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Michael Sackler, Supernode Global: Betting on the Tools We All Use Every Day

If you’ve spent any time in European venture lately, you’ve probably noticed two things:

  1. Everyone says they “do AI now.”

  2. Almost nobody wants to touch consumer.

That’s exactly where Michael Sackler and Supernode Global are leaning in.

Michael started his career not in venture, but in film. He founded and ran Rook’s Nest Entertainment in London, producing and executive producing 12 feature films, including cult horror hit “The Witch”, which still makes the rounds every Halloween.

As the streamers rose in the early 2010s, he watched technology companies steamroll the media value chain. At the same time, he began angel investing around the edges of content and tech. It didn’t take long before it was obvious where the real leverage was.

Today, Michael runs Supernode Global, an early-stage fund focused on application-layer software that people use every day at home and at work. Fund I proved out the model. Fund II is where it scales.

This episode is essentially Michael’s Fund II pitch and it’s a good one.

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🎧 Here’s what’s covered:

  • 02:40 | Fund I → Fund II — expanding from “content + tech” to technologies that enhance daily personal and professional life

  • 03:55 | The thesis shift — six themes across wellbeing, productivity, vitality, life-ops, community, and creative/pro-work augmentation

  • 05:27 | The unifying thread — application-layer software + UI/UX obsession (consumer-grade experiences applied to enterprise)

  • 07:50 | Fund II in motion — 13 companies already deployed and why the portfolio itself tells the story

  • 10:36 | Sourcing edge — 50/50 inbound/outbound, a gender-balanced team, and why that drives deal flow from overlooked founders

  • 12:57 | Speed as a superpower — winning competitive deals through fast conviction, aggressive execution, and deep consumer focus

  • 14:42 | Value add in practice — growth support, fundraising pathways, and SuperNode’s “connector” identity (with a shoutout to Naomi)

  • 15:33 | 34% GP commit — why Michael and Gina put unusually large personal capital into the fund (and what it signals to LPs)

  • 18:51 | The AI elephant — where AI enhances work vs. where it risks erasing human craft (with the Graswold example)

  • 21:56 | Human creativity vs. automation — why AI will reshape the menial, not the art, and why stories still anchor value

  • 23:32 | AI art, authenticity & meaning — when fully AI-generated output loses emotional value, and where hybrid human–AI creation wins

🎧 Listen on Apple or Spotify — chapters ready to go.


From Film Producer to Application-Layer VC

Michael’s journey starts in film, but very quickly becomes a story about software.

  • Founded Rook’s Nest Entertainment

  • Produced / exec-produced 12 films, including The Witch

  • Sold most of those films to the streamers around 2014–2015

Watching Netflix & co. become the dominant buyer in his world was a wake-up call:

“It was very clear that technology businesses were coming into the media landscape and just dominating it.”

Alongside that, he was:

  • Angel investing in early-stage tech

  • Watching tools and platforms reshape how content was created, distributed, and monetised

When he exited film, formalizing that curiosity into a fund was the natural next step.


Fund I: Content x Technology

Fund I (2020 vintage) launched with a tight thesis:

Invest at the intersection of content and technology.

Practically: early-stage tech businesses in the content/media stack.

It worked, but the world moved fast:

  • New platforms

  • New behaviours

  • AI is starting to touch everything

Supernode started seeing opportunities around that core, still application-layer, still user-facing, but not strictly “content-tech”.

Rather than stay rigid, Michael and the team decided to broaden out for Fund II.


Fund II: Technologies That Enhance Daily Life

The core of Fund II in Michael’s words:

“We invest in early-stage consumer and B2B technologies that meaningfully enhance our personal and professional lives.”

Translated into practice:

  • Stage: Early (pre-seed / seed)

  • Layer: Application-layer software (not infra, not deep tech)

  • Product: Strong UI/UX, user-centric, “tools people actually touch”

  • Mix: Roughly 60% B2B / 40% consumer

Crucially, even the B2B side is built like consumer:

“Think Figma, Canva, Slack, Dropbox. They’re in essence consumer products applied to enterprise use cases.”

They’re not backing niche tools for a handful of specialists. They’re backing software that:

  • Is used by large teams or entire companies

  • Feels like a consumer product – intuitive, delightful, viral

  • Sits in workflows people touch every day

So far, Fund II is clustering around six main themes:

On the personal side

  • Wellbeing – mental, emotional, lifestyle

  • Health & vitality – staying healthy, active, functioning well

  • Life optimisation – streamlining messy life admin (finances, legal, immigration, etc.)

  • Community & social – including entertainment, which Supernode explicitly sees as part of modern wellbeing

On the professional side

  • Productivity – getting more done, better

  • Intelligent workflows – AI-powered tools that speed up teamwork

  • Creative enablement – tools that enable people to create, not just consume

  • Professional augmentation – AI-powered tooling that makes professionals faster and better

Across all of them, the common thread is:

“User-centric, UI/UX focused application-layer products that you and I can imagine ourselves using.”


So What’s Supernode’s Edge?

Lots of funds say they do “product-led, UI/UX-first” software. Where does Supernode actually differentiate?

1. Application-layer + “Consumer-like B2B” focus

Supernode is not trying to compete in infra, deep tech or hardcore infra AI. Their lane is very clear:

  • Application-layer

  • Strong UI/UX

  • Products designed for broad, everyday usage

That focus means they can:

  • Build pattern recognition around what great UX and engagement look like

  • Move faster on conviction

  • Help founders shape products that resonate with both end-users and buyers

2. A real consumer lens in Europe

Michael is blunt:

“Being a fund with at least 50% consumer businesses in the portfolio in Europe already gives us a bit of an edge – there just aren’t that many consumer-focused funds here.”

When everything is SaaS, infra, and dev tools, the consumer + consumer-like B2B lens is becoming a differentiator, not a liability.

3. Gender-balanced team & real track record with female founders

Michael’s partner, Gina, is a passionate advocate for women founders – and the team is gender-balanced by design.

That’s not a marketing angle. It shows up in:

  • The deal flow: more and more women founders seek them out

  • Their process: fewer default assumptions driven by a single demographic

  • Their portfolio: a meaningful cluster of female-led companies, evaluated on merit, not quotas

“We’re lucky enough to have a gender-balanced team that lets us take a lot of the normal biases out. Then it’s just: is this a compelling founder solving a real problem?”

Over time, this has created a snowball effect: female founders talk, and Supernode gets more inbound from founders who actively want that kind of investor.

4. 50/50 inbound vs outbound, with an “overlooked founder” bias

Supernode’s pipeline is roughly:

  • 50% inbound – now increasingly via reputation, especially among women founders

  • 50% outbound – hunting in overlooked pockets, geographies, and founder profiles

The criteria they care about are less “pedigree” and more lived experience and deep connection to the problem.


Value Add: Growth & Fundraising Between Seed and Series A

Supernode is very clear on where they want to add value:

“We really focus on helping founders with their growth and fundraising between seed and Series A.”

Two main lanes:

1. Growth

  • For consumer: user acquisition, retention, channels

  • For B2B: customer acquisition, pipeline, sales motion

They don’t pretend to be hands-on operators inside every portfolio company. Instead:

“We’re called Supernode for a reason. We’re connectors.”

They focus on:

  • High-level strategy

  • Then connecting founders to people with deep, specific expertise

  • Portfolio ops led by Naomi, who Michael credits with “finding the most unusual but perfect people” to help founders

2. Fundraising

This is the other half of the game:

  • Introductions to the right seed / Series A / growth funds

  • Targeted, not spray-and-pray

  • They already have multiple examples where Supernode-led introductions turned into lead investments for portfolio companies

For founders, the value proposition is simple:

  • Move fast (they can gain conviction quickly due to a tight focus)

  • Help you grow

  • Help you raise the next round


Track Record & Fund II Progress

Supernode isn’t pitching off a blank sheet.

Fund I

  • Focused on content x tech

  • 1.9x MOIC

  • 0.25 DPI

  • One solid exit already

  • Combined with Michael’s angel activity, they’ve backed ~60 early-stage companies

Fund II

  • Target fund size: $45M

  • Half the fund already deployed

    • 13 of an expected 25 companies in

  • The existing Fund II portfolio is meant to demonstrate the thesis in action – application-layer, UI/UX-first, daily-use products across their wellbeing / productivity themes


34% GP Commit: Real Skin in the Game

One of the more striking data points in the deck:

34% of Fund II is committed by Michael and Gina.

That’s well above market.

Michael is very open about the “why”:

  • He comes from a well-off background and is in a position to commit materially.

  • Fund I was entirely GP capital – no external LPs, used primarily to build track record.

  • He wants LPs to know: this is not a casual experiment.

“We believe in what we’re doing. We want to be totally aligned, with no question marks about that.”

He also highlights something LPs sometimes gloss over: GP commit as a percentage of net worth. On that basis too, it’s meaningfully above the norm.

The high GP commit also enabled them to:

  • Start deploying early

  • Build a real Fund II portfolio before widening the LP base

  • Go to family offices and strategic LPs with live deals, not just a thesis

They’re now bringing in a small number of LPs they think can be genuine partners – rather than opening the doors wide and turning this into a spray-and-pray raise.


How Supernode Thinks About AI (And Where the Line Is)

Given their focus, AI is everywhere in Supernode’s world. But they have a clear lens:

“AI should be a tool to help humans.”

On the professional side, that looks like:

  • AI-powered workflows

  • Intelligent tools that make teams faster, more accurate, more creative

  • Professional augmentation rather than replacement

On the personal side, they’re more cautious about products that go “too far”.

Michael uses portfolio company Graswald as an example:

  • AI-powered workflow for e-commerce product photography

  • They generate:

    • Models

    • Backdrops

    • Every element of the shot

  • Using real images of your product, they create lifelike, on-model, on-brand visuals at scale

Yes, that removes some human labour. And Michael doesn’t sugarcoat the tension:

“It is taking away an aspect of someone’s livelihood. There’s no doubt about that.”

But he distinguishes between:

  • Menial, repetitive work (e.g. shooting 50 angles of a handbag on a plain background for a product page)

  • Art and human connection (e.g. a Mario Testino campaign, or a film with a story behind it)

His thesis:

  • Tools like Graswald will own the high-volume, low-soul workflows

  • Human-created art will:

    • Remain

    • Potentially become even more valuable in a sea of AI-generated images

    • Carry premium precisely because of the story and human connection behind it

“Stories are a universal human experience. As soon as you find out something is completely AI-generated from idea through to output, I think it loses a lot of value in certain areas.”

That stance fits their broader thesis: augment, don’t erase the parts of life and work where humans actually matter.


Why Supernode, Why Now?

If you zoom out, Supernode Global is making a reasonably sharp bet:

  • Application-layer software

  • Consumer and consumer-like B2B products

  • Daily-use tools that shape how we live and work

  • AI as an enabler, not a narrative crutch

  • A European base in a market where few funds really lean into consumer

Combined with:

  • A real track record from Fund I and Michael’s angel portfolio

  • A half-deployed Fund II already showing the strategy in practice

  • Unusual GP–LP alignment with a 34% GP commit

  • And a gender-balanced, connector-style team with a growing reputation among female founders

…this isn’t just another “we do AI and SaaS at pre-seed” story.

It’s a more specific, more human bet: on the tools that sit exactly where our fingers hit the screen and the keyboard.


EUVC | The European VC

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