Tech
New York’s top VCs under 30 | TechCrunch
The next generation of New York City investors are already making their mark in the Big Apple.
They come from big-name venture firms like Female Founders Fund and Lerer Hippeau and smaller ones like Chai Ventures. They work in areas like growth, consumer, and health. They canoe, hike, and play pickleball on the weekends. We chatted with some of the young investors — think, under 30 — who are helping to shape the future of venture capitalism in New York City.
Here’s who is on the list so far.
(This list will be updated periodically.)
Layla Alexander — Female Founders Fund
Background: Alexander, 25, first entered the industry through an internship with Cleo Capital and Harlem Capital, before landing at FFF as an investor in 2022.
Why this VC is notable: She’s excited about the care economy, enterprise climate tech, and healthcare (all very buzzy — and lucrative — sectors these days). Her firm’s portfolio includes the astrology app Co-Star and model Winnie Harlow’s Cay Skin.
Fun facts and interests: Her hobbies include running, reading, the sauna, and Pilates. She’s looking for founders who deeply know their market, retain users, and have research that shows their companies can scale.
Talia Askowitz — Deerfield Management
Background: Askowitz, 26, is a principal at Deerfield Management where she became the firm’s youngest partner at just the age of 25, according to Forbes. She previously worked at AMC Health as a business intelligence intern and was a volunteer research assistant at Mount Sinai Health Systems.
Why this VC is notable: She made the Forbes 30 Under 30 list for 2025 and, according to the outlet, has helped deploy over $500 million in capital.
Fun facts and interests: She co-authored three papers while at Mount Sinai Health Systems.
Lori Berenberg — Bloomberg Beta
Background: Berenberg, 29, worked in technical and product management roles after college until she caught the eye of Bloomberg Beta. Transitioning from product management to venture capital was a risk, but she says her background gives her a unique perspective while evaluating startups, allowing her to “bridge the gap between technical innovation and go-to-market,” she told TechCrunch.
Why this VC is notable: One of the features she led while working at MongoDB as a product manager is now awaiting a patent.
Fun facts and interests: Her hobbies include needlepoint and vintage fashion. She wants to back companies with the potential to be more than great. “It needs a shot at the extraordinary.”
Alex Chung — Chai Ventures
Background: Chung, 26, got into the venture industry through her mentor, Serena Dayal, a partner at SoftBank Vision Fund, who shared tips on how to navigate the ecosystem. “Most importantly, she imbued me with confidence,” Chung told TechCrunch.
Why this VC is notable: She’s into women’s health, identifying it as an area for much potential as the sector — and its need for innovation — steps into the national spotlight.
Fun facts and interests: Her hobbies include running, racquet sports, and needlepointing.
Besart Çopa — Antler
Background: Çopa, 27, started at Antler just this year. He previously held an internship at a16z, then started Chestr, an online shopping platform. The company closed and Copa then joined Antler. He thought about founding another startup but felt he didn’t have an idea he was passionate about, “so the second best thing was to support others who did.”
Why this VC is notable: He’s a founder turned principal investor at one of the hottest accelerator programs around. “If I hadn’t chewed glass myself, I would have found it impossible to truly sympathize with the journeys of the founders I support.”
Fun facts and interests: He disagrees with the industry’s seeming obsession with young founders. “Let teens be teens,” he said. “Fall in love. Watch the stars. You can still build on the side. If you have an idea you feel in your bones that it must exist, then go for it. Otherwise, you can always start a B2B SaaS [company] later.”
His hobbies include reading history and painting. As a pre-seed investor, he has a founder-centric approach to investing and says he’s looking for those who are building focused solutions for niche user problems. “The more niche, the better!”
Ethan Daly — Shine Capital
Background: Daly, 27, started out in investment banking before moving to Shine, where he has been for the past four years. He is now a partner at the firm.
Why this VC is notable: He was recently promoted to partner at Shine.
Fun facts and interests: Shine Capital’s portfolio includes the collector community Flamingo and the workplace platform Notion.
George Easley — Outsiders Fund
Background: Easley, 29, started at Outsiders Fund in 2021 and is now a principal at the fund where he helps lead investments in sectors such as AI and robotics. He was previously a senior analyst at ICONIQ Capital, as well as held associate and analyst roles at Bridgewater and Brownson, Rehmus & Foxworth, respectively.
Why this VC is notable: He made the Forbes 30 under 30 list for 2025 and, according to Forbes, he’s helped invest more than $25 million in companies such as Breedr and Cercle.
Fun Facts and Interests: According to his LinkedIn, he studied history and geography at Dartmouth, where he played both tennis and table tennis.
Marina Girgis — Precursor VC
Background: Girgis, 29, started out on the finance side, researching data and semiconductors. She loved learning about emerging tech but said she wanted to have more of a direct impact on the companies she researched, so she pivoted and has since become quite bullish on investing in companies at the pre-seed stage.
“I chose to become a generalist and invest at the earliest stage possible, idea-stage companies, so I could get to know the people behind the companies and witness their transformation from the very beginning,” she told TechCrunch.
Why this VC is notable: Known for her knack at picking pre-seed companies, like AI security startup Edera, and for moving fast to make the end-to-end investment process feel seamless.
Fun facts and interests: Her outside hobbies include jigsaw puzzles and reading murder mysteries. One thing she would like to see change in the industry is rigid thinking on what type of founders to back. “There are no hard and fast rules in venture,” she said, adding that anyone can fail regardless of background. “You should learn from your past experiences as an investor, but my hope is to stay open-minded.”
Laura Hamilton — Notable Capital
Background: Hamilton, 26, has been an investor at Notable Capital since 2023. She got her start in the industry by sending many cold emails and making cold calls to alumni. She landed her first VC job by applying cold on LinkedIn, “proving the hustle strategy works,” she told TechCrunch.
Why this VC is notable: At Notable, she’s focusing on data, cloud infrastructure, developer tools, and cybersecurity. “Right now, I’m especially interested in agent infrastructure,” and she is looking to back more founders with deep passion and purpose.
Fun facts and interests: Her hobbies include hosting a podcast called Partner Path, where she dives into the success stories of rising investors and founders. She also helps run FemBuild Collective, a community for female engineers and technical founders in the City.
Emily Herrera — Slow Ventures
Background: Herrera, 25, is an investor at Slow Ventures, whose portfolio includes delivery service Postmates, women’s footwear brand Birdies, and the social app Citizen. She previously worked at Night Ventures and specializes in consumer investing and the creator economy.
Why this VC is notable: Her forward-thinking approach to creator economy investing came as others were still pondering the sector’s impact.
Fun facts and interests: She has a long history in venture, interning everywhere from Harlem Capital to Dorm Room Fund. Fast Company hailed her as one of the “savviest creator economy investors” in 2022 for her work at Night Ventures, which backed companies such as influencer marketing platform Pearpop and NFT app Zora.
Bryce Johnson — Primary Venture Partners
Background: Johnson, 25, spent time working in software and product at Big Tech. He heard Josh Wolfe from Lux Capital speak at an event one year and became fixated on the idea of early-stage investing. He pivoted to management consulting and used that network to land an analyst role at Primary.
Why this VC is notable: One of the only junior VCs at his firm, he is known for being an advocate for diversity within VC.
Fun facts and interests: He loves classical music and backpacked Southeast Asia last summer. For work, his focus is in healthcare, consumer, SMB tech, and vertical SaaS.
Bradford Jones — SignalFire
Background: Bradford, 28, is a principal at SignalFire. Before that, he was an investor at Insight Partners.
Why this VC is notable: He made the Forbes 30 under 30 list in 2025 and Forbes reports that he leads SignalFire’s NYC office, where he focuses on the intersection of applied AI and SaaS, helping lead investments into companies like Tofy and Shade.
Fun Facts and Interests: According to his Linkedin, he played D-1 football at the University of Michigan
Will McKelvey — Lerer Hippeau
Background: McKelvey, 29, partnered with a few classmates and raised a fund to start backing startups while attending UC Berkeley. After graduation, he moved to New York and joined Lerer Hippeau.
Why this VC is notable: Launched a student venture fund at Berkeley that is still making investments.
Fun facts and interests: One thing he would like to change about the industry is the amount of ego and arrogance that persists, which can cause investors to miss out on opportunities and talent. “Many VCs have always been the star student, went to the fancy schools, and got the fancy job, so they misguidedly carry that attitude into this role,” he continued. “This industry could use a heavy dose of humility.”
His hobbies include softball, basketball, and beach volleyball. He wants to know two things from the founders who pitch him. “What is the insight you have that everyone else is missing, and how did you unearth it?” he said. “What is driving you to take on the titanic effort of building a company from scratch?”
Mason Murray — NEA
Background: Murray, 28, joined the firm after a brief career in investment banking. He’s mostly a generalist but focuses on software companies selling to businesses or consumers.
Why this VC is notable: Unprompted, three people on this list asked to make sure he was included. According to NEA’s website, he has made six investments, including in the newsletter company beehiiv and AI video company Tweleve Labs.
Fun facts and interests: He joined the firm after a brief career in investment banking. He’s mostly a generalist but focuses on software companies selling to businesses or consumers.
He’s bullish on AI and wouldn’t mind seeing more AI founders coming to New York. “We have talent, customers, capital, and great academic institutions,” he told TechCrunch. “I’m bullish on New York.”
In his personal life, he’s a hobby collector, musician, singer, and amateur cook. In his professional life, he’s looking for founders with a clear vision on how the world can be different, “paired with a precise hypothesis on what it takes to get there.”
Zehra Naqvi — Headline Ventures
Background: Naqvi, 25, worked at a few consumer startups before officially becoming an investor for Headline last year.
Why this VC is notable: She’s known around town for her popular venture capital newsletter No GPs Allowed, which offers networking opportunities to investors around New York.
Fun facts and interests: She loves being an investor and says even though the market is down in the consumer sector right now, “history has proven time and time again that now is the best time to double down on investing in the future of consumers,” she told TechCrunch. “Be a contrarian.”
Her hobbies include going to art galleries, traveling, playing tennis, and watching movies (she’s an AMC Stubs member). She’s looking for founders in the consumer space, in both tech and consumer packaged goods, between pre-seed and Series A.
David Ongchoco — Comma Capital
Background: Ongchoco, 28, has a background in tech, sales, and investing, working for places like Dorm Room Fund, interning at Learn Capital, and working in sales and growth at Amplitude and Rutter.
Why this VC is notable: Ongchoco is a co-founder of Comma Capital, which invests at the pre-seed and seed stages.
Fun facts and interests: He, alongside his co-founder Adarsh Bhatt, made Forbes’ 30 Under 30 this year for their work in venture capital. Comma has backed more than 50 companies to date, some of which have gone on to be acquired by companies like Stripe and Airtable.
Will Robbins — Contrary
Background: Robbins, 27, is a general partner at Contrary. According to his LinkedIn, he previously worked for various tech companies doing machine learning and held general roles at startups.
Why this VC is notable: He made the Forbes 30 Under 30 list for 2025, with the outlet reporting that he has helped raise four funds worth millions. Investments include the unicorn Zepto and Alloy Automation.
Fun Facts and Interests: Forbes also says he helps provide startup opportunities to underrepresented youth.
Michael Shepard — Insight Partners
Background: Shepherd, 29, is a principal at Insight Partners. Before that, he held roles at iCapital Network and Levine Leitchman Capital Partners.
Why this VC is notable: He made the Forbes 30 Under 30 list for 2025 and worked his way up from an intern at Insight Partners to a partner. He focuses on SaaS in Europe and North America, with investments including Kabal and Colab.
Fun facts and interests: His LinkedIn says he is the founder of the startup Lagom.io which creates homepages for browsers.
Alexandra Sukin — Bessemer Venture Partners
Background: Sukin, 27, got her start in the industry while at Harvard, where she was involved with various on-campus activities like Harvard Ventures and was a founding member of the VC firm Contrary Capital. After graduating, she joined Bessemer.
Why this VC is notable: She’s a vice president at Bessemer, and her investments include the fintech Truebill (acquired by Rocket Technologies) and enterprise companies Unito, Rewind, and Contractbook.
Fun facts and interests: Her hobbies include hiking and skiing, and she loves spending time out West, as her father’s side of the family is from Montana and Colorado. “While I’m investing a lot these days in vertical and SMB software, I am also really excited about AI enabling a wave of consumer companies,” she said.
Mark Xu — Lightspeed Venture Partners
Background: Xu, 24, is a partner at Lightspeed Venture Partners, whose investments, according to his LinkedIn, include Glean, Stripe, Wiz, and Anduril.
Why this VC is notable: One of the youngest to ever be promoted to partner at Lightspeed Ventures.
Fun facts and interests: Attended the Juilliard School for the violin before heading to Harvard University to study math. Had a background in business development and investment banking before joining Lightspeed Ventures.
Claire Zau — GSV Ventures
Background: Zau, 27, is one of the youngest investors ever to become a partner at GSV, where she helps lead AI investments, according to Forbes. She previously held internships at Red & Blue Ventures, Julius Bear, and Baring Private Equity Asia.
Why this VC is notable: She made the Forbes 30 under 30 list for 2025 with investments including Pace AI, Magic School, and Paloma.
Fun facts and interest: She has an AI newsletter called “GSV: AI & Education” that has more than 6,000 subscribers.
Vincent Zhu — General Catalyst
Background: Zhu, 25, is an early-stage investor at General Catalyst and, according to his LinkedIn, loves working with founders “building for the digitally native generation.”
Why this VC is notable: He’s made a name for himself around town, hosting events and helping founders get intros.
Fun facts and interests: After college, he worked as an analyst at Goldman Sachs before joining General Catalyst two years ago. The firm’s portfolio includes Stripe, Canva, and Warby Parker.
This piece was updated to reflect Mason Murray’s most recent investments.