The mega-funds spent years building internal AI teams. You don't need to. Here's the playbook for the rest of the market.
We track every dedicated AI and Data Science leader across 349 PE, VC, and Growth firms in our proprietary database.
59% of leaders are US-based, but EMEA is growing fast
Before joining PE firms, these 464 AI leaders came from seven distinct talent pipelines. Knowing which pipeline produces the best fit for your firm is what separates a great hire from a miss.
The builder who's done it before. Ex-founders and startup leaders bring scrappy execution, speed, and comfort with ambiguity. They've shipped AI products, not just PowerPoints.
Best for: firms that want someone who'll build, not just advise.
Already speaks the language. These leaders moved from one PE/VC firm to another - they understand fund economics, deal timelines, and board dynamics.
Best for: firms that need someone productive from day one with no PE learning curve.
Scale and sophistication. Ex-Google, Meta, Amazon, Microsoft leaders bring enterprise AI infrastructure experience. They've deployed models at massive scale.
Best for: software-heavy portfolios where AI is a product differentiator.
Strategy meets execution. Ex-MBB and Big 4 consultants who've seen AI across dozens of industries. They know how to build a business case, get stakeholder buy-in, and drive change management.
Best for: diverse portfolios needing governance and LP-ready frameworks.
Battle-tested operators from Fortune 500 companies who've implemented AI at the business unit level. They know what it takes to get a legacy organization to actually adopt new technology.
Best for: portfolios with traditional industries ready for digital transformation.
Quantitative minds from investment banking and financial services. They think in models, returns, and risk - and they already understand how PE firms make decisions.
Best for: firms that want AI applied to deal sourcing, due diligence, or portfolio analytics.
PhDs and research scientists who've published in ML and AI. Rare in PE, but when the problem requires genuine technical depth - proprietary models, novel algorithms - this is the pool.
Best for: data-rich portfolios where proprietary IP is the competitive moat.
Only 4% come from pure academia or research. PE AI leaders are practitioners, not theorists - they come from environments where AI had to generate revenue or cut costs. The talent pool is practical, and Vardis has mapped all of it.
Different fund sizes need different AI strategies. Here's what our data shows for firms like yours.
Most common archetype: Operations Optimizer. Smaller firms need ROI fast - one person wearing multiple hats.
73% are the firm's first AI hire. You're not behind - you're right on time.
Average team size: 1. One great hire is the entire strategy.
Start with an Operations Optimizer. Prove ROI in 90 days, then decide what's next. Most sub-$1B firms don't need a second hire for 12-18 months.
Book a call to discuss your firm's first AI hire →Split between Operations Optimizer and Consulting Architect. Portfolio diversity determines which.
Firms at this size often have 10-20 portfolio companies - too many for ad hoc AI projects.
20% already have 2+ AI hires. The buildout from 1 to 2-3 person teams is happening here.
Start with a Consulting Architect if you have 10+ diverse holdings. Operations Optimizer if your portfolio is more concentrated. Either way, plan for a second hire within 12 months.
Book a call to discuss your AI team buildout →More likely to hire Product Innovator or Technical Moat Builder profiles as first or second hire.
40% have 2+ AI team members. The playbook: hire an operator first, then add specialized roles.
Larger firms are building Center of Excellence models - one leader, firm-wide mandate.
You likely need a team of 2-3 within 18 months. Start with a Consulting Architect or Operations Optimizer, then layer on a Product Innovator or Technical Moat Builder based on portfolio composition.
Book a call to plan your AI team structure →Vardis has access to AI leadership networks that no other search firm can match - from the highest levels of government to the fastest-moving investors in private equity.
Josh King, Partner at Vardis, led the Chief Data Officer search for the White House - chosen over 50 other firms - and has advised agencies within the US intelligence community on senior leadership hiring. He serves on the advisory board of IADSS (Initiative for Analytics & Data Science Standards) and has been featured as a thought leader by Harvard Business Review, CIO Magazine, and MIT Sloan Management Review.