Axel Tillmann, CEO of World Summit, is building a new paradigm for luxury investing, one grounded not in hype, but in trust. From high-end cars and artwork to a venture fund designed to disrupt Silicon Valley’s recklessness, Tillmann is placing his bets on strategy, transparency, and timing.
“Most VCs are high-stakes poker players with other people’s money”
Tillmann’s latest venture, World Summit, serves high-net-worth individuals (HNIs) and ultra-HNIs with a curated portfolio of off-market goods, from rare artworks to collectible automobiles. But that’s only half the story. Alongside it, he’s launching a venture capital fund that flips the conventional model on its head.
The inspiration stemmed from years inside the system. “As a serial entrepreneur, having run a venture fund,” Tillmann explains, “I came to understand that most VCs are high-stakes poker players with other people’s money.” He points to inflated valuations like a $250 million investment into Perplexity at a $9 billion pre-money valuation as examples of what he calls “greater fool theory”, investments made not for fundamentals, but for the hope that someone else will take the fall.
Tillmann believes these patterns of behavior don’t just waste capital. “They contribute to the ever-ongoing boom and bust cycles,” he says, “which are destructive to economic growth.” At World Summit, he wants to break that loop.
“The recession of trust is the real market risk”
One of Tillmann’s biggest challenges has been navigating a climate he calls “the recession of trust.” In his view, the erosion of credibility across financial and luxury sectors has made it harder to build meaningful relationships with stakeholders. “You have to work hard to gain the trust of the people,” he says. “That takes time, proof, and integrity.”
That principle has guided his new fund’s design. Unlike traditional VC models that distribute capital passively across a portfolio, the World Summit Venture Fund leans in. “We don’t hand out money,” Tillmann explains. “We take an active role in coaching the founders to success.”
This coaching model isn’t new to him. As CEO of Pitch Global, Tillmann has mentored startups for nearly a decade, helping them raise over $1 billion in capital. “The sharp eye on what really counts to attract investor interest,” he says, “is what we’re bringing into the World Summit fund.”
“The Next Unicorns” is not just a show, it’s a strategy
Looking ahead, Tillmann is set to launch “The Next Unicorns,” a televised competition in which emerging companies compete for a $10 million investment. But this isn’t just another reality TV gimmick. The show serves a broader purpose: opening up the investment process to a wider audience.
“Public viewers will not only vote,” he explains, “they’ll also have the opportunity to invest.” The initiative is part of his broader mission to “democratize wealth creation”, a theme he returns to frequently. Unlike closed-door venture networks, this model encourages transparency, public input, and direct participation in building the next wave of high-growth companies.
“I let results – not vanity – guide my path”
Axel’s journey to the boardroom is full of surprising turns. At 18, he was managing the German heavy metal band Accept. It was there that he learned one of his earliest lessons in market strategy. “Scorpions had more success because they understood the power of crossover,” he recalls. So did Kiss with “I Was Made for Lovin’ You.” Ego, he warns, is the enemy of scale. “If you say ‘I’ll never play that music,’ you might end up leaving real success behind.”
He’s also worked outside boardrooms entirely, delivering gas and heating oil in a 36-ton trailer truck during college breaks. “It paid top dollar,” he laughs, “at least for a student’s life.” That experience, too, shaped his philosophy: humility, discipline, and a willingness to do the hard work others avoid.
Today, he applies that same grit to a sector that sorely needs it. “God is in charge to tell me the timing,” he says, “not my ego.” It’s a perspective that separates Tillmann from the speculative class. Where others gamble on buzz, he’s building on trust.