly become a fund-returner — the misalignment of expectations destroys companies.