Inside Serena Williams’ Plan To Ace Venture Investing

United States News News

Inside Serena Williams’ Plan To Ace Venture Investing
United States Latest News,United States Headlines
  • 📰 Forbes
  • ⏱ Reading Time:
  • 94 sec. here
  • 3 min. at publisher
  • 📊 Quality Score:
  • News: 41%
  • Publisher: 53%

Some 60% of Serena Williams’ investments so far have gone to companies led by women or people of color. “What better way to preach that message?” asks Williams

invested last year in the U.S. went to women-led startups—and even when including firms with both a male and female founder, you’re just at 10%. The numbers are worse for black and Hispanic founders. Yet some 60% of Williams’ investments so far have gone to companies led by women or people of color. “What better way to preach that message?” asks Williams.

Given the exponential riskiness involved in pre- and early-revenue companies, Williams has built a team of Silicon Valley mentors around her, much as Patrick Mouratoglou has guided Williams on the court and WME’s Jill Smoller has handled her endorsements—almost a quarter-billion worth—for nearly two decades. There’s Chris Lyons, from Andreessen Horowitz, who is an informal advisor and friend. “She is more passionate than 99% of the people in this space,” says Lyons.

The rate of Williams’ investments has ramped up in lockstep with the onboarding of a portfolio manager. Alison Rapaport, 29, was fresh out of Harvard Business School with an M.B.A. after a five-year stint in JPMorgan’s asset-management group, when she got connected with Williams through Andreessen’s Lyons. Williams told Rapaport to come to the interview with three investment ideas, along with the numbers and rationale behind them.

The past decade has given rise to the celebrity VC investor, spurred by the success of people like the actor Ashton Kutcher and the musician Nas, who both have their own funds. The recent IPOs for Uber and Lyft included scores of musicians and Hollywood A-listers like Gwyneth Paltrow, Jay-Z and Olivia Munn, who got in early and cashed in big. Overall, Ohanian is skeptical of the trend. “The advice I generally give to founders is don’t take money from celebrities,” he says.

The dating and networking app Bumble added Williams as an endorser for 2019, including a Super Bowl ad. The pair also partnered in a pitch competition in which two winners with female founders were chosen for funding from Serena and Bumble. Three executives of companies in the Serena Ventures portfolio—Daily Harvest, the woman-centric co-working space The Wing, and Lola, a natural tampon brand—networked at the first-ever Bumble Fund Summit in April.

We have summarized this news so that you can read it quickly. If you are interested in the news, you can read the full text here. Read more:

Forbes /  🏆 394. in US

United States Latest News, United States Headlines

Similar News:You can also read news stories similar to this one that we have collected from other news sources.

Inside Serena Williams’ Plan To Ace Venture InvestingInside Serena Williams’ Plan To Ace Venture InvestingTennis icon Serena Williams has been a trailblazer for more than two decades. She is now doing the same in Silicon Valley, investing in the underserved market of startups founded by women and minorities.
Read more »

Inside Serena Williams’ Plan To Ace Venture InvestingInside Serena Williams’ Plan To Ace Venture Investing'A lot of people say what I do on the court is amazing, but I feel like that’s just the beginning,' says Williams. 'I want to be remembered for things I do off the court; lives I’ve been able to impact and voices that have been heard.' SelfMadeWomen
Read more »

Inside Serena Williams’ Plan To Ace Venture InvestingInside Serena Williams’ Plan To Ace Venture InvestingTennis icon Serena Williams has been a trailblazer for more than two decades. She is now doing the same in Silicon Valley, investing in the underserved market of startups founded by women and minorities.
Read more »

Inside Serena Williams’ Plan To Ace Venture InvestingInside Serena Williams’ Plan To Ace Venture InvestingTennis star Serena Williams has been a trailblazer for more than 2 decades. She is now doing the same in Silicon Valley, investing in the underserved market of startups founded by women and minorities SelfMadeWomen
Read more »

Inside Serena Williams’ Plan To Ace Venture InvestingInside Serena Williams’ Plan To Ace Venture InvestingTennis icon Serena Williams has been a trailblazer for more than two decades. She is now doing the same in Silicon Valley, investing in the underserved market of startups founded by women and minorities.
Read more »

Serena Williams is the first athlete on Forbes' Richest Self-Made Women listSerena Williams is the first athlete on Forbes' Richest Self-Made Women listThe tennis legend is the first athlete to ever make Forbes' list of richest self-made women in America. According to Forbes' profile, Williams is worth an estimated $225 million.
Read more »



Render Time: 2025-02-24 05:12:42