

Jesse Draper
Founding Partner of Halogen Ventures, discussing the investment landscape for female tech founders and the challenges they face.
Top 3 podcasts with Jesse Draper
Ranked by the Snipd community

39 snips
Jan 2, 2025 • 34min
Tesla’s Annual EV Sales Drop for First Time in Over a Decade
Jesse Draper, Founding Partner of Halogen Ventures, shares her insights on the hurdles female tech founders face in securing venture capital and the evolving investment landscape for diverse startups. Vincent Catalano, Chief Markets Strategist at Stuyvesant Capital Management, forecasts the market outlook for 2025, emphasizing key economic indicators and political catalysts. The discussion also touches on Tesla's surprising drop in sales and the broader implications for the electric vehicle market, making a case for innovation amidst cooling competition.

21 snips
Dec 2, 2025 • 48min
FHC #197: Artificial wombs & medical tourism – Draper siblings on healthcare’s next wave
Jesse Draper, a venture capitalist focused on the future of family and caregiving, and Adam Draper, founder of Boost VC and investor in frontier technologies, explore the evolving landscape of healthcare. They discuss how excessive regulation impedes innovation and pushes patients toward medical tourism. The siblings highlight the potential of artificial wombs and emphasize the need for new tech to motivate nurses. They advocate for transparency in research, explore AI's role in enhancing patient care, and reflect on their family's legacy of bold investments.

Feb 24, 2026 • 1h 15min
Jesse Draper (Halogen Ventures) on Betting on Companies Early, Founder Red Flags, and Why Investing in Women Is NOT a Charity
Jesse Draper, founder of Halogen Ventures and fourth-generation VC who backs early-stage consumer and female-founded startups. She explains how she evaluates pre-revenue companies, the founder green flags she loves like radical transparency, and why she stopped investing sight-unseen on Zoom. She also discusses how social media reshaped consumer investing and why investing in women is about returns, not charity.


