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Lately, I’ve been thinking about what really drives systemic change in venture — not lofty slogans, but the small, structural choices that compound into outsized impact.
At Alma Angels, a few patterns keep showing up. They look tactical in the moment, but in hindsight, they’re transformative:
▪️ Measure impact in deals, not press.
A traditional syndicate might do 5–15 investments a year. Alma Angels did 68 last year alone. Scale matters.
▪️ Start at the cap table.
Wealth at the early stage is created as a founder or as an investor. If women aren’t in those positions, they’re locked out of the biggest driver of wealth creation.
▪️ Design away bias.
Instead of one syndicate lead deciding, every deal is open to all members. With 550+ angels, bias gets diluted and different kinds of companies get a shot.
▪️ Community is capital.
The biggest value-add isn’t always the largest check. Founders point to Alma angels as the most helpful on their cap table — doors opened, not just money wired.
▪️ Broadening who gets funded compounds returns.
Women-founded businesses deliver 78% ROI vs. 31% for all-male teams. Less capital, more creativity, faster profitability — the math is on their side.
▪️ Play long-term games.
This isn’t about a single round. It’s about building 10,000 angels backing 1,000 companies every year — and generating $1 trillion in women-led wealth by 2050.
The lesson: systemic change doesn’t happen in headlines. It happens in repeated behavior, in how capital is allocated, in who gets the chance to build.
By Rohit YadavLately, I’ve been thinking about what really drives systemic change in venture — not lofty slogans, but the small, structural choices that compound into outsized impact.
At Alma Angels, a few patterns keep showing up. They look tactical in the moment, but in hindsight, they’re transformative:
▪️ Measure impact in deals, not press.
A traditional syndicate might do 5–15 investments a year. Alma Angels did 68 last year alone. Scale matters.
▪️ Start at the cap table.
Wealth at the early stage is created as a founder or as an investor. If women aren’t in those positions, they’re locked out of the biggest driver of wealth creation.
▪️ Design away bias.
Instead of one syndicate lead deciding, every deal is open to all members. With 550+ angels, bias gets diluted and different kinds of companies get a shot.
▪️ Community is capital.
The biggest value-add isn’t always the largest check. Founders point to Alma angels as the most helpful on their cap table — doors opened, not just money wired.
▪️ Broadening who gets funded compounds returns.
Women-founded businesses deliver 78% ROI vs. 31% for all-male teams. Less capital, more creativity, faster profitability — the math is on their side.
▪️ Play long-term games.
This isn’t about a single round. It’s about building 10,000 angels backing 1,000 companies every year — and generating $1 trillion in women-led wealth by 2050.
The lesson: systemic change doesn’t happen in headlines. It happens in repeated behavior, in how capital is allocated, in who gets the chance to build.