EU CVC

The European VC

The go-to CVC Podcast in Europe.

  1. EU CVC | E059 | Alex Dang, The Venture Mindset: How Corporates Can Beat VCs in the AI Race – The Venture Mindset in Action

    1 DAY AGO

    EU CVC | E059 | Alex Dang, The Venture Mindset: How Corporates Can Beat VCs in the AI Race – The Venture Mindset in Action

    Welcome to another episode of the EUVC Podcast! Today, we’re diving into How Corporates Might just be able Beat VCs in the AI Race. Or maybe more importantly, how we can collaborate. Our guest is Alex Dang, co-author of the bestselling book The Venture Mindset: How to Make Smarter Bets and Achieve Extraordinary Growth. Alex is a seasoned technology executive and innovation advisor with over two decades of experience. He was a product leader at Amazon, where he launched new businesses across e-commerce, supply chain, and AI; a partner at McKinsey, helping Fortune 500 companies build digital ventures; and today advises corporate leaders and investors on AI strategies, venture building, and applying VC principles to large organizations. In this conversation, Alex shares provocative insights on why the venture mindset is now non-negotiable for corporates in the AI era, where incumbents hold hidden advantages over VCs, and how to avoid “innovation theater” while turning data, distribution, and scale into real venture wins. Let’s jump in! Here’s what’s covered: 01:56 | The Venture Mindset in one frame with nine principles from 20 years of Stanford VC research: uncertainty → portfolios → outliers 03:44 | The post-book update Alex wishes he had added time compression: “days, not weeks,” and the rise of the “one slice team” 05:53 | Venture mindset applied to AI 07:34 | Why “adding AI” is the wrong framing; start customer-backward, not tech-backward 08:43 | “AI theater”, innovation theater and press release strategies vs real product value 11:19 | The European corporate trap: regulation, consensus, and downside protection as the enemy of transformation 11:56 | The right AI rollout sequence with start in back office to learn and protect trust, then go customer-facing at scale 15:21 | Why CVCs die after 3.7 years: incentives, leadership fear, and why corporate venturing fails structurally 17:24 | AI is now the world’s most democratized intelligence: everyone has the same tools; the gap is execution 18:47 | Where corporates fit in venture + startup ecosystems: strengths: data, distribution, enterprise scale 20:38 | When corporates should build in-house, when to partner, and why AI must become an internal muscle 25:24 | Incentives drive behavior: why executives won’t take venture-style risks unless failure is structurally safe 28:18 | AI-native teams and corporate reskilling among smaller, senior teams + digital workers replacing junior tasks 35:24 | What happens to the average corporate employee: tasks disappear, workflows evolve, but people still matter 38:50 | If Alex were CEO: how to move a workforce into an AI-safe future and target 25% profit uplift through AI 44:01 | Most counterintuitive venture principle — “drop bad ideas fast” and why persistence is sometimes the wrong discipline 46:05 | What top CEOs are doing right now: coding with Claude, learning by building, and staying close to users 49:00 | The compounding effect: “what was impossible 6 months ago is normal today” and why constant feedback loops win

    49 min
  2. EU CVC | E058 | Axel Deniz, Bosch Business Innovations: Venture Building & How Corporates Can Power Europe’s Tech

    28 JAN

    EU CVC | E058 | Axel Deniz, Bosch Business Innovations: Venture Building & How Corporates Can Power Europe’s Tech

    Welcome back to the EUVC Corporate Podcast. This week, Jeppe sits down with Axel Deniz, CEO of Bosch Business Innovations and Head of Venture Building at Bosch.Axel is building Bosch’s venture-building engine with a clear mandate: get Bosch technology out into the world, through founder-led spinouts, joint ventures, and seed rounds that can stand on their own with external investors. With ~80,000 active patents, 20 new patents per day, and 20,000 researchers globally, Bosch has the assets. Axel’s job is turning them into investible companies.🎧 Here’s what’s covered:02:30 Bosch’s unfair advantage: 80k patents, 20 patents/day, 20k researchers04:10 Horizon 2/3: building for 2030–2035 where incumbents can’t reach05:30 Hybrid execution: not all in-house, not all studio but a blended model06:25 Problem definition: Bosch theses + founders bringing problems from outside08:25 Stage gates: “get to no fast” + external validation early09:05 Gate #1: attracting “triple-A founders” before anything else10:35 Founder-led 80/20 vs joint ventures when tech risk is still high13:10 Venture market fit: choosing where to build is a venture builder superpower16:20 Founder acquisition: why mediocre pre-seed talent is the biggest risk23:05 Working with scale-ups: co-create instead of buying or minority investing24:15 University engine: 5–6 deep partnerships (Carnegie Mellon example)27:15 Biggest surprises: founder scarcity and portfolio restructuring complexity29:05 Axel’s advice to founders: don’t start deep tech from scratch30:30 Axel’s advice to VCs: don’t underestimate corporates’ learning curve32:00 Axel’s background: founder → Silicon Valley → PWC CVC → Bosch35:15 Career advice: no cookie-cutter route and trust your gut sometimes37:10 How founders can engage: programs + direct outreach on LinkedIn#EUVC #VC #VentureCapital #Investing #TheEuropeanVC #Podcast #Tech #Startup

    33 min
  3. EUCVC | E057 | Emil Eifrem, Neo4j: Building the AI Infrastructure Layer: Neo4j’s $100M Bet

    14 JAN

    EUCVC | E057 | Emil Eifrem, Neo4j: Building the AI Infrastructure Layer: Neo4j’s $100M Bet

    Welcome back to another episode of the EUVC Podcast. Today, Jeppe sits down with Emil Eifrem, founder & CEO of Neo4j, the world’s leading graph database and a core infrastructure layer for AI applications used by all 20 of the top US banks, 9 of 10 global pharma giants, and every major automotive OEM. Emil recently announced a $100M global startup program to back founders building the next generation of AI-native products on top of graph technology — from knowledge graphs to hallucination-free LLMs. We delve into why graph thinking matters now, how Neo4j came of age during the Panama Papers investigation, and why Europe is better positioned than people think to compete in the AI platform shift. Here’s what’s covered: 02:00 — The Panama Papers “Coming Out Party” How journalists used Neo4j to uncover 7-layer-deep financial relationships invisible to traditional databases — and why it triggered a wave of global adoption. 06:40 — Why Graphs Are the Missing Link for AI Knowledge, meaning, context, and relationships: why LLMs without structured knowledge graphs hallucinate. 08:50 — The $100M Startup Program Why Neo4j is returning to its roots to support AI-native founders — and why the packaging for startups had to change. 12:00 — What Founders Get Free Aura credits, dedicated graph engineers, joint GTM, and access to the world’s largest graph developer community. 14:30 — Early Traction: 300+ Startups in Weeks Why early demand is far ahead of expectations — and the kinds of companies applying. 16:10 — Community as a Strategic Moat 500+ annual global events, deep developer love, and why skill availability is now a CIO-level buying criterion. 19:00 — Building Deep Tech in Europe Why Neo4j kept engineering in Europe, how the ecosystem matured, and what today’s founders can learn. 22:00 — Regulation & Competitiveness Will Europe overregulate itself out of the AI race? Emil’s perspective on models vs infrastructure vs applications. 23:40 — The Future of AI Infrastructure Why every company must rethink its stack — and why the biggest threat is assuming your business will survive without change.

    25 min
  4. EU CVC | E056 | The CVC Wind-Down Playbook: Martin Scherrer, Redstone VC

    28/11/2025

    EU CVC | E056 | The CVC Wind-Down Playbook: Martin Scherrer, Redstone VC

    Corporate venture capital isn’t just having “a bit of VC on the side.” Done well, it’s a strategic lens on the future. Done badly, it’s a short-lived pet project with a half-life of 3.7 years and a trail of confused founders and annoyed co-investors.In this episode, we sit down with Martin Scherrer, Partner & Head of Managed Funds at Redstone, alongside our own CVC lead Jeppe Høier, to unpack what really happens when corporates leave venture — and how to do it without destroying value or reputation.Redstone runs a dual model: classic VC funds + “VC-as-a-Service” for corporates and family offices. Martin himself has lived three lives:Inside Swiss Re’s CVC (later shut down)As a founder of an insurtech in SwitzerlandNow as VC & fund manager at Redstone across multiple corporate mandates.🎧 Here’s what’s covered:01:37 Why Martin? Why now? — Jeppe on Redstone’s VC-as-a-service role, his history with them, and why Martin is the go-to voice on CVC secondaries.02:50 Redstone in both worlds — Martin explains Redstone as a VC + CVC-as-a-service platform with deep corporate, VC, and founder roots.06:12 Portfolio thinking 101 — Why corporates underestimate startup investing, ignore the J-curve, and must commit to true portfolio construction + financial KPIs.09:37 Runoff vs. selling the bag — Score case: options to sell the whole portfolio at a 50–80% NAV discount vs. patient value-maximising runoff.13:54 Spin-outs & resilience — How CVCs can evolve into mixed-LP or fully independent VC funds (Swisscom Ventures, Berliner Volksbank → Redstone Fintech III).18:27 Follow-ons in “shutdown mode” — Why corporates sometimes should still fund follow-ons in runoff to unlock new investors and protect upside.20:25 Designing the partnership — Governance, IC design, reporting (e.g. IFRS 9), and performance-based structures that align Redstone and corporates.31:41 Managing vs. buying portfolios — How Redstone runs CVC runoff as an external manager with fees + carry, versus secondary buyers who acquire the assets outright.44:02 How to avoid a wind-down — The “gold standard”: bring in third-party LPs, avoid annual-budget setups, ringfence capital in a dedicated entity, and keep exec sponsors close.

    42 min
  5. EU CVC | E055 | EUCVC Summit 2025: Christian Tang-Jespersen (ACME) & Claus Gregersen (Augustinus Fabrikker): Global Ambition in an Age of Sovereignty

    05/11/2025

    EU CVC | E055 | EUCVC Summit 2025: Christian Tang-Jespersen (ACME) & Claus Gregersen (Augustinus Fabrikker): Global Ambition in an Age of Sovereignty

    Welcome back to the EUCVC Summit Talks, where we bring you candid conversations with Europe’s leading founders, corporate leaders, and investors shaping the future of venture collaboration. In this session, Christian Tang-Jespersen, Partner at San Francisco–based ACME, and Claus Gregersen, CEO of the 275-year-old evergreen investor Augustinus Fabrikker, explore what global ambition really means in today’s venture landscape. From recalibrating US expansion strategies to navigating sovereignty, trade tensions, and structural resets, they unpack how investors and founders must adapt to thrive in a more complex—but still interconnected—world. 🎧 Here’s what’s covered: 00:00 Setting the stage: Cycles, crises, and why this downturn feels different. 02:00 Structural reset, not just another downturn—why waiting for “normal” is not an option. 03:30 Investors as navigators, not moral arbiters—what it means in practice. 04:15 Why the US remains critical: learning, scaling, and surviving tough competition. 06:00 Page nine of every pitch deck: the inevitable US expansion slide. 07:20 Trade tensions vs. venture building—why early-stage models aren’t derailed by politics. 08:30 The importance of value-adding capital—choose partners for impact, not geography. 09:15 Lessons from COVID and defense: building lean, fast, and resilient. 10:00 Closing thoughts: capital may be scarcer, but ambition must remain global.

    10 min
  6. EU CVC | E054 | EUCVC Summit 2025: Francesco Di Lorenzo, Copenhagen Business School: Nordic CVC Insights

    03/11/2025

    EU CVC | E054 | EUCVC Summit 2025: Francesco Di Lorenzo, Copenhagen Business School: Nordic CVC Insights

    Welcome back to the EUCVC Summit Talks, where we spotlight Europe’s corporate venture leaders, founders, and academics shaping the future of venture collaboration. In this episode, Francesco Di Lorenzo, Associate Professor at Copenhagen Business School, takes the stage to share fresh research on the state of corporate venture capital (CVC) in the Nordics. From Sweden to Denmark, Francesco explores how corporates are experimenting with different venturing models, what makes CVC effective, and why Nordic corporates are some of Europe’s most important venture partners. Rather than polished slides, Francesco offers candid reflections from the Summit itself: the open questions corporates face, the trade-offs in structuring CVC units, and why cultural change in the boardroom is key if corporate venturing is to succeed long-term. 🎧 Here’s what’s covered 00:10 Nordic snapshot — Why the region punches above its weight in tech and CVC. 01:00 Tools beyond CVC — Incubators, accelerators, and venture clienting: complementary or conflicting? 03:00 The CVC effect — Beyond capital: what corporates bring to the table (and why it matters). 05:00 Measuring success — Why CVC units last only 3.7 years on average and the difficulty of proving ROI. 07:00 Smart money vs. just money — How engineer exchanges and board participation can be more impactful than capital alone. 08:00 Venture clienting — A rising model where corporates act as first customers instead of investors—and the risks it carries. 10:00 Governance cycles — Why CVC units live and die with CEO tenure, and why board-level protection is essential. 11:00 Collaboration vs. competition — What data says about corporates co-investing (and when they don’t). 13:00 Nordic findings — Early results from research in Norway, Finland, and Sweden: small portfolios, early-stage focus, and bureaucracy as the top blocker. 14:00 AI paradox — Corporates investing in AI startups but cutting internal AI budgets—what this signals for the future.

    15 min
  7. EU CVC | E052 | EUCVC Summit 2025: Anne C. Fleischer, Novo Nordisk & Henrijette Richter, Sofinnova Partners: AI, Trust & the Future of Health

    31/10/2025

    EU CVC | E052 | EUCVC Summit 2025: Anne C. Fleischer, Novo Nordisk & Henrijette Richter, Sofinnova Partners: AI, Trust & the Future of Health

    Anne C. Fleischer (Global VP of Consumer Engagement & New Business Models at Novo Nordisk) and Henrijette Richter (Managing Partner at Sofinnova Partners) join Jeppe Høier on stage at the EUCVC Summit 2025 to explore how corporates and VCs are shaping the next wave of health innovation. From personalized treatments powered by AI, to the crucial role of data rights and trust in scaling digital health, Anne and Henrijette share hard-won insights on how pharma and venture can collaborate without killing speed or innovation. They discuss the “impatience economy,” where patients increasingly demand fast, personalized solutions, and why collaboration across startups, corporates, and investors is essential to turn science into scalable business models. 🎧 Here’s what’s covered 00:10 The next wave of health innovation — AI, deep tech, and strategic investment. 01:00 Beyond the pill — Novo Nordisk’s vision for personalized, AI-driven patient care. 03:00 Investor lens — what separates fundable AI health companies from “science projects.” 04:00 Data rights & distribution — why exclusivity and integration pathways are critical. 05:00 Corporate–startup collaboration — Novo Nordisk’s partner platform for scaling innovation. 06:00 Scaling globally from day one — why diversified data and pharma channels matter. 07:00 The “translator role” — people who speak both startup and corporate languages. 08:00 The impatience economy — consumerization of health and the risks of losing trust. 09:00 Looking ahead — specificity for patients as the next frontier in health innovation.

    9 min

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The go-to CVC Podcast in Europe.