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Rich Tales: The rich listers helping our start-ups thrive

It takes many things to get a business off the ground. It takes a flash of insight, plenty of drive, and good advice. It takes savvy staff and helpful networks. It also takes something few start-up founders have to begin with: money. Australiaโ€™s venture capital industry is growing and maturing. But the funds to finance […]
Myriam Robin
Myriam Robin

It takes many things to get a business off the ground.

It takes a flash of insight, plenty of drive, and good advice. It takes savvy staff and helpful networks. It also takes something few start-up founders have to begin with: money.

Australiaโ€™s venture capital industry is growing and maturing. But the funds to finance start-ups donโ€™t just come from high finance. Increasingly, a generation of Australian entrepreneurs who made or grew their fortunes over the past decade are investing their money back into start-ups, either directly or through niche venture-capital firms. Through this, theyโ€™re helping build a start-up ecosystem able to support new, growing start-ups, using the spoils of yesterdayโ€™s success stories.

Here are just a few rich listers putting some of their money back where it came from.

James Packer

In many ways the trailblazer in this regard was James Packer, who made a fortune investing in companies like SEEK and Carsales.com.au a decade ago.

While by no means a successful start-up leader (Packer inherited most of his money), he has nonetheless grown his fortune through savvy start-up investing, a passion that doesnโ€™t appear to have ebbed with time.

Packer bought a 25% stake in SEEK for $33 million in 2003. When the business listed, Packerโ€™s stake was worth $150 million. By the time he sold out, he had made $440 million from his investment.

He was also an early investor in Carsales.com.au, putting $100 million for a stake in the company that sold for $500 million a few years later.

Those were some of the best dot.com investments ever made in Australia, and, perhaps spurred by his early success, Packer has continued to invest in start-ups with potential to disrupt their industries.

One of his most recent investments was last month in taxi app goCatch, which could radically disrupt Australiaโ€™s cab companies and Australiaโ€™s Cabcharge monopoly by allowing passengers to book a taxi by directly liaising with the driver.

Paul Bassat

Packer is joined in his goCatch investment by Paul Bassat, a cofounder of SEEK whoโ€™s since left running the business to his brother while he focuses on investing.

Bassat is the cofounder and joint chairman of Square Peg Capital, a newly minted venture capital firm thatโ€™s already put money into a heap of start-ups like beauty-box business Bella Box and design start-up Canva.

โ€œFirst and foremost, we want to back fantastic people who are smart, passionate and high integrity,โ€ Bassat told our sister site StartupSmart when Square Peg was formed a few months ago.

โ€œFor businesses that have been around for a few years and have a bit more traction, the question of if theyโ€™re solving a problem has been partially answered. If itโ€™s an early stage business without a track record, we want to know exactly what the problem youโ€™re trying to solve is if youโ€™re actually solving it, in a unique and differentiated way.โ€

Bassat is also a mentor at Startmate, which offers mentoring and seed financing to online and software start-ups.

Mike Cannon-Brookes and Scott Farquhar

Bassat isnโ€™t the only rich lister to volunteer his time mentoring young companies.

Scott Farquhar and Mike Cannon-Brookes, who cofounded Atlassian and for two years have topped the BRW Young Rich list, are also mentors at Startmate.

Last year, Cannon-Brookes also invested in Shoes of Prey, which gives shoe lovers the chance to customise every part of their shoes online and have a unique pair created and shipped.

Both Atlassian cofounders put money earlier this year into Ninja Blocks, a Sydney start-up that builds devices that let people link their devices to physical things in their homes (โ€˜SMS me when the washing is doneโ€™, for example).