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In this wide-ranging conversation, Chris Sacca, the legendary early-stage investor behind Lowercase Capital and now founder of Lowercarbon Capital, shares insights on risk-taking, investing philosophy, and authentic living. The discussion explores Sacca's transition from tech investing to climate solutions, his approach to identifying and backing unconventional founders, and the importance of maintaining authenticity throughout different life chapters. (38:00)
Chris Sacca is the founder of Lowercarbon Capital, a climate-focused investment fund, and previously founded Lowercase Capital, one of the best-performing venture funds in history with a 214x return on Fund I. Before becoming an investor, Sacca worked at Google where he won the Founders Award, was a guest shark on Shark Tank, and was heavily involved in political campaigns including both Obama campaigns. He graduated from Georgetown School of Foreign Service and began his career as a lawyer before transitioning into technology and investing.
Sacca identified a common trait among his most successful founders: they literally don't consider failure as an option in their mental calculations. (79:54) When he first met Instagram founders Kevin Systrom and Mike Krieger in a coworking space, they casually mentioned features "for when we get to 10 million users" - not if, but when. This wasn't sales talk; they genuinely believed in inevitable success and structured their thinking accordingly.
Success can be dangerous because fewer people around you will challenge your thinking as you become more powerful and wealthy. (25:42) Sacca credits his wife Crystal and points to successful partnerships like the Collison brothers as examples of people who maintain dialectical relationships where they constantly challenge each other's ideas. This prevents the dangerous slide into believing your own infallibility that affects many successful leaders.
When Sacca's team initially dismissed Augustus Doricko (Rainmaker's founder) for being too unconventional, Sacca immediately sent them back to invest. (13:32) His philosophy is that "the alpha is in the fucking weirdos" - but specifically the good kind of weird that represents genuine innovation rather than toxicity. This principle guided investments in fusion companies when everyone said it was "where dreams go to die."
Sacca describes venture investing as a "rigged game" in his favor because unlike public markets, he can actively improve companies' likelihood of success. (75:08) His investment philosophy centers on finding opportunities where the odds are mispriced due to narrative, fear, or market misunderstanding, then using his skills to increase the probability of positive outcomes rather than just placing passive bets.
When Sacca lost $4 million in the dot-com crash, he never considered moving back home or accepting failure - he was just angry that it would slow him down. (81:54) This internal locus of control, believing you can influence outcomes rather than being subject to external forces, is what separates successful risk-takers from those paralyzed by uncertainty. It's not about being reckless, but about believing in your ability to affect results.