TechCrunch News 04月23日 23:21
Fluent Ventures backs replicated startup models in emerging markets
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Fluent Ventures 是一家专注于新兴市场的早期风险投资公司,其核心策略是投资于在新兴市场复制已在西方市场获得成功的商业模式的初创企业。该基金认为,许多最具价值的初创企业并非完全是新概念,而是对已在其他地方取得成功的模式的本地化适应。Fluent Ventures 成立于 2023 年,管理着 4000 万美元的资金,并计划进行 22-25 项投资,重点关注拉丁美洲、中东和北非、非洲、东南亚以及部分美国市场。该基金强调本地化适应和创始人与市场的契合度,并获得了众多独角兽创始人及风投的支持。

💡 Fluent Ventures 是一家全球早期风险投资公司,专注于在新兴市场复制已在西方市场获得成功的商业模式的初创企业。

🌍 该基金的目标市场包括拉丁美洲、中东和北非、非洲、东南亚以及部分美国市场,并计划进行 22-25 项投资。

💰 Fluent Ventures 采取“地理套利”策略,认为成功的初创企业往往是现有模式的本地化适应,而非全新概念。基金会根据本地产品市场匹配度和创始人与市场的契合度进行筛选。

🤝 该公司获得了包括 Nubank 的 David Vélez 等在内的 75 位独角兽创始人及风投的支持,他们为投资组合公司提供人才、融资和扩张方面的帮助。

A new venture firm aims to prove that the most successful startup ideas don’t have to be born or scaled in Silicon Valley.

Fluent Ventures, a global early-stage fund, is backing founders replicating proven business models from Western markets in fintech, digital health, and commerce across emerging markets. The more cynical might describe this as a clone factory, but founder and managing partner Alexandre Lazarow calls the firm’s strategy “geographic alpha.”

Fluent’s premise is that many of the world’s most valuable startups are not entirely new concepts that haven’t been tried before, but more simply, local adaptations of models that have already succeeded elsewhere.

The San Francisco-based firm, founded in 2023, is deploying $40 million across a fund, an incubator, and a structured co-investment vehicle with limited partners. It is writing initial checks of $250,000 to $2 million from pre-seed to Series A and plans to make 22–25 investments, with follow-ons.

“We are contrarians at heart,” said Lazarow, who previously invested at Omidyar Network and Cathay Innovation. “We believe the world’s best innovations are not the exclusive purview of Silicon Valley.” 

Fluent is not exactly working in a bubble: the last decade has seen a massive decentralization in the technology industry. In 2013, just four cities had produced a unicorn. Today, that number exceeds 150.

And that has been on the back of rinse and repeat, with many of the top tech players in emerging markets mirroring successful startups that have been built elsewhere, such as Amazon clones in e-commerce, Stripe clones in payments, and neo-banking apps in fintech. The first breakout neo-bank was Tinkoff from Russia. “That movement scaled globally, and [it] was one of the insights that motivated my investments in Chime in the U.S. and Banco Neon in Brazil,” said Lazarow.

Lazarow insists Fluent doesn’t just copy-paste.

“That rarely works, in our opinion. Local adaptation is critical,” he said.

The firm points to ride-hailing as an example. Uber may have pioneered the category, but in Indonesia, Go-Jek localized it by incorporating motorcycle taxis and super app functionality similar to China’s WeChat. Now Uber Eats is essentially chasing that evolution, Lazarow argues.

To that point, Fluent Ventures, in addition to finding adapted models, screens for local product-market fit and founder-market alignment.

While the firm passed on several construction marketplaces globally, it backed BRKZ in Saudi Arabia, a localized take on India’s Infra.Market. The founder, a former Careem executive, was a strong operator in a region with surging infrastructure demand, Lazarow noted.

Despite calling itself a global fund, Lazarow says Fluent doesn’t aim for equal allocation across every geography. Instead, it goes deeper in the regions where it sees the most potential. Right now, that means a focus on Latin America, MENA, Africa, Southeast Asia, and selective U.S. markets.

Its current portfolio includes Minu, a Mexican employee wellness platform; Sabi, a Nigerian B2B commerce startup; Prima, a Brazil-based industrial marketplace; and Baton, a U.S. M&A platform for SMBs.

The firm says these companies have raised multiple follow-on rounds since Fluent’s early checks. Collectively, startups from Lazarow’s prior and current portfolios have generated over $30 billion in enterprise value, with seven reaching unicorn status.

Skeptics still question the exit landscape in emerging markets, perhaps especially since valuations have gone up in these markets, with more unicorns than a decade ago. Yet Fluent sees momentum building. IPOs of startups like Nubank, UiPath, Swiggy, and Talabat prove that global outcomes can emerge outside the U.S. and Europe — and then, as in the case of Nubank and UiPath, those companies can still go public in the U.S. if they choose.

“Exit markets are also maturing in these regions,” Lazarow remarks. “New secondary firms are rising. Stock markets are looking to build local listing capabilities. Yes, the U.S. has much more developed IPO and M&A markets. But under the hood, some of the largest and most profitable exits are already happening outside.”

Fluent has also built out a different kind of network around the kinds of founders it invests in. More than 75 unicorn founders and VCs back the fund, including David Vélez (Nubank), Nick Nash (Sea Group), Akshay Garg (Kredivo), and Sean Harper (Kin), alongside institutional LPs and family offices from around the world. According to Lazarow, many are active contributors, helping portfolio companies with talent, fundraising, and expansion. 

The firm also relies on a small group of venture partners from ZenBusiness, Terminal, Kin, and Dell, bringing both sector depth and geographic reach.

In a world where venture capital might be rethinking overexposure to the U.S. and China, Fluent believes its approach offers LPs something few firms can: diversification.

“We believe the best ideas come from anywhere and scale everywhere,” says the partner whose firm claims a spot on Kauffman Fellows’ top‑returner index, thanks to his earlier personal stakes in Chime, ZenBusiness and Sidecar Health.

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