Another women-led venture firm gains momentum, with Uber exec Rachel Holt as cofounder
Last November, Axios reported that New Enterprise Associates partner Dayna Grayson was leaving the storied venture firm after roughly six years to launch her own shop in Washington, D.C. called Construct Capital.
Today, we know Grayson has company, too. Rachel Holt, one of Uber’s first employees and until now its head of new mobility, announced earlier today that she’s joining Grayson as her cofounder.
Outside of tweeting about their partnership, neither Grayson or Holt are commenting on their new firm, presumably owing to SEC rules about promoting a new fund before it has been raised. But it looks likely that the two met at NEA in recent years if not sooner, with Holt working in the capacity of an “explorer” or scout for NEA since 2018. It was a role through which she was investing in early-stage startups in a manner similar to the way that Sequoia Capital empowers “scouts” in its network to do the same.
As for what’s next, I’ll be joining @daynagrayson to co-found @constructcap, a new VC firm based in DC. I’m really excited to take everything I’ve learned at Uber to help find, fund and scale the next generation of tech entrepreneurs. (2/6)
— Rachel Holt (@RachelJHolt) January 14, 2020
More to come! https://t.co/iS6UjQ30ds
— dayna grayson (@daynagrayson) January 14, 2020
Either way, 2020 already looks poised to be a big year for women in venture. As we reported earlier this week, a former Kleiner Perkins investor, Lynn Chou O’Keefe, also just took the wraps off her digital health-focused venture firm, Define Ventures, which raised an impressive $87 million in commitments for its debut.
Longtime VC Renata Quintini — formerly of Felicis Ventures, then Lux Capital — is expected to close the debut fund that she is raising with Roseanne Wincek, formerly of IVP, sometime this year. (The reported target for their new outfit, Renegade Partners, is $300 million.)
Last month, London-based Ada Ventures, cofounded by investor Francesca Warner, also took the wraps off its debut fund, which closed with $34 million in capital commitments.
Based on our conversations last fall with limited partners, the institutions and individuals who fund venture firms, there were a lot of people knocking on their door in anticipation of a possible economic slowdown, so we’d guess this is just the beginning of a very long list of new funds that will emerge on the scene this year, from investors of all stripes.
Our guess is that a fair amount of them — more than we’ve seen previously — will be women with deep industry expertise like Grayson and Holt.
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