Naval Ravikant
Naval Ravikant is an Indian-American entrepreneur and investor. He is the co-founder, chairman and former CEO of AngelList.[1] He has invested early-stage in over 200 companies including Uber, FourSquare, Twitter, Wish.com, Poshmark, Postmates, Thumbtack, Notion, SnapLogic, Opendoor, Stack Overflow, OpenDNS, Yammer, and Clearview AI, with over 70 total exits and more than 10 Unicorn companies.[2][3] He is the brother of Kamal Ravikant, a tech entrepreneur who wrote the self-published Amazon best seller “Love Yourself Like Your Life Depends on It.[4]”
Naval Ravikant | |
---|---|
Ravikant in 2011 | |
Born | New Delhi, India |
Alma mater | Dartmouth College |
Occupation | Entrepreneur, investor |
Years active | 1999–present |
Known for |
Ravikant is a Fellow of the Edmund Hillary Fellowship.[5] He is also a podcaster who shares advice on pursuing wealth and happiness.
Early life
Ravikant was born in New Delhi, India in 1974. He moved to New York with his mother and his brother, Kamal, when he was 9. He graduated from Stuyvesant High School in 1991.[6] In 1995, he graduated with degrees in Computer Science and Economics from Dartmouth College.[2] In college, he interned at international law firm Davis Polk & Wardwell.[7] After graduating from Dartmouth College, Naval had a brief stint at Boston Consulting Group before heading to Silicon Valley.[8]
Career
Epinions
In 1999, Ravikant co-founded consumer product review site Epinions.[9] They raised $45 million in venture capital from Benchmark Capital and August Capital.[9] In 2003, Epinions merged with comparison pricing site Dealtime with the approval of Ravikant and the other co-founders that had left the company—even though it meant valuing their shares at zero.[9]
The merged company became Shopping.com which held an IPO in October 2004.[9] After its first day of trading, it was worth $750 million.[9] In January 2005, Ravikant and three of his co-founders filed a lawsuit against Benchmark, August Capital, their co-founder Nirav Tolia who remained at Epinions after his co-founders' departures claiming that—to get their approval for the merger—they were misled to believe that at the time of the merger, the company was worth "$23 million to $38 million", less than the $45 million that they had raised in outside capital, making their shares worthless. The lawsuit was settled in December 2005.
Hit Forge
Around 2007, Ravikant started a $20 million early stage venture capital fund named "The Hit Forge".[10] Hit Forge invested in prominent startups including Twitter, Uber and Stack Overflow.[11][12][13]
AngelList
In 2007, Ravikant began co-writing a blog called Venture Hacks, which "offered detailed advice on negotiating term sheets, explained which sections mattered, and which provisions were bogus."[14] That blog evolved into AngelList, which Ravikant co-founded in 2010, as a fundraising platform for startups to raise money from angel investors. AngelList also operates Product Hunt.
MetaStable Capital
In 2014, Ravikant co-founded MetaStable Capital, a cryptocurrency hedge fund that owned Bitcoin, Ethereum, Monero and a number of other cryptocurrencies. A June 2017 regulatory filing reported its assets as $69 million.[15] Investors in the fund include Andreessen Horowitz, Sequoia Capital, Union Square Ventures, Founders Fund and Bessemer Venture Partners.
Spearhead.co investment fund
In 2017, Naval launched Spearhead, an investment fund which raised $100m for its third fund to provide founders with $1m each to invest in technology companies as angel investors.[16] The first two classes of Spearhead include founders from 35 companies. Together, these companies are worth over $10B, and four of them are unicorns. The companies include Neuralink, Opendoor, PillPack, Shippo (company), Rippling and Scale.[17] Previous Spearhead leads include Shippo co-founder and chief executive officer Laura Behrens Wu, Scale AI founder and CEO Alexandr Wang and Rippling co-founder and chief technology officer Prasanna Sankar.[18]
Nav.al, Spearhead, and other podcasts
Naval runs a short-form podcast at Nav.al and Spearhead.co where he discusses philosophy, business, and investing. He has also been a podcast guest on The Joe Rogan Experience, The Tim Ferriss Show, and Farnam Street among others.
With Ravikant's permission, Eric Jorgeson curated Naval's tweets, essays, and interviews on wealth and happiness, then published it as a book called 'The Almanack of Naval Ravikant'. Tim Ferriss wrote the foreword for it. Ravikant chose not to make money from it. It can be downloaded online for free. [19]
References
- Clifford, Catherine (2019-04-03). "Top Silicon Valley investor: This is what gives Elon Musk 'true superpowers' in business". CNBC. Retrieved 2020-03-15.
- https://unblock.net/naval-ravikant/
- https://angel.co/p/naval
- Williams, Alex (2016-08-06). "Why Self-Help Guru James Altucher Only Owns 15 Things (Published 2016)". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2020-12-14.
- https://stories.ehf.org/ehf-fellow-naval-ravikant-ba22d1d01876?gi=f9fa02e5dc5
- https://nypost.com/2018/05/09/this-silicon-valley-big-wants-stuyvesant-hs-to-stay-exclusive/
- https://dartmouthalumnimagazine.com/articles/avenging-angel
- https://dartmouthalumnimagazine.com/articles/avenging-angel
- Founders of Web Site Accuse Backers of Cheating Them
- Halperin, Alex (2014-03-24). "Silicon Valley's Avenging Angel". Fast Company. Retrieved 2020-04-26.
- "AngelList's Naval Ravikant on Syndicates, Two Months In". Retrieved 2020-04-26.
- Huspeni, Alyson Shontell, Andrea. "The 50 Early Stage Investors In Silicon Valley You Need To Know". Business Insider. Retrieved 2020-04-26.
- Yasmine, Fatema (2011-02-22). "Naval Ravikant: Twitter, Bubbles, New York and Start Fund [Interview Part 2]". The Next Web. Retrieved 2020-04-26.
- Silicon Valley’s Avenging Angel
- Sequoia and Andreessen Horowitz Are Secretly Backing This Cryptocurrency Hedge Fund
- https://spearhead.co/faq
- https://spearhead.co/faq
- https://www.navalmanack.com/