The Tech Brunch The Tech Brunch

The Tech Brunch

The Tech Brunch

  • Home
  • Startups
  • Social
  • Enterprise
  • Gadgets
  • Greentech
  • Mobile
  • Fundings and exits
The Tech BrunchThe Tech Brunch
  • Startups
  • Social
  • Enterprise
  • Gadgets
  • Greentech
  • Mobile
  • Fundings and exits
Home > > The complicated calculus of taking Facebook’s venture money

The complicated calculus of taking Facebook’s venture money

Published: Apr 14, 2022

Facebook is reportedly getting into the venture capital game, but for young entrepreneurs working in social media, ignoring or deleting that particular friend request could be the right call.

According to a report in Axios, the company is building up a corporate fund under the auspices of its “New Product Experimentation” team, which launched last year. The company posted a job opening looking for a “head of investments” for the new division and now has new job openings in the group for two “founder” positions in New York City and Menlo Park, California. 

Axios reported that the role would “manage a multimillion dollar fund that invests in leading private companies alongside top venture capital firms and angel investors,” according to a now-deleted post. The new hire will join Shabih Rizvi, a former partner at the Alphabet-backed corporate venture firm, Gradient Ventures, who began his career in venture at KPCB.

While Facebook said that the new investment arm would complement the work that the company already does to support startups through accelerators and hackathons, investors at some of Silicon Valley’s venture capital firms were skeptical. Perhaps with good reason, since the group that houses Facebook’s new investment team is hiring its own “founders” and has already developed a few apps that could compete with existing startups.

“[Money] of last resort,” one investor wrote in a text. Another said it would be a way for Facebook to spot potential acquisitions early enough to avoid triggering antitrust concerns, which may be good for Facebook, but bad for startups. “[Facebook] can’t buy 100 million-user apps any more,” this investor wrote in a direct message. “It needs to buy them closer to 10 million.”

You Might Also Like

Latest Mobile Technology Trends in 2026: Complete Guide

The Importance of Social Media Algorithm for Business

Best GreenTech Investment Platforms Guide

Best Rechargeable Travel Gadgets for Every Trip in 2026

Previous Article Rallyhood exposed a decade of users private data Rallyhood exposed a decade of users private data
Next Article Imaging startup Light is exiting the smartphone business Imaging startup Light is exiting the smartphone business

Latest News

Latest Mobile Technology Trends in 2026: Complete Guide
Mobile Jul 10, 2026
The Importance of Social Media Algorithm for Business
Social Jul 09, 2026
Best GreenTech Investment Platforms Guide
Greentech Jul 08, 2026
Best Rechargeable Travel Gadgets for Every Trip in 2026
Gadgets Jul 07, 2026
Latest Enterprise Technology Trends 2026 Guide
Enterprise Jul 06, 2026
Best Startup CRM Software for Small Businesses in 2026
Startups Jul 03, 2026
Best Mobile for Vlogging Under 30000: Top Camera Phones
Mobile Jul 02, 2026
Difference Between Private Equity vs Venture Capital Funding
Fundings and exits Jul 01, 2026
Best Social Media Apps for Creators in 2026
Social Jun 24, 2026
Why Green Technology Is Important for Sustainability
Greentech Jun 17, 2026
about us

  • Startups
  • Social
  • Enterprise
  • Gadgets
  • Greentech
  • Mobile
  • Fundings and exits
Enterprise AI Adoption Trends 2026: How Businesses Are Using AI to Stay Ahead
Enterprise AI Adoption Trends 2026: How Businesses Are Using AI to Stay Ahead
Enterprise Jan 06, 2026
How to Measure Carbon Footprint with AI Technology
How to Measure Carbon Footprint with AI Technology
Greentech Jan 06, 2026

© Copyright 2026 thetechbrunch.com All Rights Reserved.

  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms And Conditions