These firms are usually formed by an individual or a small group that have the ability to spot successful inventions. These individuals come together to create a portfolio, usually by they themselves creating a successful product, and then use this portfolio to gain necessary limited partners. These limited partners will provide the fund for venture capitalist firms to then take on clients. As is the case of Marc Andreessen, one of the most successful venture capitalists in the past years, “Andreessen started the fund because he saw a chance to exploit a shift in the startup milieu” (Fortune.com). Thus, venture capitalists are they themselves entrepreneurs, they use the knowledge that they own to help others build their own …show more content…
Berline explains this, “As general partner, the venture capitalist plays an active role in managing the portfolio, but the fund’s limited partners are not permitted to play an active management role”. This means, that even though it is their money they can not influence where the money is going. This can be an issue since it takes a long time for venture capitalists to make a return on their initial investment, if they make any at all, “Many pension funds almost overnight found they could no longer count on issues such as auction rate securities or even money market funds.” (upenn.edu). Another issue is that the money may not even go back to the limited partners but might instead go into another investment that will take a long time to mature. In Pennsylvania, specifically, the public pension fund has poured billions into venture capital firms and has seen very little return, “The $51.4 billion Pennsylvania public schools pension system, for instance, which has 46 percent of its assets in alternatives, pays more than $500 million a year in fees. It has earned 3.9 percent annually since 2007” (Creswell). Meaning, that they have spent billions of dollars and have not seen the return rate that they were not