At age 18, Kirsten Green sold women’s clothes at the Nordstrom in Walnut Creek, Calif. Twenty years later, the retailer backed her fund, Forerunner Ventures. Green, 45, has made a name by investing in a handful of e-commerce supernovas, including razor-delivery startup Dollar Shave Club, which was acquired by Unilever in 2016 for $1 billion and e-commerce marketplace Jet.com, bought by Walmart (WMT, -0.81%) for $3.3 billion.
Green started as a retail analyst and always felt “safe in numbers.” Eventually she took more risk and in 2002 invested in a little-known company called Deckers Brands, which owned Teva sandals and had acquired a boot company called Ugg. Within a year, the stock jumped fifteen fold in a year.
“I don’t love it when people come in and say, ‘We need a woman on our board,’ or ‘Can you invest in this new shopping app because you like to shop?’ ” she admits. “But whatever gets me in the deal.”
Kirsten Green
Founder and Managing Partner, Forerunner Ventures
Stone Cold Numbers
As an auditor covering Safeway, Green once spent hours in a store’s meat freezer counting inventory.
Heavenly Touch
As an angel investor, Green cashed in on hipster eyeglasses maker Warby Parker and menswear purveyor Bonobos.
Recent Favorites
Green has invested in Reese Witherspoon’s clothing line, Draper James, and online makeup site Glossier.
A version of this article appears in the July 1, 2017 issue of Fortune with the headline “A Forerunner in Venture Capital.”