Pipeline, The Angel Investing Bootcamp For Women, Announces New Class Of Bay Area Fellows

The fact is, the majority of tech industry investors are men — that goes from the larger venture capital firms that fund companies in the mid- to late-stages, to the angel investors who help to get seed-stage companies off the ground.

But an organization called the Pipeline Fellowship is working to deliberately change that, by putting on angel investing “bootcamps” for women. Pipeline aims to “train” its participants to become angel investors through a combination of mentoring and practice.  As part of the experience,  each class of Pipeline Fellows together commit to pool their money and invest in a woman-led, for-profit venture of their choosing in exchange for equity and a board seat.

Pipeline founder Natalia Oberti Noguera (pictured at left) told TechCrunch in an interview last year that Pipeline’s aim is to take down what she perceives as bias against women in the VC world and the startup ecosystem at large.

Pipeline launched its program last year in New York, and has since also had runs in Boston and Washington D.C. But this week it is making its first steps out west, announcing its first-ever Bay Area Fellowship Class. The program will kick off on Friday in San Francisco with the Bay Area Pipeline Fellowship Conference.

Without further ado, here are the 2012 Bay Area Pipeline Fellows:

Latest Stories