Entrepreneur First lands $200M for pre-idea founder bets
Entrepreneur First, the founder-focused investment platform, has raised a new $200 million fund to back entrepreneurs at the earliest possible stage — often before they have a startup idea or a team. The round is backed by high-profile tech investors including Stripe co-founders Patrick and John Collison, former Google CEO Eric Schmidt, and Index Ventures partner Neil Rimer.
The fresh capital cements Entrepreneur First‘s position as a leading builder of startup talent pipelines, rather than a traditional venture capital firm. The organisation reports that companies formed through its programs now represent a combined portfolio value of around $16 billion.
Bay Area pivot accelerates dealmaking
Since expanding and reorienting its model around the San Francisco Bay Area in 2024, Entrepreneur First says it has seen a step-change in performance metrics. According to internal figures, the Bay Area pivot has roughly halved the time it takes for founders to secure follow-on funding and has doubled startup valuations at the seed stage.
This acceleration reflects rising investor appetite for ultra-early access to technical and operator talent. By backing individuals before they form a company, Entrepreneur First effectively becomes a discovery engine for future startups in sectors such as artificial intelligence, deep tech, and enterprise software.
A different model from classic venture capital
Unlike conventional VC funds that primarily evaluate existing teams and products, Entrepreneur First recruits promising individuals, helps them find co-founders, and supports them as they develop and validate ideas. The new $200 million pool will be deployed to expand this pre-idea model across key global hubs, with the Bay Area serving as a central node.
For early-career engineers, researchers, and operators, the raise signals growing institutional confidence in founder-first approaches. For investors, it underscores the competition to secure exposure to high-potential founders long before they appear on traditional funding radars.

