I work at the intersection of European venture capital, allocator judgment, and capital formation.
I entered venture as an operator trying to raise capital, not as an investor by default. That perspective shaped how I think about venture, less as a function of capital availability and more as a system of access, trust, structure, and timing. Venture allocates upside before outcomes are visible, which makes judgment and access the real constraints.
Today, I act as a venture allocator and builder. I work with a small number of LPs, fund managers, and emerging VCs, backing top-tier funds and selectively supporting new managers where access, structure, and judgment create asymmetric outcomes. Over time, my focus has shifted from intensity to selectivity, optimizing for reversibility, downside containment, and long time horizons.
Earlier in my career, I led a Global Shapers cross-hub initiative on financial decision-making, coordinated across 50+ countries. Building and governing a distributed, high-trust structure across hubs shaped how I think about incentives, access, and judgment at scale, and continues to inform my approach to capital and institutions.
I also build EUVC, a trust-based platform focused on improving allocator judgment in European venture. Content and education are the surface layer. The underlying work is signal filtration, relationship quality, and long-term positioning across capital, talent, and institutions in Europe.
My focus is European private markets, particularly where capital formation remains underdeveloped relative to technical depth. I design systems and relationships that reduce noise, preserve optionality, and compound judgment over time. I stay deliberately small so decisions remain flexible and signal stays clean.
I’m interested in conversations around capital allocation, venture structure, European competitiveness, and how institutions can expand access without increasing fragility or noise.