Owl Have You Know

Making Venture Capital More Accessible feat. Emmanuel Yimfor '20


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At a time when startups are primarily funded by private market investors, who you know has become a critical factor in gaining access to that venture capital. But how does the reliance on alumni and professional networks create barriers for startups from historically disadvantaged groups?


Emmanuel Yimfor ’20 is a finance professor at Columbia Business School and holds a Ph.D. from Rice University. His research focuses on entrepreneurial finance, diversity and private capital markets, with insights into gender and racial disparities in venture capital funding, board representation and how resources could be more equitably allocated.


Emmanuel joins co-host Maya Pomroy ’22 to discuss his career journey from working at a Cameroonian telecommunications company to teaching at some of the top U.S. business schools, as well as his research on the influence of alumni networks in venture capital funding, how AI tools can address biases in lending, and finally how he’s teaming up with his son to bring AI tools to young innovators and entrepreneurs in Cameroon. 


Episode Guide:

01:00 Exploring Entrepreneurial Finance

03:36 The Role of Networks in VC Funding

08:10 Emmanuel's Journey From Cameroon to the U.S.

12:34 The Rice University Experience

15:43 Research on Alumni Networks and Funding

21:49 Algorithmic Bias in Lending

33:17 Empowering Future Innovators in Cameroon

38:42 Final Thoughts and Future Outlook


Owl Have You Know is a production of Rice Business and is produced by University FM.



Episode Quotes:


Rethinking who gets funded in venture capital

31:07: What does good networks mean exactly? If you look at venture capital partners, for example, right? They have worked at McKinsey before they became venture capital partners. So they have worked at certain companies, they have done certain jobs that then led them to become VCs. And so to the extent that we have a lack of representation in this pipeline of jobs that is leading to VC, then the founders that do not come from these same backgrounds do not have as equal access to the partners. And so what that suggests is something very basic, which is like, just rethink the set of deals that you are considering. That might expand the pool of deals that you consider, because, you know, there might be a smart person out there that is maybe not the same race as you, but that has an idea that you really, really want to fund. And that is something that I think, like, everybody would agree with. You know, we want to allocate capital to its most productive uses.


From hard data to meaningful change

29:13: So I have a belief in America, at least based on my life journey, which is: if you work hard for long enough, somebody is going to recognize you and you will be rewarded for it. And so I really believe that America takes in data, thinks about that data for a while to think about whether the research is credible enough, and then, using that data, they are a good Bayesian, so they get a new posterior. They act in a new way that is consistent with what the new before and the new data. And so I think about my role as a researcher as just like, you know, providing that data. Here is the data, and here is what is consistent with what we are doing right now. Now, you know, what you do with that information now is like, you know, update what you are doing in a way that is most consistent with efficient capital allocation—is my hope.


Why Emmanuel finds empirical work so exciting 

21:34: Empirical work is so exciting to me because then you are like, "I am a little bit of a police detective." So you take a little bit of this thing that feels hard to measure, and then you can create hypotheses to link it to the eventual outcomes, to the extent that that thing that is hard to measure is something that is leading to efficient capital allocation. Then, on average, you know, this feeling that you get about founders that are from the same alma mater should lead to good things as opposed to leading to bad things. And so, you know, that is exactly the right spirit of how to think about the work.

Show Links: 

  • Transcript

Guest Profiles:

  • Emmanuel Yimfor | Columbia Business School
  • Emmanuel Yimfor | LinkedIn
  • Emmanuel’s Website 

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