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Stanford Angels & Entrepreneurs

Stanford Angels & Entrepreneurs (SA&E) operates as a charter group of the Stanford Alumni Association, founded by Miriam Rivera and Clint Korver — both...

Stanford Angels & Entrepreneurs

Stanford Angels & Entrepreneurs

Stanford Angels & Entrepreneurs (SA&E) operates as a charter group of the Stanford Alumni Association, founded by Miriam Rivera and Clint Korver — both also co-founders of seed-stage venture firm Ulu Ventures. Unlike a conventional angel network, SA&E is tied directly to the university's entrepreneurial infrastructure, with Stanford AI Lab director Andrew Ng serving as faculty advisor. It is not a venture fund; it is a relationship marketplace where accredited Stanford alumni evaluate and fund deals individually. The group concentrates on early-stage and seed-stage startups, sourcing primarily from the Stanford community — students, faculty, and alumni founders. Members make their own investment decisions, but the network facilitates shared due diligence and collective access. SA&E spans multiple chapters: Silicon Valley serves as the core hub, with dedicated regional branches in India — chaired by Paula Mariwala — and Southern California, led by Justine Lassoff. The structure mirrors a distributed sourcing model, leveraging Stanford's global alumni base rather than a centralized investment committee. Leadership reflects a blend of venture-operating expertise and institutional governance. Co-presidents Jagjot Singh, Radhika Shah, and Alan Chiu manage the network alongside Chair Miriam Rivera and President Emeritus Robert Siegel. The team's configuration — a board-driven nonprofit model housed within the alumni association — separates it from venture managers that charge carry or management fees. There is no disclosed deployment number or AUM, consistent with an organization where capital deployment happens directly between angels and startups without a central balance sheet. The structural differentiator is its formal charter under the Stanford Alumni Association, which grants SA&E access to proprietary campus deal flow — startups emerging from Stanford labs, classes, and accelerators — before they reach broader angel platforms. This institutional affiliation, paired with a geographic chapter model, gives the network a sourcing moat that generalist angel groups cannot replicate. Faculty advisor Andrew Ng further anchors the group within Stanford's AI research ecosystem, tilting the pipeline toward technical founders who mature inside university programs.

General information

Firm type

Generalist

Year founded

AUM

Undisclosed

Location

Region

North America

Country

United States

City

Palo Alto

Corporate office

Palo Alto, CA, United States

Principals

Miriam Rivera

Co-founder and Chair of the Board

Clint Korver

Co-founder and Co-President

Jagjot (JJ) Singh

Co-President and Board Member

Radhika Shah

Co-President and Board Member

Alan Chiu

Co-President and Board Member

Robert Siegel

President Emeritus

Paula Mariwala

Co-founder and Chair of Stanford Angels & Entrepreneurs India

Justine Lassoff

President of Stanford Angels & Entrepreneurs of Southern California

Andrew Ng

Faculty Advisor and Director of Stanford AI Lab

Frequently asked questions

Is Stanford Angels & Entrepreneurs a venture capital fund?

No. SA&E is a chartered alumni organization under the Stanford Alumni Association, not a pooled investment vehicle. The network presents curated early-stage companies to accredited alumni investors, who then decide individually whether to invest. There is no centralized fund, management fee, or carry structure.

Who runs investment decisions at SA&E?

Individual members make their own investment decisions. The leadership team — Co-Presidents Jagjot Singh, Radhika Shah, and Alan Chiu, along with Chair Miriam Rivera — manages the organization's operations, screening, and programming, but does not allocate pooled capital. SA&E facilitates introductions and due diligence, not centralized portfolio construction.

How does SA&E source its deal flow?

SA&E sources primarily from the Stanford ecosystem: student and faculty startups, alumni-founded companies, and ventures emerging from university programs. As an official alumni association chapter, it gains early visibility into campus innovation. Faculty advisor Andrew Ng, who directs the Stanford AI Lab, further connects the group to research-led founders in artificial intelligence and adjacent fields.

Does SA&E operate only in Silicon Valley?

Silicon Valley is the primary chapter, but SA&E maintains at least two additional regional branches: Stanford Angels & Entrepreneurs India, chaired by Paula Mariwala, and Stanford Angels & Entrepreneurs of Southern California, led by Justine Lassoff. Each chapter operates with local leadership but shares the same core model of connecting Stanford-alumni investors to early-stage founders.

What is the relationship between SA&E and Ulu Ventures?

SA&E co-founders Miriam Rivera and Clint Korver also co-founded Ulu Ventures, a seed-stage venture firm. While the two entities share founders and a focus on early-stage Stanford-linked companies, they are distinct organizations: Ulu Ventures is a discretionary venture capital firm that manages funds; SA&E is a nonprofit alumni network that does not pool capital or charge management fees.

Which investment stages does SA&E target?

The group is focused exclusively on early-stage companies, defined as seed and start-up phases. SA&E does not operate across growth equity or later stages. The deal flow typically mirrors the graduation trajectory of Stanford's startup ecosystem, covering formations from university labs, accelerators, and first-funding rounds.

Does SA&E participate in fund commitments or only direct deals?

SA&E's structure supports direct investments by individual alumni into startups. There is no publicly available evidence that the organization facilitates fund commitments or invests as a group into external venture capital funds. The model is built around direct angel transactions, not limited-partner fund allocations.

Profile maintained by using OSINT (open-source intelligence), regulatory filings, licensed data partners, and verified direct submissions. Read the methodology. Last updated: . Continuous refresh with full update cycles at least every 30 days.

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