AirTree Ventures brings Accel Partners exec to Sydney to hunt startup gems

James Cameron, former Accel Partners vice-president turned AirTree Ventures partner.
James Cameron, former Accel Partners vice-president turned AirTree Ventures partner. Rory Lindsay

AirTree Ventures, an Australian venture capital firm with over $300 million to invest in start-up and "scale-up" businesses, has hired a senior investor from Silicon Valley giant Accel Partners to come to Sydney and hunt start-ups as a partner.

In another sign that the pull of the local tech ecosystem might finally exceed its push, AirTree has also convinced a San Francisco-based marketer for the likes of Atlassian and Dropbox to come work for it in Sydney.

AirTree's new partner, James Cameron, will relocate in February from the London office of Accel, an early investor in Facebook and Dropbox as well as a slew of successful Australian start-ups such as Atlassian, OzForex, 99designs, CampaignMonitor and Invoice2go.  

Mr Cameron was a vice-president at Accel, and a board observer at several of its fintech, cybersecurity and online marketplace portfolio companies.  

Julia French has become AirTree Ventures' new head of community after marketing for the likes of Atlassian and DropBox ...
Julia French has become AirTree Ventures' new head of community after marketing for the likes of Atlassian and DropBox in San Francisco. Supplied

Mr Cameron becomes the fourth partner at AirTree, which was formed by veteran technology investors Craig Blair and Daniel Petre in 2014. AirTree's third partner also made the move from London to Sydney, with John Henderson joining from tech venture capitalist White Star Capital last year.

Partners at a venture capital firm are responsible for sourcing and deciding on deals and exits, and sitting on the boards of its portfolio companies.

A high proportion of their remuneration comes from "carried interest" on the profits generated by the firm for its investors – the "carry" is typically 20 per cent of all profit – however Mr Blair said everybody at AirTree had some element of "carry" in their package as a performance incentive.

Mr Cameron and Mr Henderson are not the only tech investing talents that AirTree, one of the fastest-growing managers in the fast-growing Australian VC industry, has lured away from markets that have traditionally sucked Australians towards them.

AirTree has also hired its first "head of community" in Julia French, the founder of San Francisco-based marketing agency CoveredCo, whose clients included DropBox, WhatsApp and Atlassian, for whom she organised the first US user group meetings. 

Ms French, who is also relocating to Australia in February, will organise events for AirTree's portfolio companies to exchange ideas among themselves and their customers, as well as provide them general marketing support.

AirTree's three big hires faced an easier decision to move to Australia than most. Mr Cameron and Mr Henderson are returning expatriates, while Ms French has an Australian husband.

However, Mr Cameron said the Australian entrepreneurial ecosystem had transformed from when he left it a decade ago, and offered genuine opportunity.

"It's hit an inflection point, where now you've got founders on their second or fourth time around, who know what it takes to build a global company," he said.

Ms French said the Australian ecosystem reminded her of the Silicon Valley scene around 2007 as "unicorns" like Facebook and Twitter began to emerge.

"The founder expertise and the investor expertise takes time to build up, but I see it coming together in Australia," she said.

The Turnbull government's support for innovation was secondary to Mr Cameron's decision to move back to Australia, however he urged Canberra to press ahead with its reforms.

"Having three ministers for innovation in the past year shows the portfolio might not be getting the priority it deserves. But [new Innovation Minister] Arthur Sinodinos is a senior figure who should be able to press the agenda forward," said Mr Cameron.