Ted Wang is an investment partner at Cowboy Ventures, a seed stage venture fund based in the Bay Area with approximately US$200 million in assets under management. Cowboy's focus is backing founders building products that “reimagine work and personal life in large and growing markets” which they refer to as Life 2.0.

Ted Wang
Wang in San Francisco (2019)
Alma materUniversity of Virginia Law School, Duke University

Wang invests in both enterprise software and consumer facing technology companies. At Cowboy, Ted has led investments in companies such as Vic.ai, Lumatax, Fullcast.io, and Aura Health. He has described one of his investment focuses as Unsexy Tech. He looks to invest in consumer applications that promote wellness. At Cowboy, he is best known for assisting companies in understanding the metrics needed to get to a Series A financing and helping companies hit those milestones.[1]

Prior to joining Cowboy, Wang was one of the country's leading startup lawyers.[2] For over a decade, he was a partner at technology law firm Fenwick & West and was identified by Bloomberg as "one of Fenwick's biggest draws," in the 2011 article, "Why Techies Like to Friend Fenwick & West."[citation needed] Wang was outside counsel to an array of the most successful venture-backed technology companies including Facebook, Twitter, Dropbox, Square, Sonos, Spotify, Jet, Zuora, Apprio, Samsara, Gusto, Honor, Satellogic, Stripe and Wealthfront.[citation needed]

As a lawyer, Wang was also an innovator in applying technology to the practice of law. He authored numerous open source projects, most notably the Series Seed Documents, which he published with the help of Marc Andreessen.[3][4] In 2013, he curated a new version of the Series Seed Documents on GitHub.[5]

Wang has a bachelor's degree from Duke University, where he graduated magna cum laude and received his law degree at the University of Virginia School of Law.

References edit

  1. ^ "Ted Wang | Board Member | Satellogic". investors.satellogic.com. Retrieved 2022-04-30.
  2. ^ "Gordon Davidson and Ted Wang Named among California's Leading Private…".
  3. ^ Swisher, Kara (2010-03-04). "Series Seed Documents–With an Assist From Andreessen Horowitz–To Help Entrepreneurs With Legal Hairballs". allthingsd.com.
  4. ^ Kharif, Olga (2010-03-01). "Andreessen Horowitz, Ted Wang Launch Series Seed". BusinessWeek. Archived from the original on 2010-03-04.
  5. ^ Kolodny, Lora (2013-06-03). "Seeking Seed Funding? Open-Source Forms Might Cut Legal Bill". VentureWire.