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Tuesday · June 23, 2026 · Issue No. 904
Video

How Andreessen Horowitz Disrupted VC & What’s Coming Next

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The Venture Playbook: How a16z changes the game

In the dimly lit backrooms of Silicon Valley, Andre Horowitz emerged as a revolutionary force that forever altered the landscape of venture capital. Founded in 2009 by Ben Horowitz and Marc Andreessen with a $300 million fund, the firm challenged the status quo of an industry that had become complacent—where established VCs would, in their own words, sit like patrons at "sushi boat restaurants," casually plucking startups from a conveyor belt of opportunities passing before them.

Key Points

  • Breaking the VC mold: While traditional VC firms operated as "department stores" (medium-sized firms with 6-8 partners offering minimal support), a16z pioneered a new "barbell" structure in venture—creating a full-service platform with specialized expertise across multiple domains.

  • Founder-first mentality: The founders leveraged their experiences as entrepreneurs to build a firm that addressed the shortcomings they personally experienced when raising capital, developing services that gave entrepreneurs "the confidence and power of a big-time CEO."

  • Structural vision: Andreessen Horowitz recognized early that software would "eat the world," dramatically increasing the number of potential technology winners beyond the historical norm of just 15 companies per year reaching $100M in revenue.

  • Intentional marketing: They deliberately broke industry norms by building a brand and marketing their firm—landing on magazine covers when such media still mattered—while other VCs maintained an intentional low profile born from antiquated notions of discretion.

The Revolutionary Platform Approach

The most profound insight behind a16z's success lies in their structural understanding of how industries evolve. As Ben Horowitz explained, they recognized a pattern where maturing industries tend to "bifurcate" from middle-market players into either high-scale platforms or specialized boutiques—something that had occurred in retail, advertising, law, investment banking, and countless other sectors, yet hadn't happened in venture capital.

This wasn't merely theoretical—it informed their entire organizational design. While competitors maintained loose partnerships with "shared economics and shared control," a16z established centralized decision-making that enabled them to restructure and deploy specialized teams against emerging opportunities. This approach proved prescient

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