
AZ-VC
Financial History
Leadership Team
Key people at AZ-VC.

Key people at AZ-VC.
# AZ-VC: Arizona's Venture Capital Mothership
AZ-VC positions itself as Arizona's flagship venture capital fund, designed to address a historic funding gap that has forced local entrepreneurs to seek capital from out-of-state investors.[1] The firm's mission centers on building long-term relationships with talented founders and providing world-class resources across the entire technology ecosystem.[1] The fund invests in early-stage technology startups and venture funds spanning enterprise software, consumer technology, climate-tech, and bio/health tech, while explicitly prioritizing access to equity capital for underserved founders and communities within Arizona.[2]
What distinguishes AZ-VC is its explicit commitment to ending what the firm calls the "funding desert paradox"—the contradiction of Arizona's emerging tech hotbed lacking sufficient local capital sources.[1] Rather than operating as a traditional venture fund, AZ-VC functions as a networked platform anchored by industry leaders and deep Silicon Valley connectivity, positioning itself to provide both capital and strategic guidance to portfolio companies navigating growth stages.
AZ-VC was founded in 2021 as a sector-agnostic investment firm based in Arizona.[4] The fund's creation was catalyzed by a $25 million commitment from Pinnacle West Capital Corporation, establishing a substantial capital base to support the local ecosystem.[1] The leadership structure reflects a deliberate strategy to bridge Arizona's entrepreneurial talent with proven venture expertise: the effort is led by Jack Selby, Chairman of invisionAZ and a former PayPal executive with two decades of Arizona residency.[1] Selby's background combines deep Silicon Valley connectivity with a successful track record in early-stage investments, positioning him as a bridge between Arizona's emerging tech community and established venture capital networks.
The fund assembled Arizona's industry leaders to harness networking power, recognizing that capital alone is insufficient—the ecosystem required trusted advisors with operational experience. This founding philosophy reflects a response to a genuine market inefficiency: historically, Arizona-based companies faced structural disadvantages in fundraising simply due to geography, despite possessing comparable talent and potential to companies in traditional tech hubs.
Network-First Model: Rather than operating as a traditional capital deployment vehicle, AZ-VC emphasizes its "vast network framed to provide world-class resources for companies in all sectors of the tech ecosystem."[1] This positions the firm as a connector and facilitator, not merely a check-writer.
Operational Expertise on the Team: The fund's leadership includes seasoned operators with deep execution experience. Ashok Santhanam, Managing Director, has founded or co-founded four startups, served as Chief Revenue Officer at Nasdaq-listed Epiphany, and led turnarounds at companies like Bristlecone and Brandcast (acquired by TIME).[3] This operational depth means portfolio companies gain access to executives who have navigated scaling challenges firsthand.
Diverse Investment Verticals: Unlike sector-focused funds, AZ-VC maintains a sector-agnostic approach while maintaining strategic focus areas—enterprise, software, consumer, climate-tech, and bio/health tech.[2] This flexibility allows the fund to capitalize on emerging opportunities while maintaining thematic coherence.
Equity Access Mission: Beyond financial returns, AZ-VC explicitly catalyzes access to equity capital for underserved founders and communities in Arizona.[2] This dual mandate—financial performance and ecosystem development—reflects a stakeholder capitalism approach increasingly common among regional venture funds.
Board and Advisory Depth: The fund's team includes individuals with extensive board experience across growth-stage companies, family offices, and accelerators, providing portfolio companies with governance support and strategic guidance beyond typical venture involvement.
AZ-VC emerges at a critical inflection point for Arizona's technology ecosystem. The state has developed genuine competitive advantages—lower cost of living than coastal tech hubs, proximity to major markets, and emerging clusters in semiconductors, aerospace, and clean energy. However, these advantages have been undermined by a structural disadvantage: capital concentration in Silicon Valley, Boston, and New York meant that Arizona founders faced friction in accessing growth capital despite building compelling companies.
AZ-VC addresses this market failure by creating a local capital source with sufficient scale ($25 million anchor commitment) and credibility (PayPal alumni, proven operators) to compete for deal flow and support portfolio companies through growth stages. The fund's existence signals to entrepreneurs that building in Arizona no longer requires eventual relocation to raise capital—a psychological and practical shift that can accelerate ecosystem development.
The timing is particularly relevant as venture capital increasingly decentralizes. Rising costs in traditional hubs, remote work normalization, and investor recognition that talent and innovation exist outside coastal enclaves have created tailwinds for regional funds. AZ-VC positions itself to capture this trend while building durable competitive advantages through network effects—as the fund's portfolio grows and succeeds, it becomes an increasingly attractive destination for founders, creating a virtuous cycle.
AZ-VC represents a deliberate attempt to engineer ecosystem development through capital concentration and network effects. The fund's success will ultimately be measured not just by financial returns, but by whether it catalyzes a self-sustaining Arizona technology ecosystem where founders can access capital, expertise, and networks locally.
The fund's trajectory suggests continued growth and influence. With one fund closed (July 2023) and another in market as of September 2025, AZ-VC appears to be scaling its operations and capital deployment.[4] Future success hinges on portfolio company exits and returns that validate the fund's investment thesis, which would attract additional capital and reinforce Arizona's position as a meaningful technology hub.
The broader implication is that regional venture funds, when properly capitalized and led by credible operators, can meaningfully reshape entrepreneurial geography. AZ-VC's evolution will likely influence how other regions approach venture capital development, particularly mid-tier metros seeking to build sustainable technology ecosystems without competing directly with Silicon Valley on cost or density.
Key people at AZ-VC.
| Date | Company | Round | Lead Investor(s) | Co-Investor(s) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Feb 12, 2026 | Bearing | $4.5M Seed | AZ-VC | High Alpha, Lightbank, PHX Ventures |
| Mar 1, 2023 | Right-Hand Cybersecurity | $5.0M Hand Cybersecurity - Series A | — | Shasta Ventures |
| Jan 1, 2012 | Finsphere | $12.0M Venture Round | — | Acrew Capital, Madrona Ventures, Shasta Ventures, Trinity Ventures |
| Jul 1, 2009 | Finsphere | $9.0M Series B | — | Acrew Capital, Madrona Ventures, Shasta Ventures, Trinity Ventures |
| Dec 1, 2008 | FreedomPay | $2.0M Venture Round | — | — |
| Jun 1, 2008 | Marketcetera | $4.0M Series A | — | Shasta Ventures |
| Jun 1, 2008 | Finsphere | $10.0M Series A | — | Shasta Ventures |