Theresia Gouw and Ann Miura-Ko are coming to Disrupt

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
For a very long time, the venture industry was stubbornly resistant to change
The same people sat back in their chairs on Sand Hill Road while nervous founders made the rounds, hoping one of these firms would champion
their cause.No longer
Since roughly the advent of Y Combinator, the landscape has seemed to shift by the year, with more startups raising capital every year, more
people becoming VCs, more Medium posts, more newsletters, more events, more great founders, more bad behavior, more congestion, and more
money from all over the world finding its way to Silicon Valley and a growing number of smaller but fast-growing hubs.How to make sense of
it all? At Disrupt, we do our best to answer that question by sitting down each year with top venture capitalists who tell us what they are
seeing
In 2015, for example, we talked with VCs about why you can start, but not always scale, a company from anywhere
In 2016, the discussion turned to why VCs were gathering up so much capital when the IPO market was (at the time) all but closed to new tech
issuers
In 2017, we examined how then-new U.S
President Donald Trump might impact the venture and startup industry
the VCs who will help us to answer some of these questions: Ann Miura-Ko, a cofounder of the seed- and early-stage venture firm Floodgate,
and Theresia Gouw, a cofounder of the early-stage venture firm Aspect Ventures.Both of these longtime investors bring a lot of deep
insights to any venture discussion
Then a McKinsey analyst who was focused on wireless technologies, she went on to become an analyst at the venture firm CRV before cofounding
with partner Mike Maples the venture firm Floodgate in 2008
Since joining forces, Floodgate has backed a long list of powerful companies, including Twitch, Sonos, Chegg, AdRoll, BazaarVoice, and Lyft,
where Miura-Ko remains on the board of directors
then joining the venture firm Accel in 1999, just a year before the industry imploded
It could have been a short-lived stint
partner and former DFJ partner Jennifer Fonstad
Since then, the firm has backed a wide variety of companies, from The RealReal to Exabeam, HotelTonight to Forescout
shaping the industry right now, from the growing secondary market to IPO trends, from what excites them the most to what their biggest