AYSLUM

ASYLUM VENTURES

NICK CHIRLS

BROOKLYN, NY

JON WU

MACKENZIE REGENT

To the

artists -

Asylum Ventures is a new venture firm dedicated to the creative act of building companies. We raised $55 million to invest $1-2 million in early-stage founders practicing the art of making startups.

Origins

In 2007, I was working as a junior trader at Lehman Brothers. I hated it - the dehumanizing culture, lack of creativity, and singular focus on transactions and money left me feeling uninspired and lost. I didn’t know it then, but Lehman’s bankruptcy in ‘08 was a gift, and I left in search of a calling.

I spent a few years meandering - writing, working odd jobs, grad school in Hong Kong - ultimately ending up back in NYC in 2009, having stumbled upon a young, passionate group of misfits that folks were calling “founders.” These founders felt more like artists than assets, more obsessives than executives. They were avant garde, they were building the things they wanted to see in the world, and to my surprise, people called venture capitalists gave them money to pursue their dreams.

I was in love with their fringe eccentricity, extraordinary craftsmanship, and wild ambition. I was in love with the beautiful new works of art they called startups. For the next 15 years, I dedicated my life to working with founders – first at betaworks, and then over three funds at Notation with my partner Alex Lines.

A lot has changed.

The venture ecosystem went from cottage industry outsider to institutional insider – from a nascent practice to a consensus component of institutional portfolios. The result has been the industrialization–and bankerization–of venture. Firms that make dozens or even hundreds of investments per year, relentlessly focused on assets under management, using the same copy-paste transactional language, all drowning in a sea of sameness.

Similarly, what was once a risky leap of faith has become a credentialing factory: accelerators churn out 1,000s of startups per year and fundraising rounds are the new requisite bullets in Linkedin resumes.

The environment today feels eerily similar to the one I left on Wall Street so many years ago.

Intothe Asylum

I’ve always believed the best early-stage founders are artists – they're obsessive about new and unusual things, they feel compelled to bring creation into the world, and they are often misunderstood for long periods of time–even lifetimes. Building businesses is their art.

The good news is that as the new “banks” in venture continue to expand their tentacles, they also enable new alternatives.

What if we treated founders like artists, instead of like assets?

We plan to spend the next decade trying to answer this question.

We think it means:

  • A firm that’s small by design, that makes a handful of investments per year, and that eschews board seats and administrative control.
  • A small team of partners moving mountains to help when asked and otherwise getting out of the way.
  • A place for founders to tune out the noise and focus on making something truly great.
  • A source of calm, trust, and support for founders who are manifesting beauty through one of the hardest things you can do: starting a company.

The path forward

We believe there are exceptional founders who, like us, want to win their own way, who want to work with VCs who care more about them and their companies than assets under management.

If this sounds appealing to you, please get in touch. Whether you're a founder or in between things, we’d love for you to come visit us at our studio in Brooklyn.

And if you would like to join a small team dedicated to the art of venture rather than the business of banking, contact us at hiring@asylum.vc.

- Nick

08/05/24

More beauty and craft,
less factory line

More weird and rebellious,
less safe and derivative

More really hard inspired work,
less status games

More authentic expression of self,
less patagonia vest