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.
A simple reading platform built for kids who don’t have access to books at home or don’t find traditional reading material engaging. The goal is to give them something interesting enough to actually want to read — not something assigned to them.
time-2-read.comAn experimental “vibe-coded” learning app meant to make practice feel more like a game. It’s designed for kids but works just as well for adults who want a lightweight way to exercise their brain and attention.
heygetonmylevel.comThese 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.