

Ivan Nikkhoo has worn many hats. He co-founded a technology consulting firm, served as a software executive, worked in Wells Fargo’s technology investment banking division, and was a managing director at boutique merchant bank Siemer & Associates.
“We’re not looking for people that have a solution looking for a problem. We’re looking for people that understand a problem really well and understand how to solve it efficiently.”
Navigate Ventures was founded in 2018 and is based in Beverly Hills. The firm closed its debut fund at $30 million in late 2022 and built a portfolio of 26 investments across B2B and enterprise SaaS companies.
Nikkhoo says the main reason so many SaaS companies fail between Series A and growth-stage rounds is that the average time between rounds has jumped significantly.
“The average time for pre-seed to seed, or seed to Series A rounds, is about 20 months, while Series A to growth is 33 months, so they just run out of cash.”
Navigate Ventures is currently raising its second fund, targeting around $75 million. The firm primarily raises from high-net-worth individuals and family offices. Navigate declined to share Fund I performance metrics but stated that its typical holding period is 2 to 4 years.
Navigate focuses on **enterprise SaaS companies outside Silicon Valley** with $2M–$3M ARR. The firm extends the runway for these companies from 9 months to 18 months before seeking growth-stage investors.
Navigate builds a small extension round alongside the Series A investors using their pro-rata rights, giving the company extra time to hit the performance metrics that growth investors are looking for.
Nikkhoo’s strategy allows companies to grow past Series A, growth-stage investors get solid deals, and Navigate helps to generate DPI quickly for its LPs.
“We have a pretty accelerated path to DPI and our return profile is pretty consistent.”
One of the unique aspects of Navigate Ventures’ approach is its use of the **secondary market** to exit investments.
“Secondaries are going to become a lot more important. Most people think secondaries are just auctions, but liquidity is a major issue. Secondaries provide optionality for both LPs and GPs.”