Rupert West targets £10 million Series A checks as VCTs provide market stability

The Strategic Pivot to Growth Equity and Multi-Sector Resilience

In the volatile landscape of UK venture capital, the ability to weather economic storms while identifying high-potential disruptors requires more than just capital—it requires a philosophy rooted in diversification and operational depth.

, Managing Director of
Puma Growth Partners
, has built a firm that deliberately avoids the trap of sector obsession. By focusing on three distinct pillars—consumer brands, software and technology, and scalable business services—the firm creates a natural hedge against the cyclicality that often cripples specialized funds.

Rupert West targets £10 million Series A checks as VCTs provide market stability
Growth Equity, VCTs and Exits with Rupert West, Managing Director @ Puma Growth Partners

This multi-sector approach isn't merely about risk mitigation; it is about cross-pollinating expertise. When a firm understands the marketing metrics of a consumer brand, it is better equipped to evaluate the customer acquisition strategies of a B2B SaaS platform. This breadth of perspective allows for a more rigorous assessment of how different business models scale and where the hidden concentration risks lie. In an era where sectors trend up and down with violent speed, this structural diversification serves as a critical foundation for long-term survival and alpha generation.

Solving the Series A Milestone Puzzle

The jump from seed to Series A is arguably the most treacherous chasm in a startup’s lifecycle. Puma Growth Partners enters this space with checks ranging from £4 million to £10 million, specifically targeting companies that have moved beyond the "playbook" phase and are entering the arena of complex problem-solving. West emphasizes that the milestones for a Series A qualification vary wildly across sectors. A software company might be judged on recurring revenue and churn, while a consumer brand is evaluated on supply chain robustness and geographical scalability.

True Series A readiness is not just about hitting a specific revenue number; it is about the maturity of the infrastructure supporting that revenue. The firm looks for businesses that are "next round ready" from the moment the initial investment is made. This involves implementing rigorous, KPI-driven management accounting and ensuring that the legal and financial frameworks are robust enough to withstand the scrutiny of later-stage institutional investors. By treating the Series A as a bridge to an eventual exit, rather than a finish line, founders can build with the level of discipline required to attract top-tier global capital in subsequent rounds.

The Psychological Underpinnings of Founder Resilience

Technical skill and domain expertise are the baseline requirements for any founder, but they are insufficient to navigate the "visceral and frightening" moments of business building. West’s personal history—witnessing the 2008 financial crash from an investment banking seat and launching a venture firm on the eve of a global pandemic—has shaped a unique approach to founder assessment.

utilizes its Chief People Officer to conduct deep psychometric evaluations of management teams before deployment.

This analysis focuses on how events shape brain chemistry and decision-making mindsets. The goal is to identify "robustness and tenacity"—traits that often remain dormant during bull markets but become the primary driver of value during inflationary squeezes or black swan events. West argues that the transition from a 20-person team to a 100-person organization requires a fundamental shift in character. Founders must be self-aware enough to recognize which of their strengths might become limitations as the company matures. This level of psychological coaching, integrated directly into the venture relationship, ensures that the leadership can withstand the emotional drain of high-stakes scaling.

VCTs as the Bedrock of Permanent Capital

The structure of a venture fund is often as important as its investment strategy. Puma leverages Venture Capital Trusts (VCTs) to provide a level of "sticky money" that traditional closed-end funds often lack. Because these are government-sponsored tax wrappers that raise capital on an evergreen basis, they provide the firm with high visibility regarding its own resource bank. This permanence allows the firm to remain "risk on" even when the broader market is retracting.

In recent years, many venture partners who split from larger houses have struggled to return capital to LPs or raise follow-on funds. The VCT model offers a counter-narrative to this instability. By having a consistent pool of capital to draw from, Puma can continue to hire deep portfolio expertise—individuals with 20-plus years of experience in legal, finance, and marketing—to support its companies. For the UK economy, this flow of investment is vital, providing a reliable source of primary capital that isn't entirely dependent on the fluctuating whims of institutional fundraising cycles.

Operational Immersion: The Case for Heavy Diligence

While some investors pride themselves on being "founder-friendly" by taking a hands-off approach, West argues for a model of high-conviction, ultra-active involvement. This is exemplified in the firm’s investment in

, a tech platform accelerating Western brands in China. Despite the geopolitical risks associated with the region, Puma’s team conducted "heavy DD," even sending staff to China for a week to verify the local infrastructure and team.

This level of diligence is not intended to micromanage, but to mitigate risks before they amplify. By being operationally immersed, the VC can act as a force multiplier for the founding team. Whether it’s converting management accounts into actionable data or assisting with the sale of a business through an MBO—as seen in the successful exit of

—the value of a VC is measured by their ability to provide practical solutions to complex problems. Ultimately, the industry must move beyond paper returns and focus on
DPI
(Distributed to Paid-In Capital), ensuring that the "win-win" of a successful exit is realized for investors, founders, and the employees who built the vision.

5 min read