In the high-stakes world of early-stage investing, few navigate the biases and fallacies that plague your critical thinking. From pareidolia to confirmation and survivorship bias, picking sprinter-winners in the first few meters of the race is nearly impossible. Look beyond the horizon, lock in your bets and swing on the long-run pendulum. Convince your Limited Partners and board that your investment thesis is right and not a misread opportunity or errant gut feeling. That’s the role of early stage investors, a job for those who must stomach the risk. Of course, there’s rewards to reap, but only for the prescient and patient. Lotan Levkowitz is a General Partner at Grove Ventures and his job very much epitomizes that characterization. He’s a bona fide data-driven investor and his active portfolio spans six Israeli startups (with additional investments he led soon to be revealed). Now he’s on the lookout for the next Generative AI unicorn and we sized him up in an interview to understand where his next bets will be cast.
Grove Ventures raised $185 million for their third fund, closed last year and focused on Seed to Series A funding rounds. Managing over $500 million in assets are General Partners Dov Moran, Lotan Levkowitz, Lior Handelsman and Renana Ashkenazi. They’ve notably backed Williot, ActiveFence, Navina, and NeuroBlade, among others, focusing on wide ranging sectors, from software infrastructure to deep technologies like semiconductors for data centers and outer space computing, to next-generation bluetooth communication and IoT sensors.
