Pear VC does not chase noise. It studies formation. In a market that rewards later-stage certainty, Pear VC built its reputation inside the startup ecosystem, where risk is still raw and conviction is the only real currency. Soil first. Seed next. That is not branding. It is portfolio construction.
Pejman Nozad arrived in the United States as an immigrant and became known for seeing founders before the crowd did. Mar Hershenson earned a PhD in electrical engineering from Stanford University, founded multiple companies, and understands firsthand how fragile zero to one can be. As Founding Managing Partners, Pejman Nozad and Mar Hershenson designed Pear VC around proximity. Early stage. High touch. Embedded support. The firm’s identity is not about access to late rounds. It is about shaping outcomes before they look inevitable.
In 2023, Pear VC closed a $432M seed fund, one of the largest seed-focused funds raised by a non multistage firm. The size matters less than the signal. While capital concentrated upstream, Pear VC reinforced its commitment to pre-seed and seed, with a strong orientation toward AI, fintech, SaaS, and enterprise software. Within the startup ecosystem, that kind of focus creates gravity. Founders know where to go when they are still refining the problem, not just scaling the solution.
50% of the portfolio companies are student founded, representing roughly $15B in total valuation. That statistic reframes how talent enters the market. Pear Dorm exists to meet founders before graduation. PearX operates as a tightly run pre-seed accelerator pairing founders with multiple partners and operators across talent, marketing, and product. Female Founders Circle reinforces access, contributing to a portfolio where 41% of companies have a female founder and the team itself is 50% female. This is not diversity as marketing. It is structural design inside the startup ecosystem.
DoorDash remains one of the firm’s early signals to the market. Affinity, Viz.ai, Branch, Aurora Solar, Bioage, Cardless, Federato, and Xilis extend the pattern. Pear VC does not scatter checks. It compounds relationships. Partners such as Ajay Kamat, Annie Ta, Arash Afrakhteh, Eddie Eltoukhy, Kathleen Estreich, Khalil Fuller, and Matt Birnbaum anchor a platform that blends capital with operating depth. Talent support is not an afterthought. It is infrastructure.
The firm’s advantage is not speed. It is positioning. By concentrating on the earliest inflection points, Pear VC shapes cap tables, hiring trajectories, and operating discipline before valuation momentum distorts incentives. Inside the startup ecosystem, that early alignment compounds across cycles.
For founders building in AI, fintech, SaaS, or enterprise software at pre-seed or seed, Pear VC represents a specific kind of partner. Present early. Structured in support. Clear in thesis. For operators tracking where high-velocity companies are forming, the portfolio is active and hiring.
Follow this firm. Study their founders. Track their plays.

