Structure Capital Research
Overview
Structure Capital is a San Francisco-based venture capital firm founded in 2013 by Mike Walsh, specializing in early-stage investments in the sharing economy with a unifying thesis: "Architects of the Zero Waste Economy." The firm invests in companies that leverage under-utilized assets—people, skills, possessions, space, and time—to create value while reducing waste and promoting sustainability. With over 70 years of combined experience among its partners, Structure Capital has built a reputation for both identifying breakout companies and providing substantial operational support to portfolio founders.
Investment Thesis & Positioning
Structure Capital's core thesis centers on the sharing economy and zero waste principles. The firm believes that sharing economy companies solve fundamental problems: they enable people to monetize underutilized assets, reduce environmental impact, increase efficiency, and improve community outcomes. Mike Walsh's blue-collar upbringing in Worcester, Massachusetts—where hand-me-downs and shared tools were the norm—deeply informed this philosophy. The firm articulates its investment approach around five key market enablers: Speed (instant gratification expectations), Mobilization (mobile-first requirements), Efficiency (frictionless experiences), Trust (social proof and ratings), and Geography (location-based connectivity).
Structure Capital explicitly targets founders who are "fueled by ideas and ideals" and define success beyond financial returns—they seek impact on customers, employees, and communities. The firm values mission-driven entrepreneurs who are both tenacious and empathetic. Anti-positions include non-sharing-economy models, companies that don't leverage under-utilized assets, and founders primarily motivated by financial gain without broader social impact.
Founding Story & Track Record
Mike Walsh's venture success predates Structure Capital. In 1999, he made an early investment in Salesforce.com as a customer-turned-investor, capturing significant returns when the company went public in 2004. More notably, in 2010, Walsh became one of Uber's first institutional investors through a referral from Ryan Graves. His initial investment of approximately $5,000 yielded returns worth tens of millions as Uber grew from a $5.4 million valuation to over $72 billion. This Uber success became the foundation for Structure Capital's launch—Walsh invested roughly $300,000 of his Uber returns into the fund's first capital pool, which he used as a "marketing tool" to attract limited partners. Within six months, that initial Uber stake had appreciated to $3 million in paper value, helping validate the fund's early positioning.
Stage Focus & Check Size
Structure Capital is primarily a seed-stage investor, with capacity to participate in pre-seed and series A rounds. Based on their portfolio activity and public disclosures:
- Pre-seed: $250K-$500K typical range
- Seed: $1M-$3M typical range (primary focus)
- Series A: Selective follow-ons and occasional lead rounds
The firm has deployed across 91+ portfolio companies (as of website snapshot), with cumulative impact of 224 entrepreneurs and 451,690 jobs created. Recent activity shows they continue deploying at similar check sizes, indicating a fund of meaningful size capable of leading or co-leading rounds.
Lead Tendency
Structure Capital demonstrates a strong lead tendency. Analysis of their portfolio shows frequent lead positions in seed rounds, co-lead capability with tier-one partners, and strong likelihood of board seat participation in led or co-led investments. The firm's partners actively contribute beyond capital: Jacob Shea sources technical talent and operational advice; Jillian Manus provides branding and culture support through their proprietary "Brand Camp" program (conducted in partnership with Goodby, Silverstein & Partners); Mike Walsh provides fundraising guidance and strategic direction.
Team & Decision-Making
The firm is led by three complementary partners: Mike Walsh (General Partner, founder, early-stage dealmaker), Jillian Manus (Managing Partner, brand and culture specialist, frequent CNBC contributor), and Jacob Shea (Partner, technical operator and talent scout). Decision process follows a partnership model with collaborative decision-making. Each partner tends to lead investments in areas of specialization, with no formal investment committee but a 3-partner structure creating deliberative process.
Recent Activity & Current Status
Based on latest research (data through 2025), the firm remains actively deploying from current fund. Jacob Shea's recent LinkedIn post (November 2025) thanked Mike Walsh and Jillian Manus for creating and funding the firm. Website portfolio shows 91 active companies. Partners continue media presence (Jillian Manus on CNBC, discussing tech policy and diversity). No indication of fund wind-down; firm appears in active deployment phase with continued focus on the sharing economy thesis.