Reputation Raised This $10.5M Fund: The Visible Hands Fund Model | Justin Kang | Ep.7 episode artwork

EPISODE · Apr 2, 2026 · 51 MIN

Reputation Raised This $10.5M Fund: The Visible Hands Fund Model | Justin Kang | Ep.7

from Return on Reputation · host Justin Obey

What does it actually take to raise a venture fund when no one would have hired you to run one? And how do you build the kind of reputation that convinces 80 people to bet their money on you before you have ever written a single check?   I sat down with Justin Kang, Co-Founder and Managing Partner of Visible Hands, a pre-seed venture capital fund investing in underrepresented founders across Boston, New York, and the American South.I wanted to get him on the show because his story is one of the clearest examples I have ever seen of reputation functioning as actual currency.   Justin did not come up through Goldman Sachs or get recruited out of Stanford. He spent his twenties moving between politics, nonprofits, and civic organizations, building relationships without a master plan. Then in 2020, he and two co-founders launched a pre-seed fund from scratch with no institutional track record and no traditional pedigree. Just 15 years of trust, built one relationship at a time. Today, Visible Hands has made more than 100 investments, closed a first fund at 10.5 million dollars with 80 limited partners, and generates 3 million dollars annually through partnerships with cities, family offices, and foundations.   This conversation changed how I think about deal flow, founder evaluation, and what it really means to build authority before you need it.   What you will learn in this episode: Why micro venture capital funds statistically outperform large funds, and the business model problem that stops almost everyone from running one How Visible Hands generates 3 million dollars a year through city and foundation partnerships, giving a micro fund the resources of a much larger operation The three-part founder evaluation framework Justin uses before there is a product to judge: inspired insights, meaningful skill sets, and resource magnetism Why nine out of ten pre-seed companies pivot from their original idea, and what Justin actually bets on instead The three capital gaps blocking underrepresented founders: financial capital, social capital, and inspiration capital Why the best founders build businesses so that investors chase them, and how that changes everything about how you should approach a raise How Justin raised 10.5 million dollars without a traditional VC background, and what that proves about reputation as a substitutable form of credentialing What founders should be doing right now, a full year before they are ready to raise, to build the authority capital that makes investors pay attention   If you are a founder who thinks you do not fit the profile, or you are sitting on an idea waiting until everything is perfect before putting yourself out there, this episode is a direct answer to that hesitation. Reputation is not built on where you went to school. It is built on who showed up for you when you asked, and that only happens if you spent years showing up for them first.   About Justin Kang Co-Founder and Managing Partner, Visible Hands. Former VP of Economic Growth at the Greater Boston Chamber of Commerce and early employee at MassChallenge. https://www.linkedin.com/in/justinjkang/    Timestamps: 0:00 — Justin Kang's non-traditional path to venture capital 4:30 — Why Visible Hands started in Summer 2020 8:00 — The "Visible Hands" name: a riff on Adam Smith's invisible hand 10:45 — How ecosystem-building generates deal flow AND $3M in annual revenue 15:30 — Pre-seed diligence: what Visible Hands looks for in a founder 21:00 — Resource magnetism, inspired insights, and why management consultants get a flag 26:00 — The danger of raising too much money too fast 31:00 — AI's impact on founder team size and check size 34:00 — How founder reputation plays into follow-on rounds from seed to Series A 38:30 — Financial capital, social capital, and inspiration capital: the three barriers to underrepresented founders 44:00 — How to build authority capital before you're ready to raise 49:00 — Rapid fire: warm vs. cold outreach, best book, and why LinkedIn wins 52:00 — Closing thoughts on entrepreneurship as privilege Connect with Justin Kang: Website:https://www.visiblehands.vc/  LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/justinkang   Connect with Justin Obey: LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/justinobey YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@JustinObey Website: https://obeycreative.com

Episode metadata supplied by the publisher feed · Published Apr 2, 2026

What does it actually take to raise a venture fund when no one would have hired you to run one? And how do you build the kind of reputation that convinces 80 people to bet their money on you before you have ever written a single check?   I sat down with Justin Kang, Co-Founder and Managing Partner of Visible Hands, a pre-seed venture capital fund investing in underrepresented founders across Boston, New York, and the American South.I wanted to get him on the show because his story is one of the clearest examples I have ever seen of reputation functioning as actual currency.   Justin did not come up through Goldman Sachs or get recruited out of Stanford. He spent his twenties moving between politics, nonprofits, and civic organizations, building relationships without a master plan. Then in 2020, he and two co-founders launched a pre-seed fund from scratch with no institutional track record and no traditional pedigree. Just 15 years of trust, built one relationship at a time. Today, Visible Hands has made more than 100 investments, closed a first fund at 10.5 million dollars with 80 limited partners, and generates 3 million dollars annually through partnerships with cities, family offices, and foundations.   This conversation changed how I think about deal flow, founder evaluation, and what it really means to build authority before you need it.   What you will learn in this episode: Why micro venture capital funds statistically outperform large funds, and the business model problem that stops almost everyone from running one How Visible Hands generates 3 million dollars a year through city and foundation partnerships, giving a micro fund the resources of a much larger operation The three-part founder evaluation framework Justin uses before there is a product to judge: inspired insights, meaningful skill sets, and resource magnetism Why nine out of ten pre-seed companies pivot from their original idea, and what Justin actually bets on instead The three capital gaps blocking underrepresented founders: financial capital, social capital, and inspiration capital Why the best founders build businesses so that investors chase them, and how that changes everything about how you should approach a raise How Justin raised 10.5 million dollars without a traditional VC background, and what that proves about reputation as a substitutable form of credentialing What founders should be doing right now, a full year before they are ready to raise, to build the authority capital that makes investors pay attention   If you are a founder who thinks you do not fit the profile, or you are sitting on an idea waiting until everything is perfect before putting yourself out there, this episode is a direct answer to that hesitation. Reputation is not built on where you went to school. It is built on who showed up for you when you asked, and that only happens if you spent years showing up for them first.   About Justin Kang Co-Founder and Managing Partner, Visible Hands. Former VP of Economic Growth at the Greater Boston Chamber of Commerce and early employee at MassChallenge. https://www.linkedin.com/in/justinjkang/    Timestamps: 0:00 — Justin Kang's non-traditional path to venture capital 4:30 — Why Visible Hands started in Summer 2020 8:00 — The "Visible Hands" name: a riff on Adam Smith's invisible hand 10:45 — How ecosystem-building generates deal flow AND $3M in annual revenue 15:30 — Pre-seed diligence: what Visible Hands looks for in a founder 21:00 — Resource magnetism, inspired insights, and why management consultants get a flag 26:00 — The danger of raising too much money too fast 31:00 — AI's impact on founder team size and check size 34:00 — How founder reputation plays into follow-on rounds from seed to Series A 38:30 — Financial capital, social capital, and inspiration capital: the three barriers to underrepresented founders 44:00 — How to build authority capital before you're ready to raise 49:00 — Rapid fire: warm vs. cold out

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This episode was published on April 2, 2026.

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What does it actually take to raise a venture fund when no one would have hired you to run one? And how do you build the kind of reputation that convinces 80 people to bet their money on you before you have ever written a single check?   I sat down...

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