Occupation Venture capitalist Name Scott Weiss | Organizations founded IronPort | |
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Scott weiss ceo s role in culture building
Scott Weiss is an American venture capitalist at the Silicon Valley firm Andreessen Horowitz, joining in April 2011 as the firm’s fourth general partner. A native of Sarasota, Florida, he founded and was CEO of IronPort Systems, which Cisco acquired in 2007 for $830 million. Weiss has a Bachelor of Arts from the University of Florida and an M.B.A. from Harvard Business School.
Contents
- Scott weiss ceo s role in culture building
- Liveschool and mentor scott weiss talk edtech wsj startup of the year
- Andreessen Horowitz
- Early career
- Philanthropy
- References

Liveschool and mentor scott weiss talk edtech wsj startup of the year
Andreessen Horowitz
While at Andreessen Horowitz, Weiss has blogged on such topics as corporate transparency for All Things D and enterprise startup best practices for GigaOM. He serves on the boards of Distelli, Platfora, Silver Tail Systems, Bluebox, and Jumio as well as Skout, App.Net, and Return Path.
Weiss is credited with bringing to the firm 360-degree feedback performance reviews of partners by other partners, venture firms and entrepreneurs of the companies in Andreessen Horowitz’s portfolio. This type of performance review is an unusual practice for venture capital firms.
In April, Scott Weiss joined the Board of Directors of Optimizely as part of Andreesen Horowitz's Series B round in the company.
Early career
Before joining Andreessen Horowitz, Weiss was vice president and general manager of Cisco’s Security Technology Group, a position he assumed following Cisco’s acquisition of email appliance provider IronPort Systems. Weiss co-founded IronPort Systems in 2001 with Scott Banister, with whom he had worked at Idealab. Over the next six years, IronPort Systems grew from two people into a company with 450 employees and a $200 million run rate.
Prior to 2001, Weiss was the managing director and entrepreneur in residence at Idealab, a business incubator.
Prior to Idealab, Weiss headed MSN business development at Microsoft and was employee no. 13 at Hotmail, an email provider that Microsoft acquired in 1998. At Hotmail, Weiss was responsible for partnership and revenue generating business development efforts.
Prior to Hotmail, Weiss was an associate at McKinsey & Company and spent his first five years out of college at Electronic Data Systems.
Philanthropy
In April 2012, Weiss along with Andreessen Horowitz General Partners Marc Andreessen, Ben Horowitz, Jeff Jordan, John O’Farrell and Peter Levine pledged to give half of their lifetime income from venture capital to charity.