See The Top Schools Among Founders Who Raise Big Dollars

You don’t need a fancy university degree to
launch a startup and secure venture capital. But looking at the data on
who gets funded, alumni affiliation sure seems to be a big contributing
factor.

For this back-to-school series, Crunchbase is taking a look at how
top U.S. universities rank in terms of graduating entrepreneurs who go
on to launch funded startups. We look at which institutions launch the
most startups, as well as the most highly capitalized.

But first, a spoiler alert: If you’re looking for surprises, stop
reading now. The results largely confirm what people in venture and
startup circles could probably guess. Stanford graduates
more founders who raise more money than any other school. The rest of
the list is rounded out by large Ivy League schools, prestigious
technology institutes and some big state research universities.

Who launched the most startups

First, we ranked schools according to the number of alumni-founded
startups that raised $1 million or more in the past year. No big
surprises here, though it should be noted that a few universities are
seeing some nice year-over-gains. MIT had 134 alum-funded startups that raised over $1 million, up from 108 in the year-ago period. The University of Washington went up from 35 to 41 alum-funded startups, while University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign had 44, up from 39 in the year-ago period.

Getting down to business

Crunchbase lists business schools separately, so we ranked them here (our search is for Aug. 1 2016 to Aug. 1 2017). Again,
not a lot of surprises, unless you were thinking that Stanford would
once again be on top. The top spot belongs, instead, to Harvard.
(Perhaps it helps that Harvard is the larger business school, with over
1,800 students, compared to a little over 800 at Stanford.)

Who raised the most money?

When you look at which colleges have startup founders who raised the
most funding, the results get more mixed-up. Because unicorns and
near-unicorns are gobbling up such a big chunk of venture funding, having just one or two heavily funded companies in the mix really skews the results.

Take New York’s Baruch College,
for instance. It has just four alum-founded startups that raised a
million or more in the past year. But one of them happens to be WeWork, founded by Baruch alum Adam Neumann, which has disclosed fundraising of close to $4 billion this past year. The University of Chicago is another case in point. A single company, South Asian ride-hailing app Grab, accounts for more than three-fourths of all funding for alum-founded startups in the past year.

Nonetheless, it’s still fun to see which schools had the most heavily
funded startup founders. Here are some of the top ones we found:

At several schools, a single company accounted for 50 percent or more of total funding. These include Carnegie Mellon (Argo AI), Baruch (WeWork), Harvard Business School (Grab) and University of Chicago (also Grab).

Overall, the data shows that while founders of hot startups don’t
need a specific educational background, it helps to attend a school with
certain characteristics. In particular, founders tend to study at
universities that are prestigious and have well-known programs in STEM
and business fields. It also helps to be based in a metro area with a strong tech ecosystem and access to venture capital.

Methodology

Generally, Crunchbase lists business school affiliations in lieu of
the university. (For instance, alums who only attended Harvard Business
School aren’t listed as Harvard University grads, too.) However, the
database isn’t comprehensive in this area, so a few business school
grads may be in the main university listing and vice versa. This does
not significantly impact rankings, but it does create some margin of
error.

Additionally, many business schools grant additional degrees and
certifications beyond the traditional MBA, such as Harvard’s AMP
(Advanced Management Program). For the first business school chart
showing the total number of funded startups, Crunchbase includes
recipients of both degree and certification programs who list themselves
as alums in our database. However, we dropped short-term degree
recipients for the largest rounds in the listing of funding totals.

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