Humba Ventures Deep Tech Office Hours (Dec 2025)
About a decade ago, when I was still early in my VC career, I held founder/VC office hours for a few years around the holidays. These meetings were fun and I still keep in touch with some of the people I met back then.
I’d like to bring this experiment back for 2025.
If you’re an early-stage or aspiring deep tech founder and think a 20-30 minute virtual chat would be useful to you, please apply. I’ll hold a total of about 25 sessions over the days before Christmas and New Year’s Eve. If I get a lot of applications, I’ll pick the ones where I’m best able to help.
About me: I was a software engineer for ten years (2nd engineering hire at LinkedIn, then a few years at Google). I then switched to venture capital, co-founded Susa Ventures (software fund) in 2013, and more recently started Susa’s sister fund Humba Ventures (deep tech fund) four years ago.
Criteria:
You’re US/Canada-based.
You’re the founder of a pre-Series A deep tech company, or you’re thinking of starting one. (This is the stage where my advice/feedback would be most appropriate.) The areas I’ve been spending time in over the past few years are robotics, energy, defense, manufacturing, space, techbio, etc.
You have a topic that we could cover well in a relatively short period of time.
Topics that work well: pitch practice/feedback, product feedback, fundraising advice, discussing founder issues, brainstorming product/business/GTM strategy, etc.
Things don’t work well: requests for intros (they don’t scale + it’s hard to give a strong intro after a single short chat), pitching Humba Ventures for an investment (if you want to pitch us, my email is on my LinkedIn page), questions that require deep expertise in a specific area that I don’t know well.
If you’re interested, please apply by 11:59 PM (PST) on December 18. [Sorry, applications are now closed.]
If your friends or online followers might be interested, please share this with them :)


sweet of you to bring this back, would love to hear what patterns you're seeing show up across the applications, that's the kind of signal we'd want to track in our briefings
yay