The Mercury News

Durant to help draw people of color into tech.

Golden State superstar is teaming up with a major venture capital firm to help get more people of color into Silicon Valley

- By Seung Lee slee@bayareanew­sgroup.com

Golden State Warriors superstar Kevin Durant is teaming up with a major venture capital firm to help get more people of color into Silicon Valley technology companies.

Durant, movie star Will Smith and Essence magazine publisher Richelieu Dennis have invested in a $15 million fund launched by prominent Silicon Valley venture capital firm Andreessen Horowitz, according to the Wall Street Journal on Monday. The fund, named “Culture,” will be backed by other black celebritie­s and media figures to address the continued lack of diver- sity in the tech industry, despite years of efforts by companies to address the problem.

Andreessen Horowitz and the

Golden State Warriors declined to comment on the fund. The Warriors also said Durant wasn’t immediatel­y available for comment.

Other details — like how many partners have joined the fund — are not known as the fund is not yet closed, according to the Wall Street Journal.

It’s not Durant’s first foray into investing in technology companies. Since joining the Warriors in 2016, Durant has invested in at least six startups, including the food-delivery startup Postmates, according to Pitchbook.

The Culture fund will invest alongside Menlo Park-based Andreessen Horowitz’s main invest-

ing fund, according to the Journal. It will also “focus purposeful­ly and intently on creating opportunit­ies for people of color in tech,” according to Dennis, who spoke to the Journal.

Andreessen Horowitz will not collect the proceeds it normally gets from fees and carried interest. Instead, it will donate that money to nonprofits working to boost the number of blacks in Silicon Valley and other technology industries. Investors like Durant, however, will profit if the fund grows.

Silicon Valley and venture capital have seen little progress in the past with bringing more people of color into technology. Large companies like Facebook and Google showed little change in employee demographi­cs in their latest diversity reports earlier this year.

In May, the Congressio­nal Black Caucus visited

Silicon Valley companies to press them to do more to diversify their teams; its co-chair Rep. Barbara Lee, D-Calif., said some of the companies had “gone backwards” on diversity, according to The Verge.

The lack of diversity is acute in venture capital as well. About 58 percent of venture capitalist­s are white males, whereas only 3 percent are black, according to a recent study from Equal Ventures partner Richard Kerby.

With a white, male venture capital base, black entreprene­urs have received a fraction of funding to break through in the tech sector. Since 2009, black womenled startups have raised $289 million total in venture/angel funding — a tiny fraction of the $424.7 billion in total tech venture funding raised in the same period — according to a new study in June by digital-undivided, an Atlantabas­ed organizati­on.

 ??  ?? Actor Will Smith is among the investors in the fund.
Actor Will Smith is among the investors in the fund.
 ?? JANE TYSKA — STAFF ARCHIVES ?? Golden State Warriors’ Kevin Durant, above, along with Will Smith and publisher Richelieu Dennis, invested $15 million to help get more people of color into Silicon Valley.
JANE TYSKA — STAFF ARCHIVES Golden State Warriors’ Kevin Durant, above, along with Will Smith and publisher Richelieu Dennis, invested $15 million to help get more people of color into Silicon Valley.

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