POCKET SUN, co-founder of multi-million dollar venture capital firm SoGal, wants to better gender dynamics.
Yiqing “Pocket” Sun became a venture capitalist by accident. A Chinese national who arrived in the US in 2009 to study at Virginia’s William & Mary College, Sun was enjoying her job at an American corporate marketing firm when suddenly she had to quit because of work visa issues. Determined to stay in the country, she signed up for a master’s degree in entrepreneurship and innovation at the University of Southern California (USC). While there she realized “entrepreneurship is the only way to make a real impact on the world.” But there was a problem. She felt lonely as an aspirational entrepreneur. The venture capital industry is male dominated and Sun felt many many female entrepreneurs were undervalued and under capitalized. The biggest problem she found was lack of access to capital, which was hurting the chances of women entrepreneurs. So Sun decided to start SoGal (inspired from Southern California’s university SoCal acronym) as a student organization at USC in 2014, which quickly grew into a global community of entrepreneurs and investors, with over 4,000 members in 26 countries.
Today, SoGal Ventures is a multimillion-dollar, female-led, millennial venture capital firm, and along with co-founder Elizabeth Galbut (whom she met in a venture capital course at Stanford University), Sun takes care of over 50 companies. Besides this, 27-year-old Sun has given TEDx talks, is a regular speaker at conferences and summits across the world, and has been on the cover of Forbes Asia as one of their 30 Under 30.
We spoke with Sun to learn more about SoGal’s journey and how it is trying to empower women entrepreneurs. Edited excerpts:
What was the first investment SoGal made?
This story is from the Jan 2019 edition of Entrepreneur magazine.
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This story is from the Jan 2019 edition of Entrepreneur magazine.
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