Redpoint Ventures
Redpoint Ventures is an American venture capital firm founded in 1999 by partners including Geoff Yang and John Walecka, headquartered in Menlo Park, California.[1][2][3] The firm focuses on seed, early-, and growth-stage investments in technology companies across sectors such as enterprise software, fintech, consumer internet, and artificial intelligence.[4][5] With assets under management of approximately $7.2 billion as of 2025, Redpoint has invested in over 350 startups, contributing to notable successes including early backing of Netflix, Twilio, Stripe, and Snowflake, many of which achieved unicorn status or public listings.[6][7] In recent years, the firm raised a $650 million tenth early-stage fund in 2025 and maintains a portfolio emphasizing transformative technologies amid evolving market dynamics.[8]
History
Founding and Initial Funds
Redpoint Ventures was established in 1999 by a group of seasoned venture capitalists, including Geoff Yang, who transitioned from his role as a general partner at Institutional Venture Partners (IVP), and Tom Dyal, among others with prior experience at firms such as Brentwood Venture Capital.[1][9][10] The founding team drew on their track record of backing high-growth technology companies, aiming to focus on early-stage investments in internet, software, and infrastructure sectors during the late dot-com era.[11] In October 1999, Redpoint closed its inaugural fund, Redpoint I, at $600 million, marking the largest first-time fund raised by a new venture capital firm in technology at that time according to Venture Economics data.[12][13] The fund featured a standard 70%/30% carried interest split and targeted early-stage opportunities, with initial deployments averaging $11 million per round across nine investments that year.[13][11] This capital raise reflected strong investor confidence in the founders' expertise amid a competitive venture landscape, enabling Redpoint to commit nearly $100 million in 1999 alone.[11] Following the first fund, Redpoint raised a second vehicle in 2000 totaling $1.25 billion, expanding its capacity for growth-stage bets as market conditions evolved post-dot-com peak.[14] These initial funds positioned the firm to invest in foundational internet infrastructure plays, setting the stage for subsequent expansions while maintaining a focus on high-conviction, technology-driven opportunities.[15]Expansion and Key Milestones
Following its founding in 1999 with a $600 million inaugural fund, Redpoint Ventures pursued steady expansion through successive capital raises and geographic diversification. The firm opened its first international office in China in 2005, establishing presences in Beijing and Shanghai to capitalize on opportunities in the region's technology and consumer sectors. This move supported dedicated China-focused funds, including an initial RMB-denominated vehicle and subsequent USD funds totaling hundreds of millions for early-stage investments in TMT (technology, media, telecommunications) areas.[16] Redpoint maintained momentum with multiple early-stage funds, closing Redpoint IV at $400 million in February 2010 and Redpoint V at the same amount in January 2013, both targeting platforms, media, and data-driven startups.[17] By 2007, it had launched a $250 million fourth fund focused on infrastructure-related ventures.[18] The firm's commitment to scaling grew evident in its parallel development of growth-stage vehicles, with the fifth such fund closing at $740 million in June 2024—up slightly from $725 million three years earlier—to support later-stage companies.[19] Key recent milestones underscore Redpoint's enduring appeal to limited partners amid market volatility. In August 2022, it finalized Redpoint Ventures IX, its ninth early-stage fund, at $650 million for seed and Series A investments.[20] This was followed by the tenth flagship fund's close at $650 million in May 2025, signaling stable fund sizing and continued focus on visionary founders across phases.[8] These raises have contributed to assets under management exceeding $6 billion, reflecting expansion from a U.S.-centric early-stage investor to a multi-fund operator with global footprint.[21]Leadership and Organization
Founding Partners and Key Executives
Redpoint Ventures was established in 1999 as a spin-out from Brentwood Venture Capital, with founding partners including Brad Jones, Geoff Yang, Tom Dyal, and John Walecka.[22][5][1] Brad Jones, a co-founder and partner emeritus, previously served as a general partner at Brentwood Venture Capital since 1981, where he focused on early-stage technology investments.[23][24] Geoff Yang, also a co-founder and partner emeritus, joined from Institutional Venture Partners (IVP), where he had been a general partner since 1987; his investments at Redpoint and prior firms include early backing of Juniper Networks, Foundry Networks, and Netflix.[1][25] Tom Dyal, a co-founder and partner emeritus, has concentrated on software, security, and consumer sectors throughout his career at the firm.[9][22] John Walecka, another co-founder, has continued advising on enterprise software applications for consumer and business uses since the firm's inception.[2] Among key current executives, Satish Dharmaraj serves as managing director, having joined in 2009 after founding and leading Zimbra, with prior entrepreneurial experience.[26][27] Other prominent managing directors include Alex Bard, focusing on enterprise software; Logan Bartlett, specializing in SaaS and marketplaces; and Erica Brescia, with expertise in cloud infrastructure.[22][26]Evolving Team Structure
Redpoint Ventures was established in 1999 with a core team of co-founding partners drawn from established venture firms, including Geoff Yang, John Walecka, and Brad Jones, who brought experience in early-stage investments across sectors like communications and e-commerce.[1][2][28] Allen Beasley also joined at inception, focusing on SaaS and related markets.[29] This initial structure emphasized a compact group of generalist partners managing seed and early-stage deals. The firm began incorporating operational expertise into its partnership in the late 2010s to complement traditional VC backgrounds. In April 2018, Redpoint hired Annie Kadavy from Uber as its first female general partner, signaling a shift toward operators with scaling experience in consumer tech.[30] This was followed by efforts to refresh leadership for new funds, prioritizing partners with hands-on company-building histories.[31] By 2021, Redpoint accelerated this evolution, onboarding multiple executives from major tech platforms. Erica Brescia joined as a managing director after roles at GitHub and Microsoft, focusing on enterprise software.[32] Jason Warner, GitHub's former CTO, became a partner to lead aspects of the firm's $725 million growth fund.[33] These hires reflected a strategic pivot to blend investor acumen with product and engineering insights, particularly for AI and infrastructure bets. In recent years, the team has formalized into specialized units: early-stage investments are led by partners including Alex Bard, Satish Dharmaraj, Annie Kadavy, and Erica Brescia, while growth-stage efforts are overseen by Logan Bartlett, Jacob Effron, Elliot Geidt, and Scott Raney.[32][8] Internal promotions have supported expansion, such as Patrick Chase's elevation to managing director in May 2025 after seven years at the firm, highlighting a pathway for junior staff to partnership.[34] The overall team has scaled to approximately 35 members, including 26 partners and principals, enabling broader deal sourcing and sector coverage.[35] This structure maintains a partner-led model while adapting to multistage investing demands.Investment Strategy
Core Philosophy and Criteria
Redpoint Ventures' investment philosophy emphasizes partnering with exceptional founders to build transformative companies that either create entirely new markets or fundamentally redefine established ones through innovative technology. This approach, articulated consistently since the firm's inception, prioritizes long-term value creation over short-term trends, focusing on scalable solutions in high-potential domains like software, infrastructure, and emerging technologies. The firm views venture capital as a collaborative endeavor, providing not only capital but also operational expertise and network access to accelerate growth.[4] Central to their criteria is the identification of visionary entrepreneurs capable of executing ambitious strategies. Redpoint seeks founders with a bold, expansive vision, deep passion for their mission, and the resilience to navigate uncertainty, often evidenced by prior achievements or domain expertise. For instance, in consumer-focused ventures, they prioritize teams exhibiting analytical rigor, engineering proficiency, earned market insights, and the charisma to inspire stakeholders—qualities that enable sustained momentum amid competition.[36][37] Market dynamics form another key pillar: investments target large, addressable opportunities where technological disruption can yield network effects or defensible moats, such as in AI applications, fintech, or enterprise tools. The firm assesses velocity as a critical factor, favoring companies that demonstrate rapid iteration and adaptability in volatile environments, as slower paces risk obsolescence in sectors like SaaS or AI. Check sizes typically range from seed-stage amounts to growth equity exceeding $50 million, calibrated to the opportunity's scale and stage, with a bias toward early involvement to shape trajectories.[38][3] Redpoint applies a disciplined, data-informed lens to due diligence, weighing traction metrics like user growth, revenue scalability, and unit economics against broader macroeconomic signals, while avoiding over-reliance on hype-driven narratives. This philosophy has underpinned successes in portfolio companies like Snowflake and Stripe, where early bets on infrastructure and payments innovation aligned with criteria for market redefinition.[39]Stages, Sectors, and Geographic Focus
Redpoint Ventures invests in companies at the seed, early-stage, and growth stages, emphasizing technology-driven startups that demonstrate potential for market creation or redefinition.[4][15] This approach allows the firm to participate from initial founding rounds through scaling phases, with historical check sizes varying by stage but typically ranging from single-digit millions in seed investments to larger commitments in growth rounds exceeding $50 million, as evidenced by portfolio examples like early bets on Twilio and later expansions in Snowflake.[3][35] The firm's sector focus spans enterprise software, consumer technology, financial technology (fintech), healthcare, infrastructure, cybersecurity, and blockchain, prioritizing areas where software and data enable disruptive innovation.[3][39] Notable emphases include AI-enabled tools, cloud infrastructure, and open-source security, as seen in investments like HashiCorp for infrastructure automation and Cyera for data security.[4] This breadth reflects a strategy grounded in scalable tech platforms rather than narrow verticals, avoiding less empirically validated sectors like non-tech consumer goods. Geographically, Redpoint maintains a primary focus on United States-based companies, particularly in hubs like Silicon Valley and New York, but has pursued opportunities in China, Latin America (e.g., Nubank in Brazil), and Europe (e.g., Mistral AI in France).[6][40] This distribution aligns with global tech talent pools, though U.S. investments constitute the majority, comprising over 80% of the portfolio by deal count as of 2025.[35] The firm avoids heavy concentration in emerging markets without proven infrastructure scalability.Portfolio and Investments
Notable Early and Growth-Stage Bets
Redpoint Ventures led the $30 million Series C funding round for Pure Storage in August 2011, shortly after the firm's inception, backing the flash-based storage startup founded in 2009 to challenge traditional enterprise data storage paradigms.[41] This early-stage investment supported Pure Storage's expansion in all-flash array technology, contributing to its eventual initial public offering in October 2015.[42] In June 2013, Redpoint led a $70 million Series D round for Twilio, a cloud communications platform enabling developers to embed voice and messaging capabilities into applications.[43] As a growth-stage bet on Twilio's API-driven model, founded in 2008, the investment facilitated product development and market scaling ahead of the company's IPO in June 2016.[44] Redpoint invested in Snowflake, a cloud-native data platform, in early 2014 during its formative years post-founding in 2012, recognizing the potential for separated storage and compute architectures to disrupt legacy data warehousing.[45] This early-stage commitment aligned with Snowflake's subsequent raises, including a $45 million round in June 2015 where Redpoint participated, underscoring the firm's focus on infrastructure innovations.[46] Among more recent growth-stage investments, Redpoint joined the $250 million Series C for Ramp in 2021, supporting the corporate card and spend management platform's expansion in fintech automation.[47] In the AI domain, the firm backed early-stage startup Poolside, an AI coding assistant, as part of its ninth early-stage fund closed in 2022.[8] These bets reflect Redpoint's strategy of targeting scalable software and infrastructure plays across cycles.Successful Exits and Returns
Redpoint Ventures has facilitated over 300 exits from its portfolio, encompassing 26 initial public offerings and 148 acquisitions, enabling substantial liquidity for limited partners.[35] [3] These outcomes underscore the firm's track record in identifying high-growth companies capable of scaling to public markets or strategic buyers, though specific fund-level internal rates of return remain undisclosed publicly. Prominent IPO exits include Twilio, which debuted on June 23, 2016, raising $150 million at $15 per share for an initial market capitalization of approximately $1.2 billion; Redpoint participated in the company's Series D round in 2013.[48] [49] Snowflake, another key bet, achieved public listing in September 2020 following Redpoint's early-stage investment, contributing to the firm's reputation for backing cloud infrastructure leaders.[35] Acquisition highlights demonstrate varied exit paths, such as Looker, sold to Google for $2.6 billion in June 2019 after Redpoint led its $16 million Series A in 2013, yielding strong multiples for early backers.[50] [51] More recently, HashiCorp was acquired by IBM for $6.4 billion, with the deal closing on February 27, 2025, providing an exit for Redpoint's stake in the infrastructure automation provider.[32] [52] Next Insurance followed in March 2025 with a $2.6 billion sale, while Tastemade exited for $90 million to Wonder, illustrating Redpoint's involvement in deals spanning enterprise software to consumer media.[8]| Company | Exit Type | Date | Deal Value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Twilio | IPO | June 2016 | $1.2B (mkt cap) |
| Looker | Acquisition | June 2019 | $2.6B |
| HashiCorp | Acquisition | February 2025 | $6.4B |
| Next Insurance | Acquisition | March 2025 | $2.6B |
| Tastemade | Acquisition | 2025 | $90M |