Startups

Serena Williams’ next act in venture capital is essential in this moment

Comment

US player Serena Williams celebrates after beating Czech Republic's Barbora Strycova during their women's singles semi-final match on day ten of the 2019 Wimbledon Championships at The All England Lawn Tennis Club in Wimbledon, southwest London, on July 11, 2019. (Photo by Adam DAVY / POOL / AFP) / RESTRICTED TO EDITORIAL USE (Photo credit should read ADAM DAVY/AFP via Getty Images)
Image Credits: ADAM DAVY / Contributor / Getty Images

Lights, camera, another backhand winner down the line. It’s hard to imagine that in two weeks, Serena Williams is playing what could — and most likely will be — her last tennis tournament after 23 Grand Slams and decades of dazzling on center courts.

She announced her retirement in the latest issue of Vogue magazine, writing that she will be “evolving” away from the sport to focus on family and her career as a venture capitalist. Williams founded her own firm, Serena Ventures, in 2014 and raised a $111 million inaugural fund this year to invest in “founders with diverse points of view,” she previously told The New York Times.

LPs include CapitalG, LionTree Partners and Norwest Venture Partners, and with a team of six, the firm’s already invested in 20 companies with that capital, Fortune reported.

In tennis, she and her sister, Venus Williams, helped break the color barrier for Black girls looking to play a sport still associated with whiteness and privilege. Following the trail they blazed includes Naomi Osaka, Madison Keys, Sloane Stephens and countless others preparing for the day when they too can walk into the blinding lights of Arthur Ashe Stadium.

Between hitting ace serves on the court, Williams’ firm has invested in more than 78 companies, including 16 unicorns such as MasterClass and Impossible Foods, and has 61 businesses in its portfolio, per PitchBook. She’s a pioneer in the new era of celebrity side hustle, which now sees today’s biggest stars pursuing economic vehicles like funds, firms and multimedia enterprises that help them retain power and ownership over their careers.

These passion projects can be a good thing, depending on the celebrity. When people in positions of power redistribute their financial and social prowess, it helps tell new stories, shines a light on laws to enact and allocates money to businesses that can play a part in addressing socioeconomic inequalities. Hopefully, more celebrities will see this as an avenue in which they can make a difference and play a role in creating a more advantageous society for all.

Most importantly, Williams’ career pivot has the opportunity to expose more young Black people, especially women, to the venture capital industry. TechCrunch previously noted that this job is a mystery to the masses, and its role as an avenue to making and sustaining wealth is not a conversation had with Black children.

As Williams showed a whole new generation of Black children the possibilities of tennis, her stature and influence can help highlight this job to a new set of individuals who never thought a career in venture capital possible and who have never seen someone like themselves pursue it.

When she steps away from tennis, she’ll be walking into an arena as white as the one she just left — less than 5% of VCs are Black and even fewer are Black women. Although it’s assumed that Williams’ celebrity status will help, she’s still a Black woman; the stakes remain higher and scrutiny awaits.

She told The New York Times that she was inspired to start Serena Ventures after hearing Clear CEO Caryn Seidman-Becker speak a few years ago about the dismal funding women receive. In her latest Vogue piece, she elaborated on that point, saying she understood venture capital as men writing checks to each other, thus increasing the need for someone like her to give money back to their communities.

In 2014, when Serena Ventures launched, Black women received only $55.4 million of the then-record $47.3 billion raised by startups, Crunchbase data showed. In 2018, when Williams brought on Alison Rapaport Stillman to help shape the firm into what it is today, Black women received about $590 million of the then-record $130 billion. Black-founded startups received $324 million in VC funds in the second quarter of this year, a steep decrease from the $1.2 billion received in Q1 and substantially below the $866 million the founder cohort raised in Q2 last year, according to Crunchbase data.

The current venture conditions for minorities represent an ever-changing benchmark that makes even one step forward seem like two steps back. That’s why Williams’ voice and money are needed in this space, where Black VCs face trouble remaining at the helms of their funds and encounter problems in attracting capital from LPs. There needs to be more high-profile pressure for change and more top-down influence.

Williams already has the skills to grow her fund to cosmo heights. She’s proven able to handle power, fame and money quite gracefully. She knows her balancing act and mastered the art of what it takes to win and lose, essential skills for running an early-stage venture fund.

To date, Serena Ventures, which didn’t immediately respond to TechCrunch’s request to comment, has completed 10 exits and sits on $88 million worth of dry powder, according to PitchBook. With a $5 million check, it just led an early-stage round for Selena Gomez’s mental health startup, helping it hit a $100 million valuation and making Gomez one of the few Latinas to raise $1 million or more in VC funds. Williams said 78% of the companies within Serena Ventures’ portfolios are founded by women and people of color, which could create a domino effect on more women hired at tech companies, as studies show women invest in more women who go on to hire more women.

After next week, Williams might never step foot on a tennis court again. That conversation is bittersweet. Tech is thrilled to have her, although it should be noted that her contemporaries, like Novak Djokovic, have never spoken of leaving the sport to attend to their families.

Williams, who is married to angel investor and Reddit co-founder Alexis Ohanian, wrote in Vogue that if she were a guy, she could continue playing and winning while her “wife” tended to the household. Perhaps VC will provide more work-life balance as she seeks to grow her family. Or maybe this is an issue to look at fixing through investments? The ideas and opportunities are now endless.

What is for sure is that Williams is walking away from the sport on her own terms, making her evolution just that — a transition where the word retirement doesn’t mean disappearing into the shadows but rather enjoying the freedom and liberty to live as one chooses. And that’s the true win here.

More TechCrunch

Silo, a Bay Area food supply chain startup, has hit a rough patch. TechCrunch has learned that the company on Tuesday laid off roughly 30% of its staff, or north…

Food supply chain software maker Silo lays off ~30% of staff amid M&A discussions

Featured Article

Meta’s new AI council is composed entirely of white men

Meanwhile, women and people of color are disproportionately impacted by irresponsible AI.

4 hours ago
Meta’s new AI council is composed entirely of white men

If you’ve ever wanted to apply to Y Combinator, here’s some inside scoop on how the iconic accelerator goes about choosing companies.

Garry Tan has revealed his ‘secret sauce’ for getting into Y Combinator

Indian ride-hailing startup BluSmart has started operating in Dubai, TechCrunch has exclusively learned and confirmed with its executive. The move to Dubai, which has been rumored for months, could help…

India’s BluSmart is testing its ride-hailing service in Dubai

Under the envisioned framework, both candidate and issue ads would be required to include an on-air and filed disclosure that AI-generated content was used.

FCC proposes all AI-generated content in political ads must be disclosed

Want to make a founder’s day, week, month, and possibly career? Refer them to Startup Battlefield 200 at Disrupt 2024! Applications close June 10 at 11:59 p.m. PT. TechCrunch’s Startup…

Refer a founder to Startup Battlefield 200 at Disrupt 2024

Social networking startup and X competitor Bluesky is officially launching DMs (direct messages), the company announced on Wednesday. Later, Bluesky plans to “fully support end-to-end encrypted messaging down the line,”…

Bluesky now has DMs

The perception in Silicon Valley is that every investor would love to be in business with Peter Thiel. But the venture capital fundraising environment has become so difficult that even…

Peter Thiel-founded Valar Ventures raised a $300 million fund, half the size of its last one

Featured Article

Spyware found on US hotel check-in computers

Several hotel check-in computers are running a remote access app, which is leaking screenshots of guest information to the internet.

8 hours ago
Spyware found on US hotel check-in computers

Gavet has had a rocky tenure at Techstars and her leadership was the subject of much controversy.

Techstars CEO Maëlle Gavet is out

The struggle isn’t universal, however.

Connected fitness is adrift post-pandemic

Featured Article

A comprehensive list of 2024 tech layoffs

The tech layoff wave is still going strong in 2024. Following significant workforce reductions in 2022 and 2023, this year has already seen 60,000 job cuts across 254 companies, according to independent layoffs tracker Layoffs.fyi. Companies like Tesla, Amazon, Google, TikTok, Snap and Microsoft have conducted sizable layoffs in the first months of 2024. Smaller-sized…

9 hours ago
A comprehensive list of 2024 tech layoffs

HoundDog actually looks at the code a developer is writing, using both traditional pattern matching and large language models to find potential issues.

HoundDog.ai helps developers prevent personal information from leaking

The changes are designed to enhance the consumer experience of using Google Pay and make it a more competitive option against other payment methods.

Google Pay will now display card perks, BNPL options and more

Few figures in the tech industry have earned the storied reputation of Vinod Khosla, founder and partner at Khosla Ventures. For over 40 years, he has been at the center…

Vinod Khosla is coming to Disrupt to discuss how AI might change the future

AI has already started replacing voice agents’ jobs. Now, companies are exploring ways to replace the existing computer-generated voice models with synthetic versions of human voices. Truecaller, the widely known…

Truecaller partners with Microsoft to let its AI respond to calls in your own voice

Meta is updating its Ray-Ban smart glasses with new hands-free functionality, the company announced on Wednesday. Most notably, users can now share an image from their smart glasses directly to…

Meta’s Ray-Ban smart glasses now let you share images directly to your Instagram Story

Spotify launched its own font, the company announced on Wednesday. The music streaming service hopes that its new typeface, “Spotify Mix,” will help Spotify distinguish its own unique visual identity. …

Why Spotify is launching its own font, Spotify Mix

In 2008, Marty Kagan, who’d previously worked at Cisco and Akamai, co-founded Cedexis, a (now-Cisco-owned) firm developing observability tech for content delivery networks. Fellow Cisco veteran Hasan Alayli joined Kagan…

Hydrolix seeks to make storing log data faster and cheaper

A dodgy email containing a link that looks “legit” but is actually malicious remains one of the most dangerous, yet successful, tricks in a cybercriminal’s handbook. Now, an AI startup…

Bolster, creator of the CheckPhish phishing tracker, raises $14M led by Microsoft’s M12

If you’ve been looking forward to seeing Boeing’s Starliner capsule carry two astronauts to the International Space Station for the first time, you’ll have to wait a bit longer. The…

Boeing, NASA indefinitely delay crewed Starliner launch

TikTok is the latest tech company to incorporate generative AI into its ads business, as the company announced on Tuesday that it’s launching a new “TikTok Symphony” AI suite for…

TikTok turns to generative AI to boost its ads business

Gone are the days when space and defense were considered fundamentally antithetical to venture investment. Now, the country’s largest venture capital firms are throwing larger portions of their money behind…

Space VC closes $20M Fund II to back frontier tech founders from day zero

These days every company is trying to figure out if their large language models are compliant with whichever rules they deem important, and with legal or regulatory requirements. If you’re…

Patronus AI is off to a magical start as LLM governance tool gains traction

Link-in-bio startup Linktree has crossed 50 million users and is rolling out the beta of its social commerce program.

Linktree surpasses 50M users, rolls out its social commerce program to more creators

For a $5.99 per month, immigrants have a bank account and debit card with fee-free international money transfers and discounted international calling.

Immigrant banking platform Majority secures $20M following 3x revenue growth

When developers have a particular job that AI can solve, it’s not typically as simple as just pointing an LLM at the data. There are other considerations such as cost,…

Unify helps developers find the best LLM for the job

Response time is Aerodome’s immediate value prop for potential clients.

Aerodome is sending drones to the scene of the crime

Granola takes a more collaborative approach to working with AI.

Granola debuts an AI notepad for meetings