John Doerr On Zynga Investment: “We Own 60M Shares, So I Want That Stock Back Above $10 … Where God Intended It”

Investors tend not to be cool, sexy or “famous” in the traditional sense. After all, anyone can invest in one great company, but reproducing those victories habitually over decades is nearly impossible. Thus, while investors may never become celebrities, a handful have managed to achieve a kind of renown by defying the odds and continuing to pick next year’s winner.

While his record is far from flawless, John Doerr is one of those investors, because — as Google CEO Larry Page puts it — he “sees the future first.” A Kleiner Perkins partner since 1980, Doerr has backed companies like Symantec, Netscape, Sun Microsystems, Intuit, Amazon, Google and Twitter. Doerr has also gone on to become a big supporter, spokesman and evangelist for reform (and innovation) in education, health and greentech (among others). And, as he showed today at Fortune’s Brainstorm Tech Conference in Aspen, the dude is eminently quotable no matter the subject — success or failure.

While Doerr currently sits on the boards of fast-growing startups like social news mag, Flipboard, and MOOC pioneer, Coursera, and is a long-time Google board member, he also recently joined took a seat on the boards of one of his portfolio companies, which is turning out to be somewhat of a dog: Zynga.

In spite of amassing a legendary portfolio over the years, some of his high-profile and seemingly promising investments haven’t performed as well as Doerr (and many others) expected, Zynga and Fisker Automotive chief among them. When asked why, Doerr said that, at least in the case of Fisker, “execution was a key” reason for its comparative lack of success.

“We invested in Fisker because we believed in the electrification of transportation,” Doerr said, but Fisker is now on the edge of bankruptcy because “Tesla out-executed them brilliantly,” turning itself into a $14 billion company in the process. So, while Fisker itself hasn’t turned out to be a massive success, Doerr chose to look on the bright side, saying that even so, the firm’s investment thesis (in the evolution and rise of electric vehicles in transportation) “has been proven out.”

However, the Zynga story is different, Doerr continued, mostly because the investor still believes in the company’s viability and market position. Assuming a cheerleading role for his portfolio company, Doerr offered a view that will likely find at least a handful of detractors among tech pundits: “[Zynga is] right at the take-off point with respect to mobile gaming.” Doerr then cited Zynga’s new CEO, Don Mattrick, as another source of optimism the company going forward.

Mattrick recently left Microsoft, where he was the President of Interactive Entertainment, to help fix the beleaguered social gaming company. Mattrick was recruited by co-founder and former CEO Mark Pincus — a move which Doerr said was “one of the smartest moves that Mark Pincus could have made for Zynga,” as the former Microsoft president is a seasoned entrepreneur and turnaround executive. “When Mattrick joined Microsoft,” he explained, “Xbox Live was losing large amounts of money and when he left, it was making tons of money.”

Dan Primack of Fortune then asked Doerr to elaborate on Zynga’s CEO transition and why, as a VC, he would decide to put a second person on the board and what role he played in that move. Doerr responded by saying that “Mark Pincus led the whole board in making this change,” and because Mattrick has such a good track record, he was “supportive of Mark and the rest of the board when making that change.”

As to why he joined Zynga’s board in March, Doerr said that he joined because he thinks “[Zynga] has a monster market opportunity in front of it.” Fortune’s Andy Serwer then tamped down the self-interested cheerleading by reminding the audience that Kleiner Perkins happens to be a significant stakeholder in Zynga.

To illustrate just how significant KPCB’s stake in Zynga is, Doerr admitted that the firm owns “60 million shares” in Zynga, before joking that he is indeed self-interested and wants “to get that stock price back above $10/share … where god intended it to be,” he quipped, while nearly giggling.

Doerr’s quip on god’s wishes for Zynga’s floundering stock later spurred Primack to tweet in response — and mock reverence:

“Don’t you think there ought to be a safe, trusted place you can go to connect with your friends to play games?” Doerr continued. He then elaborated on his stance saying, “we think Zynga ought to be” the one to do it and that this is the core belief and motivation behind Kleiner’s investment and Doerr’s continuing optimism. The company “missed a beat moving from Facebook to mobile,” Doerr admitted, before concluding on a positive note: “But the team is on it.”

The 9 Best Doerr Quotes & Predictions

On a final, self-interested promotional note, Doerr will be taking the stage at TechCrunch’s own Disrupt SF conference in September to elaborate on what’s in store for the tech industry and tell us more about his visions of the future.

Doerr’s interview with Fortune’s Andy Serwer at Brainstorm Tech is embedded below:

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