So, there are things you almost certainly already know. Unlike private equity, VC is smaller, more male, older, more Oxbridge field. Also unlike PE, the sort of structured assessment and valuation methods you might learn at a business school are often confounded and turned on their heads by expert VCs. It's relatively less open to diversity. Your public sector experience is not as interesting to them, generally, as a more traditional finance or consulting background where you could have a more valuable network.
There is a considerable range of (often non-profit) initiatives targeting or ostensibly aiding the VC world. You would be more credible there. In terms of jobs filled by open competition, these might be more plentiful than actual VC jobs.
The TAU MBAs are not comparable to LBS. While there are very different programmes, they are all shallow, newer, less diverse, and cannot approach LBS's range of electives (unparalleled in EMEA) or network power. There are many reasons to work in Israel, but the low salaries, chaotically informal processes, and argumentative, confrontational business environment can exhaust outsiders, not only foreign-born Jews but even Israelis with different backgrounds to a VC's leadership team.
So, there are things you almost certainly already know. Unlike private equity, VC is smaller, more male, older, more Oxbridge field. Also unlike PE, the sort of structured assessment and valuation methods you might learn at a business school are often confounded and turned on their heads by expert VCs. It's relatively less open to diversity. Your public sector experience is not as interesting to them, generally, as a more traditional finance or consulting background where you could have a more valuable network. <br><br>There is a considerable range of (often non-profit) initiatives targeting or ostensibly aiding the VC world. You would be more credible there. In terms of jobs filled by open competition, these might be more plentiful than actual VC jobs. <br><br>The TAU MBAs are not comparable to LBS. While there are very different programmes, they are all shallow, newer, less diverse, and cannot approach LBS's range of electives (unparalleled in EMEA) or network power. There are many reasons to work in Israel, but the low salaries, chaotically informal processes, and argumentative, confrontational business environment can exhaust outsiders, not only foreign-born Jews but even Israelis with different backgrounds to a VC's leadership team.