Portrait of Sequoia Taylor

Sequoia Taylor

Investing, liquidity solutions, and founder support — with a background spanning Wall Street, venture capital, and operating teams.

Bio

I’ve spent the past two decades moving between Wall Street, venture capital, and the startup trenches. I began in investment banking as an intern at bulge-bracket banks and—after graduating during the worst recession of our time—landed at Raymond James, where I rotated through both Financial Institutions and Debt Capital Markets. From there, I jumped into tech as one of the first five employees at a Y Combinator–backed SaaS startup funded by Andreessen Horowitz and NEA, where I built and led the Account Management team.

Along the way, I’ve worn other hats: marketing and business development, interim Chief of Staff to the CEO of an ad tech startup (later acquired by Acxiom for $300M), and eventually Venture Partner at two VC firms and Entrepreneur-in-Residence at a micro fund.

Today, I advise clients on liquidity solutions and secondary transactions in growth and late-stage tech. I’m also an active angel investor, backing dozens of early-stage companies and participating in syndicates to support founders I believe in. I work closely with entrepreneurs on fundraising strategy, business development, and pitch coaching—while connecting them to my network of VCs and family offices.

I studied Sociology (and a bit of Economics) at Wellesley College, but most of my education has come through experience: building, investing, and learning as a lifelong student of business and people. Over the years, I’ve gained a perspective on markets, money, and human behavior that often rivals those twice my age.

What I’m up to now

Last updated: February 2026

  • Working on launching a fund
  • Planning a move to NYC
  • On a wellness journey

Side projects

I started building small side projects after realizing I’d spent years around startups and venture without ever actually shipping a product myself. Around the same time, I saw a TikTok discussing literacy rates among Gen‑Z and younger students, and it stuck with me more than I expected.

I’m a budding VC, but I felt it was important to understand the other side — the uncertainty, the tradeoffs, and the work of actually building something from scratch. Both of these projects came out of that: learning by doing, and trying to make something useful at the same time.

These projects aren’t a company — they’re part learning exercise, part social experiment. They’re my way of understanding product development firsthand while trying to build tools that might genuinely help people, even in a small way.

Contact

Use the form below, or reach me on LinkedIn / X / Threads.