A Fortnight of Female Founders

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Last Wednesday marked the two-week point since the launch of XFactor Ventures.  We are grateful for, and a bit overwhelmed by, the support and feedback.  We thought there was an unmet market need for female founders investing in female founders, but you amazed us with the volume, quality, and breadth of opportunities that have come into XFactor.  

Over our first two weeks, we received 200 female-founded companies to review.  Obviously, there is a huge pool of talented and creative female founders!  Equally obviously, not all of these investment opportunities are going to fit with our expertise, passion or capacity, and we know that will mean we will end up missing out on some fabulous opportunities.  Given we can’t do it alone, we want to make sure amazing female founders have access to as many resources as possible.  As a result, we are developing an Allies list with whom we can make introductions.  If you’re an angel interested in backing seed stage founders or a fund that is committed to backing women and mixed gender teams, drop us a note to hello@xfactor.ventures letting us know what areas (however you define it) are most of interest to you!

In reviewing these opportunities we are struck by the fact that, apart from the high-quality level, there is no such thing as a normative female founded company.  While the stereotypical beauty/fashion company is a segment within our deal flow, it is nowhere near the most common. The companies we are seeing are diverse, broadly reflective of the venture industry, tech-driven and blow away the myth that female founders only start female-focused companies.  Specifically, 50% are deep tech companies (Software, AI, VR/AR, Networking, IoT, Robotics, Wearables, Other hardware), 20% are e-commerce (mostly B2C, some B2B, in the pet, clothing, beauty, food and home furnishings markets among others), 12% are Biotech (even though it’s not an area of focus or expertise for us at this time) and the remaining 18% are scattered across a variety of categories including fin-tech, ed-tech, marketplaces, content and tech-enabled services.

Nor do female founders always have a female co-founder.  Of the companies with co-founders, 68% have mixed gender founding teams.  This reinforces our belief that diverse founding teams will have a better perspective on market opportunities,  how to define and market products for the widest possible audience,  will make better decisions, and be more successful in attracting and retaining talent.  Interestingly, almost half of the companies have a solo-founder, and while this has always struck me as a harder path, some of the best female-founded companies (StitchFix, LearnVest and The Real Real are three examples that come immediately to mind) have followed this path, so it’s clearly not a determining factor one way or another.

On the XFactor front, since our launch we have closed 3 investments and committed to 2 others. We are extremely impressed with the quality of the first 5 female founders we are fortunate enough to support.  We will follow up with details in future posts, once these companies announce their financings and plans, but the companies are in the AI (2x), Data, Cloud Platforms and Content/Community fields and we look forward to working with these teams as they take on their respective billion dollar market opportunities.

Thank you all again for the support and introductions and for all the female founders we have met for your talent, perseverance, and grit.  As always, if you are interested in speaking with our team, please email us at hello@xfactor.ventures.

Announcing XFactor Ventures: Female Founders Investing in Female Founders

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Today, we are pleased to announce and launch XFactor Ventures, a pre-seed and seed stage venture fund that will invest in 30 new companies with female founders targeting billion dollar opportunities in the coming year or two.  

Are you a female founder with the XFactor looking for funding?  If so – we want to talk to you!  Please find us online at XFactor.ventures, follow us on Twitter or reach out via email to hello@xfactor.ventures

XFactor is led by a fantastic investment team of female founders –

  • Bay Area: Danielle Morrill of Mattermark, Erica Brescia of Bitnami, Jessica Mah of inDinero, and Ooshma Garg of Gobble
  • New York: Aubrie Pagano of Bow & Drape, Kathryn Minshew of The Muse, and Liz Whitman of Manicube
  • Boston: Anna Palmer of WonderMile, who while also working on launching her second start-up, was instrumental in co-founding XFactor with me and my amazing partner at Flybridge, Kate Castle.

This team has delivered hundreds of investor pitches, raised well over $100M in venture capital across multiple rounds, hired thousands of employees and generated significant value as they have built and grown the almost dozen companies they have founded.  

XFactor’s goal is threefold:

  1. Supporting and enabling the next generation of female-led businesses.  We invest in companies with at least one female founder – the “X Factor” – who have the insight and drive to build the next billion dollar company. Our investment team are all talented and successful female founder operators that have ridden the company-building roller coaster themselves and will provide connections and “in the trenches” advice and mentorship to our portfolio companies.  Regardless of gender, a team of successful founder and leaders investing in the next-generation of founders is unique and their collective insights will be valuable to the companies in which we invest.
  2. Providing our investment team a platform and mentorship to become successful investors. We hope that, over time, this effort will increase the ranks of female investors in the venture and angel investing community.
  3. Finally, and most importantly, XFactor is focused on generating attractive investment returns by identifying massive market opportunities and backing the most talented ambitious founders (who happen to be female) based on our conviction that diverse teams will outperform in the market.  Said another way, XFactoris not an affirmative action fund with all the negative connotations that implies.  There are few things worse for a female founder than being referred to a female-focused fund with the insinuation that you are not ready for the big leagues of male dominated funds. That’s not us. We are big league entrepreneurs and investors that will hold founders to high standards and support them in building game-changing companies.

I have been a venture capitalist for almost my entire professional career, first as a General Partner at Greylock and more recently as a co-founder of Flybridge.  On a personal level, I have always been surrounded by strong women and recognize the unique value women can bring to the table.  Over the years, when I realized that my male-dominated deal flow and investment activity did not reflect those values, I told myself that it simply reflected the demographics of the B2B tech space in which I invest.  Further, when I heard stories about VCs who would ask female founders what they would do if they got pregnant, or comment inappropriately on their appearance, or get their wife on the phone to help assess an idea that was being pitched to them or, as has become so apparent in the last weeks, inappropriately turn pitch meetings into a dating opportunity, or even more deplorable, an opportunity to leverage their power to sexually harass female founders, I comforted myself by saying that was not me or my partners. Those jerks are the minority of venture investors and not the ones I work with.

But last Fall, it became apparent that being a bystander was no longer acceptable.  I was appalled that the public discourse in the country suddenly turned openly misogynistic.  And when I received a specific comment from my oldest daughter, a tech-focused junior in college, I realized I had to do something to change the venture industry. “Dad,” she groaned, “I am so tired of looking at websites of startups and seeing only men on the management team” Thus, teaming with Kate, the inspirational XFactor investment team, and all of my partners at Flybridge, we set about forming XFactor Ventures.

The venture industry needs to dramatically change.  80% of the companies that receive venture funding have male only founding teams, and only 7% of partners in leading venture firms are women.  The two are related.  Female partners are more likely to back female founders and yet venture firms pull new venture partners from the ranks of successful founders, so the cycle perpetuates.  While the funding statistics are objectively not right, they are, equally importantly, not smart.  Diverse founding teams will have a better perspective on market opportunities, how to define and market products for the widest possible audience. They will make better decisions and be more successful in attracting and retaining talent.  All of which will lead to superior investment returns.

Finally, as no post from me would be complete without a chart, I have been astounded by the change in the gender composition of my “sourcing meetings” since I started working on XFactor, and this is in the last six months while we were quietly working on this initiative.  As shown below, it turns out to find female founders; you just need to look for them.

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The entire team at Flybridge is thrilled to support XFactor and, on a personal level, I am looking forward to working with our phenomenal and unique investment team as we back and support 30 companies started by fantastic female founders with the XFactor!  

Are you a female founder with the XFactor?  Find us online at XFactor.ventures, follow us on Twitter or reach out via email to hello@xfactor.ventures.