When VC Is “Golf for Intellectuals”: The Reason Many GPs Never Retire

I used to joke that GPs never retire, you just hear from them less 🙂

I’m starting to think that’s wrong.

They don’t retire because they don’t want to.

They have money. They have a track record. They finally have time.

And yet… They keep doing deals.

Why?

Because for a certain vintage of investor, venture capital isn’t just a job.

🏌️It’s golf for intellectuals.

These are the forces at play IMHO ….

The Board Room Becomes the Living Room

When the house gets quiet, a lot of that mentorship energy needs somewhere to go.

So it shows up in the boardroom.

You start to see a real parental instinct with early-stage founders. (I’ll admit I’ve delivered my fair share of dad jokes.)

Sometimes that’s incredibly valuable.

Sometimes… it’s a lot.

Wisdom & Relevance

There’s real alpha in this.

Raising kids is actually decent training for early-stage chaos – patience, pattern recognition, emotional management.

But there’s a flip side.

It’s easy to confuse proximity to young founders with actual cultural relevance.

Still, staying in the game is one of the best ways to keep a pulse on what’s changing.

Benefit / Danger of Infinite Time

A partner with infinite time cuts both ways.

On one hand, they’re more available than a newer partner juggling firm politics, young kids, and a growing portfolio.

On the other hand, they can get too involved, treating your company like a project, not your life’s work.

Longevity in venture is a feature, not a bug.

But as a founder, it’s worth understanding the psychology of who you’re partnering with.

Are you getting a multi-cycle operator with real pattern recognition?

Or someone with one foot in and one foot out?

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