Something Ventured: Female-Founded U.S. Venture Firms On Track To Raise Over $7B In 2021 (2024)

Editor’s note: This article is part of Something Ventured, an ongoing series by Crunchbase News examining diversity and access to capital in the venture-backed startup ecosystem. Accessthe full projecthere.

Venture firms in the U.S. founded by women are on track to raise more than $7 billion in 2021— almost $1 billion more than the prior peak of 2019 and up 59 percent so far year over year, Crunchbase data shows.

Subscribe to the Crunchbase Daily

U.S. venture capital has raised record funds in 2021, at $96 billion through the third quarter, according to a Pitchbook/NVCA report. That compares with $86.8 billion in 2020, a prior record in the past decade.

The proportion raised by female-founded firms through the third quarter of 2021 represented more than 7 percent of the total raised by U.S. venture firms, a higher proportion than 2020, but lower than percentages from 2017 to 2019, according to Crunchbase figures.

Something Ventured: Female-Founded U.S. Venture Firms On Track To Raise Over $7B In 2021 (1)

Larger funds

Funds in the $100 million to $500 million range have grown the most year over year and represent the largest proportion of funds raised by female-founded funds through the third quarter of 2021 at $3.9 billion.

Something Ventured: Female-Founded U.S. Venture Firms On Track To Raise Over $7B In 2021 (2)

Investing in women

How do female-founded firms fare when it comes to investing in female-founded startups?

We analyzed U.S. female-founded venture firms and found 28 percent of deal counts from 2016 to October 2021 were in startups with at least one female founder. That proportion dropped to 22 percent of deals for male-only founded U.S. venture firms.

A minority of male-founded firms have female partners. According to All Raise, a group that advocates for more women in the venture ecosystem and a greater proportion of funding to female founders, female partners represent 13 percent of partners at U.S. venture firms with funds above $25 million, and 64 percent of the firms have no female partners.

Second funds dominate

Crunchbase figures show second funds represented the majority of funds–52 percent–raised by female-founded firms through the third quarter of 2021.

Bond, which spun out of Kleiner Perkins to invest at growth in September 2018, has raised the largest fund this year at $2 billion. This is an all-time peak for a U.S. female-founded venture firm, co-founded by ex-Wall Street analyst Mary Meeker, along with former Kleiner colleagues Mood Rowghani, Noah Knauf and Juliet de Baubigny.

The firm has made 46 investments, per Crunchbase data, leading more than half at an average size of $112 million. It has already had three exits, including Hippo Insurance, which went public via a SPAC and in which Bond is listed as an owner of more than 5 percent of stock according to the S-1.

Something Ventured: Female-Founded U.S. Venture Firms On Track To Raise Over $7B In 2021 (3)

Acrew Capital, founded by Theresia Gouw, Lauren Kolodny, Mark Kraynak, Asad Khaliq and Vishal Lugani in 2019, all previously at Aspect Ventures, raised a $380 million second fund for early-stage investing and a $300 million second fund to invest at later stage. The firm has racked up seven unicorn portfolio companies amongst its 44 portfolio companies, three of which were also portfolio companies of Aspect Ventures, and the majority with a first investment at Series C and later.

Something Ventured: Female-Founded U.S. Venture Firms On Track To Raise Over $7B In 2021 (4)

Inspired Capital Partners was founded in 2019 by Alexa von Tobel, sole founder of LearnVest, and Penny Pritzker, the former U.S. Secretary of Commerce. The firm closed on a second fund of $281 million in September.

“We’ll focus on everything from early seed; that check can be $1 million to $3 million, all the way up to your series A, where we could write up to a $15 million check,” von Tobel said to Crunchbase News, speaking about the close of its new fund.

The company likes to lead or co-lead and will invest in 25 to 30 companies from the new fund.

Graduating to fund 3

Something Ventured: Female-Founded U.S. Venture Firms On Track To Raise Over $7B In 2021 (5)

Third funds are the next largest cohort, at 14 percent of the total raised by U.S.-based female-founded firms with funds above $25 million.

These include Los Angeles-based Fika Ventures, co-founded by Eva Ho and TX Zhuo, that raised a $160 million fund 3 and a $35 million opportunity fund.

Boston-based seed investor Pillar VC with founding partners Sarah Hodges, Jamie Goldstein and Russ Wilcox, raised a $169 million fund 3 and a $23 million select fund in July.

Something Ventured: Female-Founded U.S. Venture Firms On Track To Raise Over $7B In 2021 (6)

And San Francisco-based edtech investor Reach Capital, co-founded by Jennifer Carolan and Shauntel Garvey, raised a $165 million fund 3.

New funds

Something Ventured: Female-Founded U.S. Venture Firms On Track To Raise Over $7B In 2021 (7)

Inaugural funds were raised in 2021 by venture firm veterans. These include Washington, D.C.-based Construct Capital co-founded by Dayna Grayson previously at NEA and Rachel Holt, a past Uber executive. Construct Capital raised a $140 million inaugural fund to invest in foundational technologies that represent half of the U.S. GDP but have lacked investment–sectors like manufacturing and mobility–according to the firm.

Something Ventured: Female-Founded U.S. Venture Firms On Track To Raise Over $7B In 2021 (8)

San Francisco-based Renegade Partners was founded in 2020 by Renata Quintini, formerly at Lux Capital and Felicis Ventures, and Roseanne Wincek, a prior partner at IVP. Renegade closed on its first fund at $100 million.

Something Ventured: Female-Founded U.S. Venture Firms On Track To Raise Over $7B In 2021 (9)

And New York-based Avid Ventures, founded by former General Catalyst principal Addie Lerner, and joined by founding investor Tali Vogelstein, previously an investor at Bessemer Venture Partners. Avid Ventures has raised a $72 million first fund.

In summary

Female-founded firms have raised record amounts through the third quarter 2021. Consistent with overall trends in venture capital, firms are raising larger funds with a shorter time horizon between fund raises.

But in a year of record funds raised by venture capital, female-founded firms are not growing their proportion of dollars so far in 2021 compared to earlier years bar 2020.

However, the majority of these funds are focused on seed and early-stage funding, the stages that can have a disproportionate impact on founder success. If a startup is not able to raise an institutional seed round or overcome the Series A hurdle, it often ends up closing down. Female-founded firms tend to invest in female-founded companies by a higher proportion, according to our analysis. That means, if trends hold, we should see better fundraising odds for female founders as more women raise funds.

Crunchbase Pro queries relevant to this article

  • U.S. female-founded venture firms

Methodology

The data contained in this report comes directly from Crunchbase, and is based on fund reported data through Sept. 30, 2021. Female-founded firms for this report are defined as U.S. headquartered venture and micro-venture firms where at least one founder is a woman. We include firms with current founders and founders in emeritus in order to represent amounts and proportions over time.

Illustration: Dom Guzman

Note: A previous version of this article contained incorrect information about one of the founding teams. Avid Ventures was founded by former General Catalyst principal Addie Lerner who was joined by founding investor Tali Vogelstein.

Something Ventured: Female-Founded U.S. Venture Firms On Track To Raise Over $7B In 2021 (10)

Stay up to date with recent funding rounds, acquisitions, and more with the Crunchbase Daily.

Something Ventured: Female-Founded U.S. Venture Firms On Track To Raise Over $7B In 2021 (2024)

FAQs

Something Ventured: Female-Founded U.S. Venture Firms On Track To Raise Over $7B In 2021? ›

Venture firms in the U.S. founded by women are on track to raise more than $7 billion in 2021— almost $1 billion more than the prior peak of 2019 and up 59 percent so far year over year, Crunchbase data shows.

How much VC funding goes to female founders? ›

Banking and Capital Markets

Women-founded startups accounted for 2% or less of venture capital (VC) funding invested in Europe and the United States in 2023, Pitchbook data finds. But by VC deal numbers, women are making gains over the longer term.

How much venture capital was raised in 2021? ›

Private venture-backed companies raised a total of $238.3 billion last year, 31% lower than the record of $344.7 billion in 2021, the data showed.

Who do venture capital firms raise money from? ›

The capital in VC comes from affluent individuals, pension funds, endowments, insurance companies, and other entities that are willing to take higher risks for potentially higher rewards. This form of financing is distinct from traditional bank loans or public markets, focusing instead on long-term growth potential.

How many female venture capitalists are there? ›

One area where women are advancing little, however, is venture capital (VC). Companies founded solely by women received only 2% of all VC investment in 2022, and only about 15% of all VC 'cheque-writers' are women.

How much money do you need to get into VC? ›

Many venture capitalists will stick with investing in companies that operate in industries with which they are familiar. Their decisions will be based on deep-dive research. In order to activate this process and really make an impact, you will need between $1 million and $5 million.

How much do VC funding founders make? ›

While a quarter of both groups earned between $50,000 and $100,000 per year, just 4% of the VC-backed crowd was paid $0, versus 29% of the bootstrapped founders. But then 29% of the VC-backed group made between $100,000 and $150,000, while a mere 9% of the bootstrapped group pocketed that amount.

Has VC funding dried up? ›

The decline in fundraising is also happening at a time when VC dry powder of $302.8 billion is at a record high. Most of this dry powder belongs to funds that were formed in 2021 and 2022.

How many startups get venture funding? ›

Only 0.05% of startups get VC funding

Venture capital is defined as a temporary equity investment in young, innovative, non-listed companies, aka startups. Many promising startups seek venture capital as a way to secure investment, but it's extremely competitive and rare. A mere 0.05% of startups get VC funding.

How do venture partners get paid? ›

Venture Partners are normally compensated with carried interest, versus receiving a salary. Carried interest or carry is generated from the fund performance, and it aligns incentives well, since Venture Partners only get compensated when the fund has positive returns.

Who makes more money private equity or venture capital? ›

Generally speaking, those who work in private equity earn more than venture capitalists. This is because the fund sizes are much larger in private equity.

Who pays venture capital? ›

Investors in venture capital funds are typically very large institutions such as pension funds, financial firms, insurance companies, and university endowments—all of which put a small percentage of their total funds into high-risk investments.

Who is the founder of Girls Who VC? ›

Isabella Mandis is a Harvard undergraduate, the founder of Girls Into VC (formerly known as Girls Who VC), a Kleiner Perkins Fellow, and was recently listed in Forbes 30 Under 30 for Boston.

What are the female founded private equity firms? ›

Other recently founded women-led firms include Prelude Growth Partners, Citation Capital, Clearhaven Partners, Vertu Capital, Grafine Partners, HarbourView Equity, Emerald Bridge Capital and Astira Capital. An informal support network has sprung up as more of these women-led firms have hit the market.

How many investors are female? ›

As of 2023, around 60% of women in the US are investing in the stock market in some way or another, compared to just 40% in 2017. And with the approach of the Great Wealth Transfer, women are expected to control $30 trillion by 2030.

How much VC money goes to Black founders? ›

VC investments in Black-owned startups reached nearly $5 billion in the U.S. in 2021. That figure plummeted by more than half to $2.4 billion in 2022. Crunchbase found in 2023, just $705 million in venture funding went to Black-owned startups, the first year that figure was less than $1 billion since 2016.

What percentage of founders are female? ›

Women accounted for just 13.2% of all startup founders in 2023. This founder gender gap was larger in some sectors than others. Over the past several years, men have outnumbered women among the population of new startup founders by a ratio of nearly six to one. In 2023, that disparity got even worse.

How many female founders have taken a company public? ›

Taking a company public is perhaps one of the best days in a founder's life — but out of the 7,000 companies that have IPO'd throughout history, only about 30 of them have been founded and led by women. One of those female founders is Julie Wainwright — and she's done it twice.

How much percentage does a VC take? ›

The investors get 70% to 80% of the gains; the venture capitalists get the remaining 20% to 30%. The amount of money any partner receives beyond salary is a function of the total growth of the portfolio's value and the amount of money managed per partner. (See the exhibit “Pay for Performance.”)

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Mrs. Angelic Larkin

Last Updated:

Views: 5697

Rating: 4.7 / 5 (67 voted)

Reviews: 82% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Mrs. Angelic Larkin

Birthday: 1992-06-28

Address: Apt. 413 8275 Mueller Overpass, South Magnolia, IA 99527-6023

Phone: +6824704719725

Job: District Real-Estate Facilitator

Hobby: Letterboxing, Vacation, Poi, Homebrewing, Mountain biking, Slacklining, Cabaret

Introduction: My name is Mrs. Angelic Larkin, I am a cute, charming, funny, determined, inexpensive, joyous, cheerful person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.