Stanford StartX Fund and Stanford University have/had a hierarchical relationship

Program Stanford StartX Fund
Host Stanford University
Start Date 2011-00-00
Notes StartX is a non-profit startup accelerator and founder community associated with Stanford University. It was founded by Cameron Teitelman in 2011.[1][2][3] It began as a spin-off of Stanford Student Enterprises, the non-profit financial arm of the Associated Students of Stanford University, which sponsored earlier events called SSE Labs in 2009 and then SSE Ventures.[4][5] The StartX accelerator differentiates itself from other accelerators in Silicon Valley, such as Y Combinator, in that it is an educational non-profit 501(c)(3) organization that takes no equity in the companies it helps start.[6] At least one member of each company must have some Stanford connection, but undergraduates, graduates, faculty and staff are involved in the seminars and advise program.[7] One of its first ventures, Alphonso Labs, developed the Pulse App.[6] WifiSlam was acquired by Apple Inc for about $20 million.[8][9] StartX's staff is primarily composed of student volunteers from Stanford. StartX received a $800,000 grant from the Kauffman Foundation in August 2012 (which allowed Teitelman to earn a salary),[10][11] and $400,000 from Silicon Valley companies in February 2012.[12] In May 2012, StartX created a specialized track, called StartX Med, for medical-related startup companies.[13] In September 2013, Stanford announced a grant of $1.2 million every year for three years to StartX. Along with Stanford Hospital and Clinics, it created a new Stanford-StartX fund (of uncapped amount) to invest in current and alumni StartX companies.[8][14] To receive the investment from Stanford, StartX companies must raise at least $500,000 on their own from professional angel investors or venture capitalists.[15] Stanford-StartX approved 6 companies by 2013.[16]
Updated over 6 years ago

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