Venture capitalists once cared deeply about polished resumes and brand-name degrees. Today, in the middle of the artificial intelligence boom, they are looking elsewhere. Founders with no patience for credentials, no appetite for permission, and often, no diploma are building companies too fast for the traditional model to catch up.
At funds like 1517, the thesis is simple: credentialed founders build conventional companies. Outliers, the ones who create entirely new markets rarely look the part. Increasingly, they are walking away from the classroom to build AI startups before graduation papers can even be printed.
Across San Francisco’s hacker houses, Y Combinator cohorts, and the portfolios of early-stage investors, the trend is visible. Some of the most aggressive and promising
Degrees Are Becoming Irrelevant as VCs Are Backing AI Dropouts
- By Anshika Mathews
- Published on
Some of the most aggressive and promising AI startups are being built not inside college campuses, but in spite of them.
