Why is advancing the next era of venture capital important?
Venture capital is an American national treasure. It has fueled the advancement of innovation, economies, and people. It has created value, jobs, wealth, and life-changing products and services. Though venture capital as an industry may be young and as an asset class may be small, high-growth startups and their long-term investors have truly changed the world.
To continue the success of the industry’s past 50 years to the next 50 years and beyond, we must expand opportunities for people of all backgrounds to access the venture ecosystem and thrive. We must educate future leaders on best practices and help them learn from the industry’s rich history. We must help firms build strong, healthy cultures and values. We must keep the public and ecosystem informed through qualitative and quantitative insights.
By investing in tomorrow’s leaders today, we shape the next era of venture capital.
high-growth startups—across all 50 states and DC—raised venture funding in 2019 to build and grow their businesses.
of all U.S. IPOs from 1974 to 2015 were venture-backed companies, representing 63% of the market capitalization and 85% of R&D.
is the average net jobs created annually between 1980 and 2010 by high-growth startups, which account for ~50% of gross jobs created in the U.S.
U.S. venture firms are active today, managing an aggregate of $444 billion in assets.
NVCA Oral History Collection: David Morgenthaler
/in Other Education, History ReadingAn oral history featuring David Turner Morgenthaler, an American businessman who founded the venture capital firm Morgenthaler Ventures.
NVCA Oral History Collection: Alan Patricof
/in Other Education, History ReadingAn oral history featuring Alan Patricof, a venture capital pioneer, who founded Greycroft, LLC in 2006.
Giving Notice: Why the Best and Brightest are Leaving the Workplace and How You Can Help them Stay
/in Book Human Capital ReadingIn today’s workplace, blatant discrimination has mostly been relegated to the dustbin of America’s past. However, in this book Freada Kapor Klein shows how even well-intentioned people can harbor unconscious […]