Alejandro Troll Bouroncle - GP, BVC
Podcast Notes, Episode 5 - LatAm VC Playbook: Investing Across Brazil, Colombia & Peru
La Frontera đ” Podcast, Episode 5 - LatAm VC Playbook: Investing Across Brazil, Colombia & Peru

Alejandro Troll Bouroncle
We met Alejandro Troll at a finca in BogotĂĄ during Colombia Tech Week and were able to catch up with him again in Lima, Peru for happy hour Aperol Spritzâs this past December. Whatâs evident about Alejandro, besides his cool vibe and friendly persona, is his passion for his work. He is so involved in the local startup ecosystem that he himself helped cultivate in Lima, routinely connecting founders, investors, and educators through events and referrals. Weâre excited to share his passion with you here, along with his unique insights!
Itâs a fun episode; we encourage you to listen to the whole thing via these links! âŹïžÂ
Episode 4 Summary
In this episode, we sit down with Alejandro, GP at BVC, to unpack the differences between venture ecosystems in Brazil, Colombia, and Peruâand why those nuances matter for startups and investors. We explore how BVC builds trusted deal flow in markets like Peru and Colombia, sources high-potential startups before they hit major accelerators, and works to educate Japanese LPs on the opportunity in LatAm. We also settle a critical debate: does Peru really have the best sushi in the world? đŁÂ
In Today's Newsletter

BVC: Investing Early-Stage Across ALL of Latin America
đ° Assets Under Management: $30M+ across two funds
đ HQ: SĂŁo Paulo, with local teams in BogotĂĄ and Lima
đŻÂ Stage Focus: Pre-Seed and Seed
đ Geographic Focus: 50% Brazil, 50% Spanish-speaking LatAm (Colombia, Peru, Mexico, etc.)
đ Check Size: $30Kâ$100K initial, with follow-on capacity
đ Exits: Multiple M&A exits from Brazilian portfolio, including Collact, bxblue, and Code Money
đ Notable Investments:
Linnda â E-commerce analytics platform for customer lifecycle and retention (Colombia)
The Hub â Same-day fulfillment and logistics using dark stores (Peru)
Cobre FĂĄcil â Automated receivables and collections management for SMBs (Brazil)
Cubi Energia â Energy management and savings platform for businesses (Brazil)
Jobecam â Bias-reducing video hiring platform with anonymous candidate profiles (Brazil)
Treasy â Online financial planning and cost control platform (Brazil)
Sekure â Embedded insurance platform for insurers and brokers (Colombia)
Space Ag â Agtech platform for crop monitoring and farm data (Peru)
Lara â AI agent for human capital management and productivity (Argentina)
Alejandro and the BVC team are doing important work supporting overlooked founders and building local ecosystems from the ground up.
âWe drive regional development by supporting innovation with impact.â
BVC invests in early-stage startups building in emerging markets, with a strong focus on B2B models, capital efficiency, and local market traction. What sets them apart is their hands-on support, deep knowledge of nascent ecosystems like Peru and Colombia, and their unique bridge between Latin America and Japanese investorsđ.
From Corporate to VC: Alejandroâs Jump into Venture
Alejandroâs route into VC was a bit unplanned. Originally from Peru, he was leading digital transformation at TelefĂłnica across Latin America and living in SĂŁo Paulo. Thatâs where he started working with startups through their CVC arm đ.
Later, he reconnected with his MBA classmate Mitsuruânow co-founder of BVCâand the two teamed up to expand VC access beyond Brazil. âBrazil was heating up around 2014â2015,â Alejandro said, âbut Colombia and Peru were still in early innings. We wanted to help shape those ecosystems.â
Brazil vs. Colombia/Peru: Two Very Different Playing Fields
Brazilâs ecosystem is years ahead of Spanish speaking LatAm. Alejandro broke it down:
Brazil has a well-developed capital market, layered with everything from large private equity and secondary funds to active family offices and individual angel investors. âFamily offices in Brazil have been investing in tech for a while,â Alejandro shared. âTheyâre more comfortable with risk. Theyâve seen IPOs, M&As, and unicorns happen.â That comfort with liquidity cycles means investors are more likely to recycle capitalâand stay in the game during downturns. đž
More exits, more unicorns đŠ, more IPOs mean more investor education and appetite. Latin America is home to 45 unicorn companies as of 2024, and Brazil accounts for half of them. Employees of unicorns become second-time founders (the âmafia effectâ), angel investors, or even fund managers themselves.
Brazilâs government, despite its bureaucracy, has been relatively progressive in setting up frameworks that support sectors like fintech and open banking. For example, the Central Bank of Brazil launched PIX, an instant payments system in 2020 thatâs now used by over 140 million people đ„.
Contrast that with Peru, where regulation is still slow-moving and lacking when it comes to enabling financial innovation or digital infrastructure.
Finally, Brazilâs sheer scale matters. With over 215 million people and a large middle class, a startup can become a billion-dollar company without ever leaving the country.
âIn Colombia or Peru, you need to expand. In Brazil, you can build big just by staying local,â Alejandro explained.

Why BVC Expanded to Spanish-Speaking LatAm
Brazil still makes up about 50% of BVCâs focusâitâs the more liquid, agile market. But Colombia and Peru? Thatâs where BVC has been able to make a big impact.
âBetter terms, less competition, and we can be a more relevant player,â Alejandro told us. âThere are 50+ VC firms in Brazil. In Peru, maybe 4. In Colombia, just a handful.â
 Alejandro Troll Bouroncle
At the same time, Colombia is moving fast thanks to ecosystems spun out of unicorns like Rappi, Habi, and Mercado Libreâthe so-called âmafiasâ that create second-gen founders đŒâĄïžđĄ.
Sourcing Startups & Building Local Networks from Scratch đ§đ€
When Alejandro moved back to Lima in 2019 to expand BVCâs presence beyond Brazil, he wasnât parachuting into a ready-made ecosystemâhe was building from zero.
âI had a strong VC network in SĂŁo Paulo, but in Peru? Nothing,â he admitted. âIt was truly starting from scratch.â
So how did BVC plant roots in new and underdeveloped markets like Peru and Colombia?
đïž Tapping into Peruâs University Innovation System
One unexpected advantage? Peru mandates every university to run an innovation initiativeâwhether thatâs an entrepreneurship course, an incubator, or even a fully-fledged accelerator.
âThis became a key entry point,â Alejandro explained. âI reached out to my alma mater and said, âIâm back in Lima, and I want to connect with early-stage entrepreneurs.ââ From there, the doors opened.
These university programs gave BVC early visibility into new foundersâand a chance to mentor and guide them before they even launched their first products đ.
đ Local Accelerators, Friends, and Founder Referrals
Alejandro also leaned on a close friend from business school who was building a startup in Lima. That friend became a connectorâintroducing him to local accelerators, government innovation hubs, and fellow founders.
But over time, the most valuable sourcing channel turned out to be BVCâs own founders.
âOur best deals often come from portfolio founders,â Alejandro told us. âOnce youâve backed someone, and they trust you, theyâll refer other serious founders your way. That network becomes exponential.â
đŁ Building Awareness Through Events & Educational Programs
In newer ecosystems like Lima or BogotĂĄ, where VC isnât as deeply embedded as in Mexico or Brazil, visibility is everything.
To stand out, BVC launched:
Webinars and workshops on fundraising best practices đĄ
Open calls for startups, signaling accessibility đŻ
Partnerships with incubators and public innovation agencies, like TelefĂłnicaâs Wayra and state-backed programs like Innovate PerĂș đ”đȘ
BVC also runs a unique internal programânot quite an accelerator, but a fundraising-readiness program focused on helping early founders improve their pitch, sharpen their metrics, and understand what VCs actually look for in diligence.
For the select startups that stand out, BVC writes an initial $30K checkâthen monitors progress for potential follow-on investments of $100K or more đ.
đŻ The Challenge of Catching Startups Early Enough
In many LatAm markets, once a startup gets into a top-tier accelerator like 500 Global, Rockstart, or Platanus, their valuation jumpsâand early-stage investors like BVC are priced out.
Thatâs why the timing of discovery matters as much as the quality of the startup itself.
âItâs all about timing,â Alejandro said. âYou want to meet great founders before they hit the big acceleratorsâbecause after that, valuations can triple.â
To widen that window, BVC is actively forming alliances with acceleratorsâlooking for ways to co-invest or stagger checks, rather than compete.
đ§ Building Trust with Founders
In less developed VC markets, founders are often skeptical of investorsâespecially if theyâve had bad experiences with âtourist capitalâ during the 2021 boom.
So Alejandro emphasized that sourcing isnât just about outreach. Itâs about trust.
âWe meet with founders multiple times. We give feedback even if we donât invest. And we always respond on LinkedInâeven if itâs a âno,â we explain why.â
 Alejandro Troll Bouroncle
This reputation has become one of BVCâs key sourcing advantages: being early, being helpful, and being real.
Fintech, AI, and the Sectors to Watch
Fintech still dominates LatAm VCâaccounting for 40â50% of deals. But Alejandroâs seeing some exciting shifts đ.
âWhatâs hot right now is B2B startups using AI to help companies get more efficient,â he shared. âHR, operations, retailâthese founders are using existing AI tools to move faster and cheaper.â
Other emerging verticals? Biotech, cleantech, and foodtech đ±đ§Źđ€âespecially in Chile and Argentina. Theyâre still niche, but growing fast. âPersonally, Iâd love for us to dive deeper into those sectors,â Alejandro said.

Valuations, Exits & Fund Strategy
At BVC, the sweet spot for investing is $1Mâ$5M valuations at the pre-seed and seed stages đ”.
And exits? âWeâre not chasing unicorns,â Alejandro said. âWeâre seeing most exits in LatAm come in under $40â50M.â Even in Brazil.
Thatâs why their strategy is to exit around Series B, often through secondaries or M&A đ€. âWe donât want to drag out our funds. Liquidity matters. DPI matters.â
Educating International LPsâEspecially from Japan
Most of BVCâs LPs are from Japan. Some are former Bain colleagues, others are founders whoâve IPOâd, and some are involved through JICA (Japanâs international development agency).
Why Japan? Two big reasons:
Japanâs economy is stable, but slow. Latin America offers higher-growth opportunities đ±
They see parallels between Latin America and Southeast Asiaâfragmented, emerging markets where digital infrastructure is still being built
âWe host investor missions every yearâbringing our LPs to Lima, letting them meet startups, and yeah⊠we take them to Central,â Alejandro said with a grin đŁ.
And who has the best sushi? âPeru,â he said confidently. âItâs not traditional sushiâitâs sushi mixed with Peruvian flavors. Think ceviche meets nigiri. Way more flavor.â
 Alejandro Troll Bouroncle
âŠDefinitely no Peruvian bias,đïž there!đÂ
Bridging Ecosystems: From Lima to Tokyo
Alejandro also told us about BILA, a joint program with JICA to connect Latin American startups with Japanese government-backed support đ€.
It turns out Japan faces its own tech challengesâlike still digitizing ID systems or addressing aging populations. Latin American startups that have solved these issues at home can offer ready-made solutions abroad đ.
âThereâs real synergy here,â Alejandro explained. âAnd itâs mutualâweâre learning a lot from Japanâs discipline and long-term thinking.â
Follow Alejandro for more insights
If youâre an early-stage founder in LatAmâespecially in Colombia or PeruâAlejandro wants to hear from you. Drop him a note on LinkedIn đŹ. BVC is active, supportive, and looking to back the next big thing. Check out their events calendar here!
Thanks for reading!
Be sure to share La Frontera with your network if you enjoy our newsletters!


