Avichal Garg is the Co-Founder and a Managing Partner of Electric Capital, a venture capital firm specializing in Web3 and blockchain technologies [2] [3]. Prior to his focus on crypto, Garg was a serial entrepreneur and held product leadership roles at Google and Facebook [4]. He is also the Chairman of the Crypto Council for Innovation [5].
Garg attended Stanford University, where he earned a Bachelor of Science (B.S.) degree in Computer Science [6].
Garg's career began in the early 2000s and spans serial entrepreneurship, product management at major technology firms, and venture capital.
From 2003 to 2007, Garg served as the co-founder and CEO of PrepMe, an online adaptive learning and test preparation company. The ed-tech venture was later acquired by Naviance, a subsidiary of Hobsons [6].
Following PrepMe, Garg joined Google, where he worked from approximately 2007 to 2010 as a Product Manager. His responsibilities included working on core products such as Search Ranking, web spam, and AdSense [7] [6]. During his time at Google in 2005, at the age of 22, Garg conceived the idea for Google Transit after getting lost on the New York City subway. He wrote the initial product specification and was part of a small team that developed the project in their spare time. The service grew to serve one billion monthly active users [5].
In 2010, Garg co-founded his second company, Spool, where he served as CEO [6]. Spool developed mobile technology that allowed users to save online content and create a personal content cache for offline viewing and access [8] [6].
In July 2012, Spool was acquired by Facebook in an "acqui-hire," and Garg's team joined the company's mobile division [3] [6]. At Facebook, Garg became the Director of Product Management for the Local product group, where he led a team of 400 engineers. This group was responsible for product initiatives that generated billions of dollars in revenue for the company [3] [8]. His work at Facebook included leading product development for local initiatives like Facebook Pages. He held this role until approximately 2014 [6].
After leaving Facebook, Garg became a prolific angel investor in the technology sector, investing in over 100 startups. From 2016 to 2018, he also served as a Part-Time Partner at the startup accelerator Y Combinator, where he advised and invested in early-stage companies [9] [6].
His angel investment portfolio includes numerous companies that went on to achieve significant valuations, including 15 unicorns and 5 decacorns [10]. Notable angel investments from this period include:
A number of these companies, such as Airtable, Cruise, Notion, and Figma, are frequently cited across 그의 investment profiles. [3] [8]
In 2018, Garg co-founded Electric Capital with Curtis Spencer to focus exclusively on the cryptocurrency and Web3 ecosystem [10] [6]. Garg serves as a Co-Founder and Managing Partner at the firm [8].
Electric Capital was established as a venture firm run by former founders and senior engineers from major tech companies, rather than career financiers. The firm's central thesis is to invest in "programmable money" and foundational crypto-native protocols and businesses. They focus on long-term, early-stage investments, primarily at the Seed and Series A stages, with typical initial check sizes ranging from 10 million [8] [1].
The firm employs a distinct engineering-led and data-driven investment approach. It leverages proprietary software and analyzes large-scale data, including hundreds of millions of open-source code commits, to inform its investment decisions. This methodology is designed to identify promising ecosystems based on developer traction. The firm's funds are structured with 10-year lockups, allowing them to participate in long-dated token mechanics that may be inaccessible to other venture funds [8].
Electric Capital is widely known for its annual Electric Capital Developer Report. This in-depth, data-driven analysis tracks developer activity across thousands of open-source cryptocurrency and blockchain projects. The report is considered an industry benchmark for measuring the health, growth, and long-term potential of various blockchain ecosystems. The core idea, heavily promoted by Garg, is that developer activity is the most crucial leading indicator of where value will be created in the future [9] [6]. The firm has also open-sourced industry tools, with developerreport.com being a key example of its contributions to the community [8].
In March 2022, Electric Capital announced it had closed 400 million venture fund and a $600 million digital asset fund. This fundraising round established the firm as one of the largest dedicated crypto-native venture capital firms [9].
The firm's portfolio includes a range of foundational protocols, DeFi applications, and Web3 infrastructure companies. Notable investments made by Electric Capital include:
This portfolio reflects the firm's focus on investing in core infrastructure and applications across the Web3 stack. [3] [10]
In addition to his role at Electric Capital, Garg serves as the Chairman of the Crypto Council for Innovation, an industry advocacy group [5]. He has also noted having played a "very small part" in the founding of Boom Supersonic, suggesting an early advisory or support role [5].
This section summarizes an interview with Avichal Garg published on the Milk Road YouTube channel on August 12, 2025.
In the interview, Avichal Garg outlines his interpretation of recent market movements in the digital asset sector, with emphasis on Ethereum and the emergence of companies that hold crypto assets as part of their corporate treasury strategy. He attributes the market performance observed in July to investor behavior influenced by expectations of changes in monetary policy, combined with the presence of substantial capital allocated to money market instruments. In his view, these conditions may affect capital allocation decisions toward higher risk assets, including cryptocurrencies, depending on broader macroeconomic developments.
Garg describes an investment approach centered on long-term exposure to assets with established usage and adoption, specifically referencing Bitcoin and Ethereum. He frames Ethereum as a settlement and execution layer used by multiple financial and technology platforms and states that recent institutional participation, including exchange traded products, represents an early stage of adoption rather than a fully developed market phase.
The interview also examines the operational structure of digital asset treasury companies. According to Garg, these entities typically rely on equity and debt issuance to increase their holdings of digital assets, a process he explains through capital markets mechanics rather than price speculation. He notes that outcomes for such companies vary based on factors such as balance sheet scale, asset selection, and corporate governance, and he points out that smaller or less capitalized entities may face increased pressure during periods of reduced market liquidity.
In addition, Garg comments on differing approaches taken by financial technology firms entering blockchain infrastructure. He contrasts the creation of proprietary base layer blockchains with the use of existing Ethereum based Layer 2 networks, stating that these strategies involve different technical and operational tradeoffs. He also indicates that blockchain networks may remain viable even without extensive institutional involvement, particularly when serving specific retail or application focused use cases.
The information summarized reflects statements and interpretations provided by Avichal Garg during the interview and is presented for descriptive purposes only. [12]
In an interview published on the YouTube channel of the Foresight Institute on April 19, 2023, Avichal Garg, co founder and partner at Electric Capital, discussed topics related to privacy, shielded transactions, developer activity, and governance within crypto systems.
During the interview, Garg described privacy as a structural condition that enables activities such as free expression, independent reasoning, and routine economic operations. He stated that reduced privacy can limit the ability of individuals and organizations to exchange ideas, carry out lawful but sensitive actions, and manage internal business processes. These limitations were presented as factors that can influence broader social and institutional outcomes.
Garg also explained Electric Capital’s analytical approach, which places emphasis on developer activity as an indicator used to evaluate crypto ecosystems. He noted that developer participation is examined through open source code contributions rather than price movements or on chain transaction data. According to his explanation, this method is intended to observe longer term patterns related to technical development, contributor retention, and ecosystem maintenance.
The interview addressed geographic changes in developer participation, with Garg noting a relative decline in the share of developers based in the United States and growth in regions such as Asia and Eastern Europe. He associated these shifts with considerations about regulatory environments, jurisdictional influence, and the location of technical infrastructure that supports digital financial systems.
Privacy related technologies were discussed in terms of different implementation models. Garg distinguished between blockchains designed with privacy at the base layer and systems that add privacy features on top of existing public networks, including approaches based on zero knowledge proofs. These models were described as technically distinct, with differing design constraints and use cases.
On governance, Garg compared systems designed to minimize change, such as Bitcoin, with blockchains that allow more frequent protocol modifications. He outlined a view in which governance frameworks may evolve over time, with early flexibility intended to address technical uncertainty and later constraints aimed at reducing the risk of coordinated misuse.
Garg indicated that the positions expressed in the interview reflected his own assessments and the analytical framework used by Electric Capital, particularly regarding privacy, developer participation, and governance design in crypto networks. [13]