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Eric Engineer, from Product Manager to VC to CEO

Published on Parsi Khabar

Invodo CEO and CS alumnus Eric Engineer loves the business side of the technology industry. “I was a double major: CS and Managerial Studies,” he said. “Those were the bubble years and people were talking a lot about entrepreneurship, but it wasn’t built into any of the Rice programs. I went to first Rice Alliance meeting, when it was held a small event in a classroom. All those things got me excited and I knew I wanted to do more than just programming.”

He stayed to complete professional masters in computer science (MCS) in 2002 then went to work for Trilogy Software. He said, “I was hired into tech presales, which was supporting the sales people who were trying to win deals.” The role included a lot more customer-focused interaction than most junior engineers experienced and it was his first step into the sales and marketing part of a company. When the technology bubble burst soon after, he got laid off.

Luckily, Engineer had interned at Microsoft during his Rice years and contacted his recruiters to ask if they had any openings for a recent graduate. He said, “They were just starting up a brand new leadership development program to bring recent college graduates into product management and field sales roles, rotating them through different functions and business units across the company over two years.”
Over those two years, Engineer realized that a product manager worked at the intersection of a lot of different functions. “It was like being a mini-CEO,” he said. “We dealt with engineering, sales, marketing, partners, finance, the whole spectrum. That got me even more excited about the business aspect of the tech industry and prompted me to go back for an MBA.”

Moving with his newlywed wife to Boston, Engineer began working on his MBA at Harvard and realized working in venture capital (VC) with early-stage technology companies was what he wanted. With much of his family based in Texas, Eric started his search there.

“It’s pretty rare to find a summer internship at venture capital firm – let alone in Texas,” Engineer said, “but I had looked at the alumni databases for both Rice and Harvard and turns out there was a venture capitalist in Texas that appeared in both databases. So I emailed John Jaggers, the managing director at Sevin Rosen, with a subject something like “Rice-Harvard alumni seeks VC internship in Texas” and that got his attention.

Engineer worked at Sevin Rosen for four years, and worked closely with an Austin startup called Invodo. “I’d written the original memo as to why we should invest in them,” he said. Invodo helps retailers and manufacturers produce videos that help them sell more products online.

Invodo was only one of several startups Engineer worked with, but it was one of the companies that helped him broaden his own career. He said, “I really wanted to get back to operating within a company, so I made the shift from investing in startups to helping grow one,” said Engineer. “At the time, I was thinking it would be good to get more operations experience and maybe go back to venture capital in the future. But now, my primary focus as CEO is on making Invodo a success and eventually delivering a healthy return to our investors.”

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