4 investors at Long Journey Ventures, based in San Francisco, CA.
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General Partner, Long Journey Ventures
Lee Jacobs co-founded Long Journey Ventures after being a repeat founder himself, and he explicitly uses his own entrepreneurial experience as a benchmark for backing what he calls magically weird founders who sit outside standard Silicon Valley pattern-matching. He positions himself as a second believer investor willing to commit early to technically complex ideas across both software and capital-intensive sectors, while maintaining an unusually open and accessible persona that welcomes pitches from overlooked founders rather than requiring warm introductions.

Venture Partner, Long Journey Ventures
Lee Jacobs co-founded Long Journey Ventures after being a repeat founder himself, and he explicitly uses his own entrepreneurial experience as a benchmark for backing what he calls magically weird founders who sit outside standard Silicon Valley pattern-matching. He positions himself as a second believer investor willing to commit early to technically complex ideas across both software and capital-intensive sectors, while maintaining an unusually open and accessible persona that welcomes pitches from overlooked founders rather than requiring warm introductions.

Founder and General Partner, Long Journey Ventures
Lee Jacobs co-founded Long Journey Ventures after being a repeat founder himself, and he explicitly uses his own entrepreneurial experience as a benchmark for backing what he calls magically weird founders who sit outside standard Silicon Valley pattern-matching. He positions himself as a second believer investor willing to commit early to technically complex ideas across both software and capital-intensive sectors, while maintaining an unusually open and accessible persona that welcomes pitches from overlooked founders rather than requiring warm introductions.

Venture Partner, Long Journey Ventures
Lee Jacobs co-founded Long Journey Ventures after being a repeat founder himself, and he explicitly uses his own entrepreneurial experience as a benchmark for backing what he calls magically weird founders who sit outside standard Silicon Valley pattern-matching. He positions himself as a second believer investor willing to commit early to technically complex ideas across both software and capital-intensive sectors, while maintaining an unusually open and accessible persona that welcomes pitches from overlooked founders rather than requiring warm introductions.
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