What Placement Agents Actually Do
Breaking down the value chain: investor research and targeting, introductions and meetings, pitch preparation, and follow-up and closing. Steps 1, 2, and 4 are increasingly addressable through technology. Step 3 depends on the quality of the advisor. For detail on current fee structures, see our placement agent fee breakdown.
When a Placement Agent Still Makes Sense
Placement agents add the most value when you’re raising over $500M, entering a new geography where you have no existing relationships, navigating complex regulatory jurisdictions, or need a credibility signal for institutional LPs.
For emerging managers raising under $250M with a clear thesis, the combination of technology, managed outreach, and your own network is more cost-effective. See our placement agent vs. managed service comparison for a detailed breakdown.
The Placement Agent Fee Structure
Placement agent fees typically have two components: a success fee and an upfront retainer. As Samir Kaji writes in his analysis of placement agent economics for emerging managers:
“These placement agents typically take a 2–3% fee on capital placed along with at times, a small retainer.” If the agent raises $20M, “the manager would pay between $400K-$600K, usually spread over 2–4 years.”
, Samir Kaji, Founder of Allocate (formerly First Republic), Venture Unlocked
Retainers most commonly run $10,000-$15,000 per month for a 6-month engagement, totaling $60,000-$90,000. Larger institutional agents may charge a lump-sum retainer of $25,000-$100,000 upfront. Some agents credit retainer fees against the success fee; others do not.
On a $100M fund at 2%, that’s $2M in placement fees before a single dollar is deployed. For a first-time manager already committing 1-3% of personal capital (the median GP commitment is 2.55% for PE per Carta’s 2025 Fund Economics Report), the math changes the economics of the entire fund.
Alternatives to a Placement Agent
Three categories of alternatives exist, each suited to different situations:
Capital introduction services focus on generating introductions between GPs and LPs. Prime brokers offer cap intro bundled into PB relationships; technology platforms offer standalone cap intro at lower price points. The GP handles the relationship from introduction forward.
Managed outreach handles the operational work of LP targeting, sequencing, and follow-up, the steps that consume 30+ hours per week of GP time during active fundraising. Combined with an institutional investor database, managed outreach replicates much of what a placement agent provides at a fraction of the cost.
DIY with technology uses LP databases and CRM tools to run outreach in-house. This works when you have the bandwidth and data. For a comparison of the major LP databases and how they fit into a capital raising strategy, see our LP database buyer’s guide. And for how positioning and targeting fit into the broader process, see our fund marketing framework.