MissionOG Research
Investment Thesis
MissionOG is a Philadelphia-based growth investor that describes itself as operator-led and partnership-oriented. The firm backs high-growth B2B companies that are driving the digitization of the economy, with a thematic focus on fintech, data, and AI-driven technologies. Its public thesis emphasizes companies with recurring technology products or services for business customers, meaningful customer value, proven commercialization, deep market experience, and an execution bias. In a March 2026 market-insights essay, MissionOG sharpened this thesis around the AI platform shift: it argues that AI compresses the value of generic application-layer software while increasing the value of proprietary data, regulated processes, domain-specific judgment, auditability, and money-movement infrastructure. The practical target is not broad horizontal SaaS but infrastructure embedded in high-consequence workflows where accuracy, compliance, integrations, and accumulated operational data form the moat.
Stage Focus
MissionOG appears to invest primarily at growth-oriented early and expansion stages rather than company-formation pre-seed. Its homepage says it partners with high-growth B2B companies and looks for proven commercialization and repeatable processes. Recent public transactions include MissionOG leading Eisen's $10 million Series A inside an $18.5 million total financing announced May 19, 2026, and public posts around growth funding for BlastPoint and Alternative Payments. The portfolio page includes companies across fintech, AI/software, and data, with multiple later-stage outcomes, IPOs, and acquisitions. Based on the firm's own criteria and observed deals, the best stage fit is Seed through Series B, with Series A and growth rounds likely strongest.
Check Size
MissionOG's homepage states that the firm seeks to invest $5 million to $10 million, with significant follow-on capital where necessary. That is the clearest source-backed check-size guidance. The firm's recent Series A participation in Eisen is consistent with this range: Eisen announced $18.5 million in total funding, including a $10 million Series A led by MissionOG. The firm should be modeled as writing institutional lead or major-participant checks, not small angel-style checks.
Lead Tendency
MissionOG can lead rounds. The clearest recent example is Eisen, whose May 2026 announcement states that the Series A was led by MissionOG and quotes Jason Tiede as MissionOG Managing Partner and Eisen board member. Publicly available transaction titles and press releases also show MissionOG as a lead or named institutional investor in a number of portfolio financings. Because not every transaction is led by MissionOG, the practical classification is both: the firm leads when the opportunity matches its themes and can also participate or follow on around existing portfolio companies.
Recent Activity
MissionOG is actively publishing and investing. On May 19, 2026, Eisen announced $18.5 million in funding, including a $10 million Series A led by MissionOG, to build AI-enabled compliance operations infrastructure for financial services. On April 22, 2026, MissionOG published a WealthTech perspective with advisor Chris Feeney, focused on integrated advisor platforms, AI-enabled workflows, and alternatives infrastructure. On March 17, 2026, MissionOG published its SaaSpocalypse market-insights essay, arguing that durable value in AI-era software will accrue to companies with proprietary operational data, regulated embedded workflows, and money-movement infrastructure. MissionOG's site also shows 2026 portfolio activity around Apkudo, Billd, Autobooks, Thredd, Yardstik, VRGL, Onbe, BlastPoint, Sayari, Roots, and Alternative Payments, indicating ongoing platform support for portfolio hiring, press, and go-to-market visibility.
Portfolio Highlights
The public portfolio includes a dense concentration of fintech, data, compliance, payments, banking, wealthtech, workforce/data automation, and AI/software infrastructure. Active or listed portfolio companies include Eisen, Alternative Payments, Apkudo, Autobooks, Billd, BlastPoint, Brightfield, Capacity, Clip, d1g1t, GAN Integrity, iAltA, iDonate, Infinicept, Ingo Money, Onbe, Roots, Sayari, Thredd, Token, ValidiFI, VRGL, and Yardstik. The portfolio page also lists notable outcomes: Alkami and Katapult reached IPOs; Accurate Group was acquired by Novacap; Bento by U.S. Bank; Cloudamize by Cloudreach; DivvyCloud by Rapid7; FactorTrust by TransUnion; Featurespace by Visa; OneTwoSee by Comcast; Solovis by Nasdaq; and Venminder by Ncontracts. These outcomes reinforce MissionOG's bias toward regulated markets, payment and banking rails, data-rich workflows, and enterprise-grade software infrastructure.
Team
The team is strongly operator-heavy. Managing Partner George Krautzel focuses on AI-driven technology and data and previously co-founded ITtoolbox, which was acquired by CEB. Partner Kevin Leonard heads the investment team and manages sourcing, diligence, market research, financial evaluation, and the firm's weekly investment review process. General Partner Robert Metzger focuses on fintech and AI-driven technology after a William Blair investment-banking career across M&A and capital raises. Managing Partner Andy Newcomb focuses on fintech, data, and AI-driven technology and previously co-founded Relay Network and was part of Ecount, which was acquired by Citi. Managing Partner Jason Tiede focuses on fintech after senior corporate development and partnerships roles at J.P. Morgan Payments. Gene Lockhart, Chairman Emeritus and General Partner, brings senior financial-services operating experience including former CEO roles at MasterCard International and Midland Bank. The firm also maintains a broad advisor network across banking, fintech, software, security, payments, cloud, data, AI, wealth technology, and go-to-market.
Decision Process
MissionOG's team page describes Kevin Leonard as heading the investment team, which evaluates opportunities through sourcing, due diligence, market research, and financial evaluation. It also says the firm has a weekly investment review process involving portfolio companies and partners. The public materials do not disclose a formal investment committee, voting structure, or timeline. A founder should assume a partnership-driven process with substantive operational diligence, market mapping, financial modeling, and partner-level sponsorship. Because the firm invests $5 million to $10 million with follow-on reserves, diligence likely includes both commercial traction and quality of market infrastructure moat, not just narrative fit.
Founder Preferences
The ideal founder for MissionOG is building a B2B technology company in fintech, data, AI-enabled infrastructure, or adjacent regulated software markets. The firm explicitly prefers businesses with recurring models, demonstrated customer value, proven commercialization, repeatable processes, domain expertise, and a bias toward execution. MissionOG is likely less interested in pure consumer apps, undifferentiated horizontal SaaS, companies without meaningful operational data, or products where AI makes the application layer easily replaceable. The strongest founder profile is an operator with deep market knowledge, a credible understanding of regulated or high-consequence workflows, and evidence that the company can become infrastructure for customers rather than a replaceable point solution.
Geographic Focus
MissionOG is headquartered at 2400 Market Street, Offsite at Fitler Club, Suite 270, Philadelphia, PA 19103. The public site does not state a strict geographic investment mandate. Its portfolio includes U.S. and international exposure, including Mexico-based Clip, Europe-oriented Token and Thredd, and global data and fintech companies. The most conservative geographic interpretation is U.S.-anchored with selective international investments where the market, team, and regulated infrastructure thesis fit.