- In a lengthy feature article this week, Fortune’s Polina Marinova chronicled the downfall of Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers, once the premier venture firm in Silicon Valley.
- Marinova reports that part of the firm’s downfall was high turnover by some of the firm’s most up-and-coming investors.
- Some of Silicon Valley’s most prominent venture capital firms were started by former Kleiner Perkins investors, including Khosla Ventures and Defy Partners.
- Visit Business Insider’s homepage for more stories.
Fortune’s Polina Marinova published a lenghty feature story chronicling the series of bad decisions that led Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers, once Silicon Valley’s premier venture firm, to lose its edge.
One of the critical flaws, Marinova reports, was the firm’s lack of a succession plan during a time when longtime leader John Doerr planned to step back from day-to-day operations. Rather than promoting the highly skilled team of investors internally, Fortune says Doerr instead decided to tap Mamoon Hamid from Social Capital, an outside firm that Doerr had invested in.
Mary Meeker, head of Kleiner Perkins growth fund, was one of the firm’s highest profile departures in September 2018, but even before that, a series of partners exited the Sand Hill Road institution to start their own firms.
Here are some of the hottest names in venture capital that used to work at Silicon Valley’s aging "gold standard" firm.
Mary Meeker, Bond
Business Insider
Meeker was a rock star internet analyst for investment bank Morgan Stanley before Kleiner Perkins courted her to lead its new growth fund in 2010. According to Fortune, she oversaw the $1 billion digital growth fund’s successful returns from investments in high-growth companies that Kleiner Perkins had previously passed up, like Facebook, LendingClub, DocuSign, Snapchat, and Slack.
Meeker reportedly left Kleiner Perkins in 2018 due to disagreements with Hamid. She is targeting $1.25 billion for Bond’s first fund, her own growth investment firm.
Vinod Khosla, Khosla Ventures
Mario Anzuoni / REUTERS
Khosla joined Kleiner Perkins as a general partner in 1986 after cofounding Sun Microsystems, a company that developed computer hardware. His experience in hardware paid off through the firm’s successful investments in Cerent and Juniper Networks, according to Fortune.
Khosla left Kleiner Perkins in 2004 to start Khosla Ventures, an early-stage venture firm that focused on emerging industries like biotechnology and clean energy. Khosla’s firm has invested in genomic testing startup Color Genomics, sustainable fashion brand Everlane, food delivery platform DoorDash, and payments platform Square, among others.
Trae Vassallo, Defy Partners
KPCB
Vassallo joined Kleiner Perkins in 2002 and worked on the firm’s energy efficiency portfolio. According to Fortune, the former IDEO product engineer used her design background to help land one of Kleiner Perkins’s most successful investments in Nest, which was sold to Google for $3.2 billion.
Vassallo left Kleiner Perkins in 2014 to start Defy Partners with Neil Sequeira. On April 10, the firm announced its second fund with $262 million committed to invest in early-stage companies.
See the rest of the story at Business Insider
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Source: Business Insider – mhernbroth@businessinsider.com (Megan Hernbroth)