Gagan Biyani, Morgan Springer, Neeraj Berry, Matt Kent
Cofounders, Sprig
CEO Gagan Biyani's mission is for Sprig to become "the easiest way to eat healthy in the world." Former Google head chef Nate Keller leads the in-house kitchen staff that prepares each meal delivered by Sprig, the on-demand fresh-food delivery service that launched in November 2013. It offers three meal options daily and aims to deliver the food in 15 minutes.
In April, the company raised $45 million in funding, which spurred its expansion to Chicago from the San Francisco Bay Area.
Conrad Chu, Tri Tran
Cofounders, Munchery
Tri Tran and Conrad Chu wanted to provide the convenience of a professional chef without the high cost, and in 2011 Munchery was born. The company is similar to Seamless, except your food is made by Munchery's chefs instead of being outsourced to restaurants. Each time you order a meal on Munchery, the company makes an equivalent donation to a charity in your town.
Munchery made headlines in April when it raised a $28 million Series B round. More recently, Sherpa Ventures, a prominent venture-capital firm, announced it was making its "biggest bet since Uber" by endorsing Munchery. At the end of May, the company announced its Series C round of $85 million co-led by Menlo Ventures and Sherpa. Munchery has raised $117.2 million, including contributions from celebrities such as Jared Leto and Edward Norton.
Todd McKinnon and Frederic Kerrest
Cofounders, Okta
McKinnon is a Valley A-lister, a former star Salesforce engineer who launched his own company in 2009 without CEO and friend Benioff's blessing. His company has seen massive growth: By September 2014 it had raised $155 million from top VCs. Okta is now valued at about $600 million and is expected to go public by 2016.
McKinnon said there's tremendous value in working for a rapidly growing, successful company before pursuing other endeavors. He called his time at Salesforce a "gift" that taught him what it means to win.
Ross Mason
Founder, VP of product strategy, MuleSoft
MuleSoft is, to some, the definition of disruption. Two of its biggest legacy rivals, Tibco and Informatica, left the public markets in leveraged buyouts in 2014 and early 2015, which left room for founder Ross Mason to grow MuleSoft like crazy.
MuleSoft solves the hard problem of integrating cloud applications, especially with a company's existing apps. In 2014 it raised $50 million at an $800 million valuation, and just this past May MuleSoft raised a new $128 million investment at a $1.5 billion valuation. It seems it could be heading toward an IPO.
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Cofounder, CEO, Yo
Yo is the almost stupidly simple communication tool that briefly took the tech world by storm in 2014. The one-word correspondence app started out as a side project for Arbel, but it went viral and last year was valued at about $10 million.
Arbel is planning on bringing Yo back withYo 2.0, which will include your location, a photo, or just the good old original "yo."
Amanda Bradford
Founder, CEO, The League
Bradford's app The League is like a curated Tinder for elites, and it raised $2.1 million in seed funding earlier this year to play matchmaker to the most successful and ambitious singles. The League launched in San Francisco at the beginning of 2015 andjust opened up to the New York market as well, where a targeted group of 2,500 users were allowed to sign up.
The goal, Bradford says, is to make more power couples, and help people date "intelligently." She's now eyeing London.
Liz Wessel and JJ Fliegelman
Cofounders, Campus Job
Founded by former Googler Liz Wessel,Campus Job is a marketplace for college kids looking for internships and jobs. About 90% of the positions offered on Campus Job are paid, and the startup sees 10,000 new college-aged users signing up weekly.
Campus Job was born out of a campus-rep company that Wessel had started with a fellow student at Penn; it's an alternative to a college career service center and Symplicity, a job board employers have to pay for postings on. It recently went through the startup accelerator Y Combinator and raised over $9 million in May, bringing its total funding to $10.3 million.
Aarthi Ramamurthy
Founder, Lumoid
Aarthi Ramamurthy is the founder of Y Combinator-backed Lumoid, a try-before-you-buy gadget marketplace that lets people test-drive electronics before they buy them. It allows potential consumers try out the expensive products they're thinking of buying — like the Apple Watch, which users can rent for between $45 and $55 (and usually retails for $349 and up).
Ramamurthy spent six years at Microsoft working on its popular Visual Studio software-development tool and on Xbox Live, and also cofounded a bra-fitting company called True&Co.
Kyle Vogt
CEO, Cruise
Vogt, a Y Combinator alum, created driverless-car company Cruise not to manufacture driverless cars but to enable any car to become a driverless car. "We're trying to reuse as many concepts and behaviors as you already have in your car, such as a single button to control the cruise control," says Vogt. "Whatever speed you're going becomes the target speed."
So far Cruise has raised one undisclosed seed amount, back in January 2015. The Cruise system costs $10,000 and can be installed in a few hours.
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Cofounders, August
Jason Johnson and designer Yves Behar (known for designing the Jawbone UP fitness band) are out to take "the internet of things" by storm with a new app called August, which aims to make the house key obsolete.Using a lock, along with an app and Bluetooth, August can unlock your home and generate temporary keys that would allow plumbers, cleaners, or houseguests inside at specified times.
Johnson and Behar's product went on sale in the fall of 2014 and just raised a new $38 million round led by Bessemer Venture Partners to produce August en masse.
Andrew Rubin, PJ Kirner, Alan Stokol
Cofounders, Illumio
Rubin is the cofounder of Illumio, the buzzed-about startup that raised $42.5 million from investors at hugely successful companies like Salesforce and Yahoo before it even came out of stealth mode. The company offers Adaptive Security Platform — a cutting-edge security software designed for the cloud.
In April, Business Insider reported Illumio to be worth $1 billion, a stunning number for a company that's six months old. Rubin has also been a seed investor in Powermat and Tory Burch for more than 10 years.
Josh Reeves, Edward Kim, Tomer London
Cofounders, ZenPayroll
ZenPayroll CEO Josh Reeves believes it's easier than ever to be an entrepreneur. Whether or not that's true, it certainly seems easy for Reeves, whose payroll-processing startup raised a $60 million series B round, led by Google Capital, in April.
The recently revealed laundry list of angel investors includes celebs like Ashton Kutcher and Jared Leto, former head of the US Small Business Administration Karen Mills, and a list of famed startup CEOs from Evernote, Eventbrite, Stripe, Constant Contact, SurveyMonkey, WordPress, and Instagram. Founders from PayPal, Yahoo, Reddit, Nest, Twitter, HubSpot, and Mint also contributed.
Solomon Hykes
Founder, CTO, Docker
Docker is one of the most buzzed about things on the internet, and for good reason. The open-source software, developed by CTO Solomon Hykes, gives developers the tools to build and distribute apps so that they work across multiple platforms. This technology is revolutionizing how companies view and build applications, and companies such as Yelp and eBay are adopting Docker at a fast pace.
In total, it has raised $150 million through three rounds of funding, with investors including Insight Venture Partners, Greylock Partners, Lightspeed Venture Partners, and AME Cloud Ventures.
Doug Evans
Founder, CEO, Juicero
The juicing fad isn’t over yet. Secretive startup Juicero — which raised $120 million earlier this year — is on a mission to completely reinvent the way we consume fresh fruits and veggies. Though the company has remained tight-lipped about their process, sources told Business Insider earlier this year that Juicero is creating an appliance similar to a Keurig that will juice freshly picked fruits and veggies without creating waste.
And founder Doug Evans knows a thing or two about juice. He's the former CEO of Organic Avenue, a popular health-food chain in New York.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdBrit Morin
Founder, CEO, Brit + Co.
Touted at the "Martha Stewart of Silicon Valley," Brit Morin specializes in the intersection of tech and DIY — and it's lucrative. Morin launched Brit+Co, a lifestyle website that features crafts, fashion, and decor, in 2011, and so far it's raised $27.6 million in funding from investors including Oak Capital, Intel Capital, and Marissa Mayer.
Before diving into her own site, Morin grew her love for the tech world as an employee at Apple and Google, where she worked on iTunes and Google Maps, respectively.
Brian Armstrong and Fred Ehrsam
Balaji Srinivasan, Matthew Pauker, Nigel Drego, Daniel Firu, and Veerbhan Kheterpal
Cofounders, 21 Inc.
Enigmatic startup 21 Inc. wants to bring bitcoin to the mainstream through an embeddable chip for phones that will allow users to "mine" Bitcoin in the background. Though the company only recently announced its master plan, they’ve been building capital for some time. In March, it raised $116 million in venture funding from investors including Andreessen Horowitz, Yuan Capital, and RRE Ventures.
21 recently shook up its management as well: Cofounder Balaji Srinivasan, who is also a partner at Andreessen Horowitz, is taking over as CEO, and Matthew Pauker, the current CEO, is replacing Srinivasan as chairman.
Craig Martin and Curtis Lee
Cofounders, Luxe Valet
Luxe Valet wants to take the hassle out of parking. The app, which calls someone to park your car for you with just a click, is picking up steam, even against competition from similar on-demand valet companies. It raised $20 million in a Series A funding round in February, and is continuing to expand into new markets.
The idea was born after cofounder Curtis Lee and his wife spent 30 minutes searching for a parking space in San Francisco one night, nearly missing their dinner reservations. "Circling is not good for anybody," he told Forbes.
Kevin Gibbon and Joshua Scott
Cofounders, Shyp
Anyone who's ever had to lug a package to the post office knows how annoying it can be. But with Shyp, all that hassle goes away. The startup is reinventing the shipping process; instead of schlepping your boxes to UPS,Shyp picks them up for a $5 flat fee plus shipping.
Shyp raised $50 million in a Series B round of funding earlier this year, with investors including SherpaVentures and Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers. In the past year, the company has increased its number of shipments by nearly 500% and continues to grow.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdBen Rubin, Uri Haramati, Itai Danino
Cofounders, Meerkat
It's never been easier to share live video with your friends and followers. Just open Meerkat, click "stream," and share whatever you're doing with friends. The popular live-streaming app, which launched in March, raised $18.2 million in funding and has nearly 2 million users.
However, Meerkat is facing fierce competition from Twitter's Periscope, another live-streaming app. Despite Perisciope's advanced features, like the ability to replay videos, Meerkat cofounder Ben Rubin is confident there's space for both to thrive. When he found out Twitter was launching its competition, he says "it was Saturday – all the team went back to the office to get ready to dive in."
Baiju Bhatt and Vlad Tenev
Cofounders, Robinhood
Robinhood, a sleek mobile-brokerage app, is making it possible for anyone to invest, not just Wall Streeters. Unlike rival investment apps E-Trade and Schwab, which charge $7 to $10 per trade, Robinhood is free to use. In May, it raised $50 million in a funding round led by NEA. Previous investors include big-name VCs and celebrities including Snoop Dogg and Jared Leto.
Inspired by the Occupy Wall Street Movement, Vlad Tenev and Baiju Bhatt created the app to "democratize access to the financial markets." And good news for their mission: It’s now available for anyone to use.
Ryan Hoover
Founder, Product Hunt
For tech enthusiasts, Product Hunt is a daily addiction. The community review site constantly surfaces new products, and many consider it a direct competitor to blogs like TechCrunch. Last October, the site raised $6.1 million in a Series A round of financing from investors including Andreessen Horowitz.
Founder Ryan Hoover commands a ton of power in the tech world for becoming the face of the site. He's been known to flood Twitter with conversations about new products, consistently engaging people with the site.
Recently, Product Hunt also began branching out from tech; it launched Snoop Dogg's new album in May, and many speculate it will continue to feature nontech products.
Tony Xu, Evan Moore, Stanley Tang, Andy Fang
Cofounders, DoorDash
DoorDash, a startup that delivers food from local restaurants, raised $40 million in March from a round of funding led by Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers. Unlike other meal-delivery services, DoorDash provides its own drivers, which makes it possible to order from restaurants that aren’t available on places like GrubHub.
The company is about more than just meal delivery. It places a heavy emphasis on the logistics side of things, and hopes to create an infrastructure that can be used to deliver anything.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdMax Mullen, Brandon Leonardo, and Apoorva Mehta
Cofounders, Instacart
Often dubbed "Uber for groceries," Instacart eliminates the need to ever set food in a grocery store. For $3.99 plus your bill, the service will deliver your full load of groceries, hand-picked by a personal shopper at local stores like Whole Foods and Costco.
The startup is valued at $2 billion, notably bringing in a $220 million round of fundingin December, following a $44 million round led by Andreessen Horowitz in June. And it's still on the rise: Instacart is in 15 cities and plans to continue growing in those places while expanding to others.
Jason Kilar and Richard Tom
Mike Olson, Christophe Bisciglia, Amr Awadallah, Jeff Hammerbacher
Cofounders, Cloudera
Cloudera, a software company that launched in 2008 and aims to help businesses make sense of huge data sets, raised $900 million in funding last March. Investors include Intel, Google Ventures, and MSD Capital. They also raised an undisclosed amount in another round later that year.
The company continues to grow, raking in over $100 million in revenue last year, and some analysts believe it could be worth almost $5 billion by the end of 2015. The startup even recruited Google exec Daniel Sturman to join as their vice president of engineering.
John Zimmer and Logan Green
Cofounders, Lyft
It was a huge year for Lyft: It raised two major rounds of funding — $530 million in March and another $150 million from Carl Icahn in May — rebranded with a more sophisticated look, and announced huge growth for the company. And in March, the ride-hailing service reached a $2.5 billionvaluation, making it one of Silicon Valley's growing number of unicorns.
Though the startup still faces seriouscompetition from Uber, it continues to prove itself a worthy opponent.
Nirav Tolia, David Wiesen, Prakash Janakiraman, Sarah Leary
Cofounders, Nextdoor
In March, Nextdoor, a neighborhood-based social network, officially became a tech unicorn after raising $110 million in funding that put the company's valuation at $1.1 billion.
Nextdoor connects users with those who live close to them, creating a forum for discussing everything from neighborhood crime to the best places to eat. Though others, including Foursquare and AOL, have had mixed luck with the neighborhood-centric concept, founder Nirav Tolia believes Nextdoor's focus on small communities will make it an effective way to connect people. In the long term, the app also hopes to find a way to monetize the user recommendations.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdDheeraj Pandey
Cofounder, CEO, Nutanix
Enterprise virtualization and storage company Nutanix became of the first enterprise unicorns of 2014, with a valuation of $2 billion. The company raised over $141 million in 2014, and $312 million to datefrom investors including Lightspeed Venture partners, Blumberg Capital, Khosla Ventures, and Goldman Sachs.
Nutanix has become so emblematic of successful enterprise hardware companies that, in Silicon Valley, other startups dream of becoming "the Nutanix of" their markets. Nutanix also has plans to take down incumbent VMware. The two companies are intensely competitive.
Chris Wanstrath and PJ Hyett
Cofounders, Github
CEO Chris Wanstrath is a self-taught coder who dropped out of college to pursue a career in software development. An active profile on GitHub — his software-development tool that allows users to collaborate — has become a popular destination for Valley programmers to work and get hired.
In mid-June, Bloomberg Business reported that GitHub was raising a $200 million round at a valuation of about $2 billion. GitHub has not put out a statement, but rumors suggest that the round is being led by Andreessen Horowitz, the same firm that led GitHub's first funding round back in 2012 when it raised $100 million.
Patrick and John Collison
Cofounders, Stripe
In September, Apple announced partnerships with a number of retailers and payments companies for its Apple Pay service. Among them was Stripe, a five-year-old mobile-payments startup.
Recently, Stripe has been in talks to raise a funding round that could see the payments company, which has previously raised $190 million in venture capital, reach a valuation of $5 billion.
Parker Conrad and Laks Srini
Cofounder/CEO, cofounder, Zenefits
Zenefits, a startup aimed at making administrative tasks such as payroll and benefits easier, is shaping up to be one of the fastest-growing cloud companies ever, in terms of both revenue of number of users. In May, it raised $500 million in Series C funding, bringing the company’s valuation up to $4.5 billion. However, it reportedly only generated $20 million in 2014. Only two years old, Zenefits employs 1,000 people and has 10,000 customers.
Though he’s faced several ups and downs in his career, Parker Conrad’s hub-and-spokes model — give Zenefits away and sell services through it — is proving effective as the company continues to grow.
Nathan Blecharczyk, Brian Chesky, and Joe Gebbia
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdBen Silbermann and Evan Sharp
Cofounders, Pinterest
Pinterest, an online scrap-booking site that lets users organize photo pins onto different boards, is now worth $11 billion after raising a $367 million round of funding in March, followed by another $186 million in May. Investors include Andreessen Horowitz, Fidelity Investments, and Bessemer Venture Partners.
The site continues to grow and adapt its business model, most recently releasing new options for advertisers. Instead of just choosing to pay for views or clicks on promoted pins, advertisers can choose to pay with a cost-per-engagement model or cost-per-action model. Pinterest just lost its head of partnerships however, Joanne Bradford. The rumor is Pinterest wasn't generating as much revenue as it should have.
Elizabeth Holmes
Founder, CEO, chairman, Theranos
When she was a sophomore at Stanford in 2003, Elizabeth Holmes founded healthcare-technology company Theranos (a few months later, she dropped out to focus on the company). Today, she's America's youngest female billionaire with a net worth of $4.6 billion.
Theranos is a $9 billion biotech company that has a new approach to blood testing. Its goal is to make clinical testing cheaper and faster. Theranos wants to conduct blood tests for health issues through a single finger stick rather than by having to draw vials of blood in a doctor's office. Theranos has drawn skepticism from the scientific community in part because Theranos is cagey about how its tests actually work. But for now, Holmes is on top of the world. Today, her blood tests are used in places like Walgreens.