Oren Zeev

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Oren Zeev
Born (1964-09-23) September 23, 1964 (age 59)
Haifa, Israel
Alma materBSc cum laude Elecetrical Engineering, Technion, Israel. MBA with Distinction, INSEAD, France
Occupation(s)Venture Capitalist, Entrepreneur, Angel Investor, and Managing Partner of Zeev Ventures.
SpouseHagit Zeev

Oren Zeev is an Israeli-American billionaire businessman. He is venture capitalist and head of Zeev Ventures, a Silicon Valley-based venture capital firm with early-round investments in technology companies. Zeev has had notable investments in Houzz, Audible, Chegg, Navan, Inc., and Tipalti. He is co-founder and co-chairman of ICON, a non-profit organization focused on bridging Israeli and Silicon Valley technology and business.[1]

As of January 27, 2024, Forbes listed Oren Zeev net worth at US$2.2 billion, ranking him 1393 on the Billionaires list[2] and he was ranked 15th among the top wealthiest people in Israel.[3]

Engineering career[edit]

Zeev graduated BsC Cum Laude, EE from Technion-Machon Technologi Le’ Israel, and earned an MBA with Distinction in Business from INSEAD in France.

Zeev developed and implemented image and signal processing algorithms prior to his career as a venture capitalist. He was a Research staff member at IBM and part of the founding team of IBM's chip design group in Haifa, Israel.

Investment career[edit]

Following his time at IBM, Zeev spent 12 years at Apax Partners as a General Partner. He joined in January 1995 as part of the founding team of Apax Israel. In 2002, Zeev moved to the US and co-headed, and later headed, the Technology Practice of Apax and its Silicon Valley office. His first investment was Audible where he was also a board member.[citation needed]

Zeev Ventures[edit]

In 2007, Zeev established Zeev Ventures in Palo Alto to focus on early-stage companies. At Zeev Ventures, he has been an early investor and has held board and chairmanships at various companies including Houzz,[4] Chegg, Homelight, Tipalti,[5] TripActions,[6] and NEXT Insurance. For Houzz, Zeev led the Series A round in the company in 2010, and then invested another $20 million from his fund, Zeev Ventures, expanding on the 8% of the company he already owned.[7]

Tipalti[edit]

In 2010, Zeev Co-founded Tipalti when another one of Zeev's portfolio companies approached him with a major challenge they were facing around processing payouts to their global partners. To explore and address this problem, Zeev recruited Chen Amit, who he had studied and gotten his MBA with while at INSEAD, to create and run the company. Tipalti now processes over $11 billion in annual transaction for over 1,000 clients and over 4 million suppliers around the world.[8]

In 2014, Zeev was featured in Techcrunch on his investment approach that has achieved an annual 100 percent IRR.[9]

In 2017, Forbes wrote an article about Zeev's unique investment approach that had led to such a high portfolio success rate.[10]

In 2019, Zeev was profiled by CNBC on how he chooses start-ups for investment.[11]

Personal life[edit]

Zeev was born in Haifa, Israel in 1964. He moved to California with his wife, Hagit Zeev, and 2 children in 2002.[12] Zeev currently lives in Los Altos Hills, California.

List of startup investments[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "How Israeli Expats In Silicon Valley Produce Winning Startups". Inc.com.
  2. ^ "Oren Zeev". Forbes. Retrieved 2024-01-27.
  3. ^ "Wealthiest People in Israel (January 22, 2024)". CEOWORLD magazine.
  4. ^ "Houzz's Founders Have Become Tech's Newest Power Couple". Forbes.
  5. ^ Zeev, Oren (20 February 2018). "Why I Decided to Lead Tipalti's Series C Round of Funding". Medium.
  6. ^ "TripActions launches its business travel app and unveils a $14.6 million round". House of Bots.
  7. ^ "Houzz's $4B Valuation Sets Investor Oren Zeev Apart". Forbes.
  8. ^ "Tipalti Surpasses $11 Billion in Annual Transactions, Grows by 80+%". Bloomberg.
  9. ^ "Meet Oren Zeev, Silicon Valley's Builder-Investor". Techcrunch. 22 February 2014.
  10. ^ "Houzz's $4B Valuation Sets Investor Oren Zeev Apart". Forbes.
  11. ^ "How this venture capitalist chooses start-ups for investments". CNBC.
  12. ^ "Meet Oren Zeev, Silicon Valley's Builder-Investor". TechCrunch. 22 February 2014.

External links[edit]