What does it take for corporate innovators to stop killing startups and start working with them productively? In this episode of The Innovation Storytellers Show, I sit down with Andy Goldstein, Partner at Venture University, to unpack how large companies can finally bridge the gap between venture capital and innovation that delivers results.

Andy is a seasoned entrepreneur and investor with over 40 years of experience founding, scaling, and funding startups around the world. He’s worked with thousands of founders, co-launched accelerator programs across Europe, and played a critical role in creating nine unicorns. Now, through Venture University, Andy is training corporate innovation leaders to develop the skills of real VCs by doing the work themselves.

In our conversation, we explore why so many corporate innovation programs stall or fail when trying to work with startups. Andy explains that the majority of breakthrough technologies come from startups, not from within the walls of large corporations. Yet many corporations still lack a repeatable system for sourcing, piloting, and integrating those innovations. This disconnect, he argues, isn’t just an oversight. It’s a strategic blind spot.

We talk about the structural flaws in most corporate venture capital teams, particularly the tendency to jump into ownership too soon without proving value through partnership first. Andy introduces the concept of “venture clienting,” a model pioneered at BMW that allows corporations to work with startups as paying clients before investing in or acquiring them. This approach, he says, reduces risk, builds trust, and produces measurable ROI long before equity ever changes hands.

Andy also shares how Venture University flips the traditional VC education model. Rather than teaching venture theory in a classroom, the program operates as a functioning VC fund. Participants, many of whom are corporate leaders, source real deals, perform due diligence, sit in on partner meetings, and help deploy capital. It’s a hands-on apprenticeship designed to demystify the venture process and make it actionable within a corporate setting.

Throughout our discussion, Andy offered real-world examples of startups that became critical partners to large organizations. Not because they were acquired, but because the relationship started with a competent pilot, clear value, and mutual respect. He emphasizes that the key to success lies in aligning venture strategies with the real pain points and revenue goals of the business.

The startups that win are those that solve expensive problems, scale well inside complex environments, and come backed with investor confidence.

About: Andy

Name: Andy Goldstein
Title: Partner
Company: Venture University
LinkedIn | Website Company LinkedIn Page

Andy Goldstein is a passionate serial entrepreneur and startup investor with over 40 years of global experience in founding, building, financing, and accelerating companies. Currently, Andy serves as a Partner at the global VC Fund, VU Venture Partners and at Venture University, where he’s focused on VC investments and closing the gap in Europe for investor education across VC, PE, and angel investing.

Andy’s expertise lies in helping European companies expand globally and U.S. companies enter the European market. His journey has spanned Co-Founder/MD roles across major organizations like The LMU Entrepreneurship Center, Deloitte Digital Ventures, German Entrepreneurship (recently rebranded as the Start2 Group), German Accelerator Program, Social Entrepreneurship Akademie, and numerous startups.

Andy is also the co-founder of accelerator programs that have empowered 1,000+ startups and produced 9 unicorns.

Andy holds a Bachelor’s degree in Entrepreneurial Management & International Business from The Wharton School.