March 2026
The venture capital model is not broken.But it is evolving faster than most people in the industry are willing to say out loud.
The structure hasn't changed much:
- 10-year funds
- Gradual deployment
- 5 to 9 year exit cycles
That foundation is still there. What's shifting is not the model itself, but what's happening inside it: the distribution of outcomes, the speed at which winners scale, and how decisive capital concentration has become.
Timelines: Same Structure, Different Reality
The 10-year model was built on an assumption of a relatively linear journey from investment to exit. That model is currently under high pressure.
Two timelines are now clearly visible inside the same fund:
- Fast winners scaling in 2 to 5 years, driven by AI, distribution advantages, or sheer capital weight
- Long-tail companies taking 10 to 15 years because of market complexity, regulatory cycles, or slower growth curves
The industry has responded. Opportunity funds are normal. Continuation vehicles are common. Funds are holding onto winners longer wherever they can.
But let's be clear about what these instruments actually are. They are workarounds, not structural solutions. The underlying challenge, LP return timelines are not matching the reality of how long companies take to reach liquidity; this has not been resolved. That distinction matters.
Reserves: Same Principle, Greater Concentration
Doubling down on winners is not a new idea in venture. Reserves have always been part of the strategy. What's changing is the intensity of it.
A larger share of reserves is going into fewer companies. The gap between top performers and the rest of the portfolio is widening. Average-performing companies are increasingly deprioritised, not abandoned necessarily, but they are no longer where the attention or the capital goes.
This is not a strategic pivot. It's the same strategy operating at a more extreme end of the spectrum.
Ownership: From Important to Decisive
Ownership has always mattered. But in an environment where fewer companies drive the majority of returns, and those companies are scaling faster and larger than before, ownership is no longer just an important variable.
It is the variable.
The tension is this. The funds with the highest ownership in the best companies are almost always the ones who got in early, at low valuations, before the company was obvious. Entering later with meaningful ownership is nearly impossible to build for smaller funds. So while ownership is decisive, it is increasingly inaccessible in practice for investors who wasn't already in the room early.
That gap between the funds who own the winners and those who don't is therefore not closing. It is widening.
What's Actually Changing
It's tempting to frame this moment as a structural overhaul of venture capital. It isn't.
The fundamentals remain the same:
- Power law still applies
- Reserves still matter
- Ownership still drives returns
- Fund structures are broadly similar
What has changed is where the pressure is being felt: speed at the top end, duration at the long tail, and capital concentration into an increasingly narrow set of companies.
The AI impact
AI is compressing timelines structurally, not cyclically. It attacks the actual bottlenecks of company building: code, hiring, go-to-market, customer support. Those bottlenecks don't come back once the tools exist.
But compression alone does not decide outcomes. Distribution does. Capital does.
AI lowers the cost of building a product. It is not yet lowering the cost of reaching a market. And the companies with existing audiences, data, brand, and balance sheets are deploying AI on top of those advantages (Think Meta, Microsoft, Google). That widens the gap between them and everyone else rather than closing it.
Product is no longer a moat on its own. A strong team matters for execution, but a great team with no distribution and no capital is now competing against an average team sitting on top of an existing user base with the same AI tools available to everyone. That is a harder fight than it was five years ago.
The open question is not whether AI keeps compressing timelines. It will. The question is whether capital and distribution advantages become so dominant that product and team quality become secondary filters rather than primary ones. The early evidence suggests yes.
The Growing Divide
The dynamics described above, concentration, speed, ownership pressure, mostly benefit large established funds with strong brand, early access, and the balance sheet to double down. For everyone else, the model getting more intense is not just more demanding. It is more punishing.
Emerging managers, smaller funds, and institutional co-investors are operating in an environment where the best deals are locked up earlier, valuations at entry are higher, and the window for building meaningful ownership is narrower. The same model, running hotter, is structurally harder to navigate from outside the top tier.
That's the part of this evolution that doesn't get said clearly enough.
The Real Shift
The most honest way to describe this moment is not "VC is broken" or "the model needs reinventing."
It's this: the same model is now operating under more extreme conditions, and those conditions are not equally extreme for everyone.
Bigger winners. Faster scaling. Longer holding periods. More aggressive capital concentration. And a growing divide between the funds positioned to benefit from all of that and the ones absorbing the pressure without the upside.
The model didn't break. It intensified. And intensity, as always, separates.
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