Seeing Around Corners
If you’ve spent any time around corporate strategy circles lately, you’ll notice three little letters keep coming up more and more: CVC. Corporate Venture Capital has become a “thing”—not just a shiny tactic but, in many companies, a core way they explore growth. But if you’re used to thinking in terms of traditional Corporate Development—M&A and partnerships—it’s natural to wonder: why bother with venture investments at all? Why not just double down on acquisitions?
Let’s unpack this.
Why is Corporate Venture Even a Thing?
Corporate venture capital has been around for decades, but in the last ten years it’s jumped from an occasional side project to a mainstream strategy for large companies. Why? A few forces have come together:
- Speed of innovation. Traditional R&D alone can’t keep up with the sheer pace of startups reimagining industries. CVC gives companies a way to plug directly into the frontlines of innovation.
- Strategic optionality. By investing small dollars in several startups, corporates get a “portfolio view” of where markets are headed. They aren’t betting the farm but are still gaining real intelligence for future moves.
- Talent and culture spillover. Startups experiment with novel business models and moves that can help corporates rethink their own ways of working. Investing offers a window into fresh approaches without having to rip apart existing org structures.
At its best, CVC provides both learning and leverage. It isn’t only about financial return (although that’s nice if it happens). It’s about positioning: making sure the company has sightlines into the future and relationships with the players shaping it.
Why Not Just Stick With M&A?
Now, for the counterpoint: why can’t M&A teams just handle this? After all, they’re already chartered to find opportunities, negotiate deals, and strengthen the core business. The simple answer: M&A and CVC solve different types of problems.
Think of it this way:
- Corp Dev is about today. It asks: “What can we acquire, merge, or partner with to strengthen our current position?” It’s largely about execution and fit. You see the target, you move.
- CVC is about tomorrow. It asks: “What are the emerging companies we should learn from, support, and grow with to prepare for what’s next?” It’s an options game—designed to explore, not just consolidate.
Companies can often default towards tactics that make sense in the near term—bolt-ons, tuck-ins, or partnerships that align neatly with current priorities. That’s great when the corporate strategy is set. But it leaves little room for exploring contrarian bets or understanding markets that haven’t fully taken shape yet.
Put another way: Corp Dev is like staging today’s play on your main stage. CVC is more like attending small indie shows off-Broadway, so you don’t miss the breakthrough performance before it hits the mainstream. Both matter, but they serve different clockspeeds.
How They Work Together
Of course, it’s not an either/or choice. The most effective companies find ways to make CVC and Corp Dev play in harmony:
- Insights from CVC investments can inform where Corp Dev leans in with acquisitions.
- Corp Dev’s scanning of mature assets can validate and refine the focus areas of a CVC program.
- Together, they cover the “now and next” spectrum of innovation strategy.
When these functions respect their boundaries but collaborate, companies avoid two extremes: chasing every shiny startup or staying locked into today’s business model blinders.
A Closing Thought
Corporate venture capital isn’t a magic wand—it comes with challenges: governance, incentives, and integration with the mothership all matter. But when done right, it complements corporate development in a way that no other tool can.
If you’re only thinking in terms of Corp Dev, you risk anchoring your strategy in the present tense. If you add CVC, you start building fluency in the future. And in business, fluency in the future is increasingly becoming the difference between those who adapt—and those who get disrupted.