APRIL 2018 FORBES ASIA | 59there are no female investors at all. If Lee’s
group could ind a way to efect long-term
change in this old boy network, it could
serve as a model for hidebound industries
around the world.
She had one thing going for her. Four
women on her initial email blast rank
among the world’s most powerful venture
capitalists: Ann Miura-Ko (No. 55 on this
year’s Midas List), Kirsten Green (No. 77),
heresia Gouw (No. 89) and herself. And
there were also up-and-comers like Sequoia’s
Jess Lee, Union Square’s Rebecca Kaden and
Sarah Tavel from Benchmark. As champions
of entrepreneurial capitalism and free enter-
prise, these women knew that if they seized
the commanding heights—by funding more
female founders and mentoring more fe-
male investors—they would be impossi-
ble to ignore. Protesting the power structure
might generate one-day headlines. To cata-
lyze change over a period of decades, they
needed to become the power structure.
Called All Raise, the group, now with
3 6 women, granted Forbes exclusive access
as they try to rewrite their industry’s play-
book. he stated mission is to double the
percentage of women in VC partner roles
over the next ten years and increase total
VC funding to female founders from 15%
to 25% in ive years. All Raise was already
the invisible hand behind two of tech’s big-
gest diversity eforts in recent months: the
mentoring series Female Founder Oce
Hours and a 700-startup pledge for diversity
called Founders for Change, featuring tech
billionaires like Instagram founder Kevin
Systrom and Dropbox CEO Drew Houston.
Two startups have already secured fund-
ing because of All Raise. Education-sav-
ings service CollegeBacker raised $75,000
toward its seed inancing thanks to a meet-
ing at the Female Founder event. Agentolo-
gy, a fast-growing maker of real estate sot-
ware, raised a $12 million round led by an
All Raise member acting on a tip from an-
other. And through a private database of in-
terested female tech leaders—dozens strong
and growing—these groups are not just re-
butting irms that say they can’t ind women;
they’re acting as part of the change.
Ater months of secrecy, All Raise’s
members are going public. When Melin-
da Gates surveyed the industry to see who
had the most promising plans for diversi-
ty and inclusion, All Raise caught her eye.he group is in talks with her personal of-
ice, Pivotal Ventures, to formalize its sup-
port. All Raise has commitments of $2 mil-
lion from such supporters as Silicon Valley
Bank.
Like a startup itself, All Raise faces risk
as it builds on early success. Its volunteermembers will have to scale carefully and
avoid burnout while working within an in-
dustry known for its resistance to change.
Should they succeed, All Raise’s members
have the chance not just to open the eyes of
an industry but also to kickstart a transfor-
mation of American business, where shock-
ingly only 6% of the biggest publicly traded
companies are led by women.AT THE ALL RAISE February meetup in San
Francisco, Medha Agarwal rushes to thank
her cohost and fellow venture capitalist
Maha Ibrahim, a partner at Canaan who in-
vests out of an $800 million fund.
For more than four hours, Agar wal and
92 other women hear stories from Ibrahim,
Aileen Lee, Miura-Ko and others, covering
everything from how to speak up in partner
meetings to when to switch irms. Agarwal,
a midlevel principal at Redpoint Ventures,
PORTRAIT ILLUSTRATIONS BY LOUISE POMEROY FOR FORBES a $4 billion-in-assets shop in Menlo Park,
1 Neil Shen /11
SEQUOIA CAPITAL CHINA
Alibaba
2 Bill Gurley /7
BENCHMARK
Uber
3 Jim Goetz /1
SEQUOIA CAPITAL
WhatsApp
4 Carl Gordon /8
ORBIMED
Acerta
5 Robert Nelsen /16
ARCH VENTURE PARTNERS
Juno Therapeutics
6 Mary Meeker /6
KLEINER PERKINS CAUFIELD & BYERS
Airbnb
7 Peter Fenton /3
BENCHMARK
Docker
8 J.P. Gan /30
QIMING VENTURE PARTNERS
Meitu
9 Douglas Leone /9
SEQUOIA CAPITAL
ServiceNow
10 Brian Singerman /5
FOUNDERS FUND
Stemcentrx
11 Eric Paley /31
FOUNDER COLLECTIVE
Uber
12 Mike Maples Jr. /20
FLOODGATE
Okta
13 Kui Zhou /25
SEQUOIA CAPITAL CHINA
New Dada
14 Roelof Botha /34
SEQUOIA CAPITAL
Square
15 Byron Deeter /39
BESSEMER VENTURE PARTNERS
Twilio
16 Scott Sandell /24
NEW ENTERPRISE ASSOCIATES
MuleSoft
17 Rob Hayes /21
FIRST ROUND CAPITAL
Uber
18 Dennis Phelps /4 5
INSTITUTIONAL VENTURE PARTNERS
Snap
19 Josh Kopelman /35
FIRST ROUND CAPITAL
Flatiron Health
20 Hans Tung /19
GGV CAPITAL
Musical.ly
21 Neeraj Agrawal /17
BATTERY VENTURES
Coupa
22 Joe Lonsdale /88
8VC
Wish
23 Xiaojun Li /13
IDG CAPITAL
Xiaomi
24 Xiao Ping Xu /72
ZHENFUND
Meicai
25 Jerey Jordan /18
ANDREESSEN HOROWITZ
AirbnbJ.P. GAN
Picture
Perfect
His rapid rise to the
Midas List’s Top 10
comes from invest-
ments in picture-
editing app Meitu
and e-commerce
platform Meituan-
Dianping. —A. KnappRANK Name /2017 RANK
FIRM
Notable DealTHE LIST
The Forbes Midas List ranks the top 100 tech in-
vestors in the world. We pick VCs on the num-
ber and size of exits over the past five years.
We count only exits above $200 million or pri-
vate rounds valuing companies at $400 mil-
lion or more. Neil Shen, seen on our 2014 Forbes
Asia cover (right), is
No. 1, thanks to invest-
ments that include Ali-
baba, Meituan Dianping,
JD.com and, recently,
an exit through online
lending platform Ppdai
Group, which raised $221
million in an IPO on the
NYSE in November 2017.