
🧬 Childhood Without Tech: Building a Foundation for VC Success | Sergey Jakimov (1/4)
"Retrospectively, this was honestly the best childhood one can get, and it was absolutely without gadgets." In this episode of The Biotech Startups Podcast, we explore the formative years of Sergey Jakimov, founding partner at LongeVC, as he takes us from his childhood in post-Soviet Latvia to his graduate studies in Budapest. Sergey shares what it was like growing up in a small rural town near the Russian border, where limited resources, no technology, and long winters shaped his resilience, diplomacy, and drive to succeed. Sergey recounts his unlikely journey into competitive tennis under a retired national coach, training on concrete courts and turning the sport into both a discipline and a livelihood. He describes the grueling path to university admission—waking at 2 AM every Saturday for four-hour bus rides to attend prep courses in Riga—and the intense workload that followed, surviving on just three to four hours of sleep while juggling translation work and coaching gigs. A pivotal parliament internship shattered his idealistic views of government, leading him to embrace technocracy and meritocracy as guiding principles. Finally, Sergey reflects on earning his master's at Central European University in Budapest, where diverse perspectives and world-class academics further expanded his worldview and prepared him for entrepreneurship.
The Biotech Startups Podcast · Excedr
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Show Notes
- Post-Soviet Childhood: Growing up in rural Latvia with no gadgets, outdoor adventures, and resourcefulness as survival skills
- Athletic Discipline: Training in tennis from age six on concrete courts under a retired national coach, developing grit and work ethic
- Academic Journey: Finishing school early, grueling university workload at Riga Stradiņš University, and working multiple side hustles
- Political Disillusionment: Parliament internship revealing bureaucratic inefficiency and cementing technocratic/meritocratic beliefs
- Graduate Education: Earning a scholarship to Central European University in Budapest, studying political economy and quantitative methods