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Newton Venture Program opens applications for its first on-campus VC investor training course

Following the success of its groundbreaking online investor training course, the Newton Venture Program is now accepting applications for its first ever in-person course, due to start in April. 

Following the success of its groundbreaking online investor training course, the Newton Venture Program is now accepting applications for its first ever in-person course, due to start in April. 

Founded in 2020 with the aim of getting overlooked and underestimated groups – especially female, non-binary, Black, Asian and other underrepresented candidates – into venture capital, Newton is a first-of-its-kind investor training and development program.

It offers a unique blend of faculty and practitioner teaching for people across the global innovation ecosystem – from VCs to LPs, angels, accelerators, and tech transfer officers worldwide – and it provides training for those looking to enter the sector, as well as those already working in investment looking to upskill. 

The program is run in partnership with London Business School (LBS) and 40 trainees for the face-to-face courses will benefit from classroom-based learning within the LBS campus as well as digital touch points, project work, and will be a part of a six-month fellowship.

Applications are also now open for Newton’s third digital course which will see 60 trainees from across the globe begin their studies in March. 

Initially designed to offer both online, and in-person programs, Newton made the decision to offer its first two courses digitally in the wake of the Covid pandemic. The first cohort was announced in June 2021, and the second began study in September. 

Each cohort that joins the program is made up of at least 50 per cent fellows from overlooked and underestimated groups. Of the first cohort, the majority identify as female (52.8 per cent), 24 per cent identify as Black, 20 per cent identify as Asian, and 6 per cent identify as mixed race. 

Newton welcomed its second cohort in September and 40 per cent of the fellows identified as Asian and 17 per cent  black. Participants from these previous digital courses joined from 12 time zones, from countries including the United States, India and the Philippines.

Graduates from Newton’s first program have since gone on to found their own companies, have even joined forces to create their own fund and start careers in VC – with one working for San Francisco-based firm Alix VC.

Applications for the first in-person training course opened on 17 November and will close on 13 January. While applicants do not require a minimum level of education, they will be expected to have a minimum level of work experience. 

The process will then be managed via a blind recruitment process. Instead of interviews or CVs, this process assesses applicants based on their motivation and ability to overcome challenges as these are traits that great venture capitalists have. 

For the first on-campus cohort, Newton is setting itself the target of 50 per cent of the cohort coming from overlooked gender groups (not just female) and 50 per cent from overlooked ethnic backgrounds. 

Fees for the on-campus course are GBP9,950 but all applicants will be able to apply for scholarships, funded by the VC community, to help pay towards these fees. The digital-only course fees are GBP2,030.

Newton is a joint venture between London Business School, European seed investor LocalGlobe VC and Research England (a part of UKRI) and is backed by Silicon Valley Bank. Program partners include Sequoia, Atomico, Seedcamp, Index Ventures, AngelList and Point Nine. 

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