The Ethics of VC — Why ESG for VCs now? (#9)

Dr Johannes Lenhard
7 min readMar 11, 2021

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While nine months ago (see my earlier piece), many VC funds wouldn’t even have known what ESG might mean for them, there has been a wave of initiatives going through the industry recently. In general, ESG stands for environment-social-governance and comprises a set of principles that touches on issues from the well-known DEI and board structures to labor relations, supply chain, data ethics, environmental impact and legal requirements. Unlike impact investing, which is squarely focused on the (external) effects of a business, ESG concerns mostly internal practices and processes that could support both a fund and its portfolio companies to make them more sustainable. While other asset classes from buyout funds to public equities have seen a big push towards ESG ratings and initiatives, venture capital has been lagging behind for the longest time. What has changed recently?

The FT ‘rebranded’ in 2019 — are VCs (finally) following the call to action?

Over the last months, quite a few, mostly European funds have stepped forward with initiatives to tackle ESG. Balderton, for instance, announced their Sustainable Future Goals with a bang at the statup event Slush in early December 2020. Their efforts are focused both internally on the fund and externally on its investment decisions and portfolio support. I asked Colin Hanna, one of the leaders of the development internally and Principal at the firm, how this initiative came about: “While our efforts on this front preceded Covid, this year we saw that a real impact was possible on climate change related goals […] we have become accustomed to doing virtual board meetings, cutting down on travel; the challenge will be to continue those efforts going forward and rolling them out to our portfolio companies even as the world returns to normal. Having a framework helps us do that.”

This rationale also recently brought a group of about 25 VCs to form a community around ESG for VC for the first time. The initiative is led by GMG Ventures and Houghton Street Venture, a new firm affiliated with the London School of Economics, and met for the first time in December with the likes of LocalGlobe and Latitude, Kindred Capital, Balderton, the Westly Group and Blisce/. The goal of the group is to share expertise from the bottom up and fill the gap where existing frameworks don’t quite work. This is direly needed right now as Sophia Bendz, partner at Berlin-based firm Cherry Ventures, told me: “Beginning with topics around DEI and climate issues, we are really keen on upping our ESG game. ESG involves such important issues and we have to dedicate the time to learn more to ultimately do more on these fronts now. Yet, I also believe that true impact doesn’t result from knowledge silos. It’s great that we are learning from and supporting each other to have more societal impacts in our day-to-day roles. I am really passionate about this.”

What are the main drivers for this push?

I asked Susan Winterberg, an ESG consultant who recently finished a two year fellowship at Harvard producing a groundbreaking report on the subject of ESG for VCs specifically about the ‘why now’.

“There are broadly two sets of reasons why investors and company leaders adopt ESG. The first set relates to increased awareness of how their activities impact external events happening in the world such as climate change and social justice. The second relates to increased awareness of how adopting ESG can advance specific business goals they have such as increasing sales, attracting top talent, and reducing operating risks.”

Obviously, 2020 was a watershed year to drive change based on both of these sets of rationales. Social justice issues — from Black Lives Matter and racial equity, Covid-19 and healthcare and freedom of expression and democracy — were prevalent across the spectrum. Startup leaders and investors were influenced by these societal movements as much as by new research helping them understand how ESG and help advance business objectives in venture capital. The two reports published by CDC/FMO and the Belfer Center are only two examples of this evidence.

What do the VCs say, how has change happened for them? Hana told me that at Balderton a combination of factors mentioned by Winterberg above, worked together to start the process:

“It was both a push and a pull within Balderton. Our investors and the leaders at the top of our firm were proponents of this change but the efforts were also driven by the younger generation within the firm; they felt it was important. Overall, we were silent about climate change and sustainability for a long time which was not really an option anymore.”

For Martin Weber, founding partner at HV Capital where they are working with the St. Gallen based ESG initiative ROSE, the conversation really started with Leaders for Climate Action. Weber admits: “We didn’t think about ESG enough […] beyond our own horizon really […] sometimes you really need a kick in the butt, that’s what Leaders for Climate Action did for us; a small change started our awareness and commitment to ESG.” For HV Capital but also some funds in the US such as the Westly Group a specific ESG vector started the journey — that could be the E as in environment but also DEI as part of the S and G of ESG.

I also spoke to several LPs recently among others moderating a panel at the UK-based Allocate conference; the atmosphere seems to be shifting more drastically towards ‘doing business better’ among the asset owners, too. Particularly family offices managing their own money are outspoken already; but big asset owners are becoming aware (and active) too. Michael Cappucci, Managing Director of Compliance and Sustainable Investing at the Harvard Management Company — Harvard’s endowment — thinks that “we are long past the time to ‘wait and see’ if ESG integration is a worthwhile undertaking for investors” (see the UNPRI report for more context). The movement here seems to be coming even stronger from Europe again, however. As a result, the same group around Houghton Street Ventures and GMG Ventures pushing ESG for VCs is also in the process to get more LPs on board with a special workshop in February, as I learnt. The tempo on the LP front is increasing as we speak.

What is still missing?

While lots of progress has been made on the level of individual funds, individual LPs and in baby steps also towards a more general industry-wide push, there are still some core elements that are not in place. I believe the five key gaps concern a clear differentiation of ESG from impact, finding the right language, establishing a common framework, agreeing on metrics and real LP commitment.

1. Know what ESG is: many investors (and LPs) I speak with still don’t really know the difference between impact and ESG. In my own very simple terms (there is no standard definition of either!), ESG principles are about the (internal) processes (of a fund, portfolio company etc.) while impact investing is about outcomes (sometimes operationalized through the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)). While impact will likely remain a niche asset class for the foreseeable future, I believe ESG principles will inform the practices of all investors in one way or the other going forward.

2. Find the right language: on a related note, finding the right language to talk about what ESG (versus for instance impact) is, might help us to differentiate better. As Sarah Drinkwater of Omidyar Network made very clear in her post from September last year, we simply don’t have a good word to describe (and own) what ESG expresses in the world of venture capital and technology — principled, progressive, equitable? Possibly, ‘setting a standard’ can help with this issue, too.

3. Somebody, set a standard: ESG (and impact) frameworks developed and deployed slowly in the venture industry are still all over the place; they are influenced by all kinds of other frameworks (from other asset classes and related activities, such as impact) and mostly made up by individual funds themselves. There is certainly a risk of green washing if it stays that way; (self-proclaimed and reported) marketing is one thing but if we really want to change the industry, an authoritative body will have to step forward. What the biggest European anchor investor — the European Investment Fund — has done on that front so far with a very high-level questionnaire is not enough. How about, for instance, the UNPRI descends from the plane of high level down to individual industry principles?

4. What isn’t measured…: One part of what could really lead to an industry standard is a set of widely accepted and benchmarkable metrics; what are the most important measurements across early stage and late stage VC portfolio companies? The group of funds in London has for good reason announced that this particularly question will be one of the focus points they are working on next. But how will this again be adopted and spread industry-wide? Another set of players might get involved in that again: LPs. If they make their GPs report on ESG on an annual basis, this will surely shift the industry as a whole and make the next generation of startups more equitable, responsible and stakeholder-focused.

5. LPs really need to bite: So far, we are still missing real LP commitments when it comes to ESG. On the one hand, many GPs I spoke with that have recently been fundraising reported that LPs in general still don’t ask about ESG. In fact, some LPs particularly in the US believe ESG might be a distraction from generating returns. In any case, ESG still has not become a must-have but is merely regarded a nice-to-do. The ESG questionnaires that do exist — like the EIF framework — are so far really high level and unspecific. When big anchor LPs like the EIF and BBB in Europe or big foundations and university endowments ask about it in their due diligence meetings, GPs will have to comply — all of them. Their influence as agenda setters might in the medium turn be the biggest driving factor towards making ESG for VC the normal way of doing business. Given that there is state-money, all of our money, involved here, it seems an absolute no-brainer to make that step.

Note: This is my unabridged (and unedited) Techcrunch piece from February 2021 with my own title and the full ‘industry overview’.

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Dr Johannes Lenhard

Writing and working on venture capital ethics, ESG, DEI @Cambridge_Uni and @VentureESG; former: PhD on homelessness at Cambridge, MSc at LSE, BA at ZU