Bio
Russell Siegelman has spent over twenty years in business and technology as a manager, investor and director. Currently he is splitting his time between teaching, angel investing, and non-profit activities.
As a Lecturer at Stanford Business School he teaches Startup Garage, Product Launch, and Starting and Growing a Social Venture. In 2014-15 he will be teaching Startup garage in the Fall and Winter. He will also co-teach with Laura Hattendorf a new course, Starting and Growing a Social Venture, in the Spring Quarter of 2015, as well as co-teaching Product Launch with Jonathan Levav. Russell is a mentor and adviser to many GSB entrepreneurs.
In the non-profit area, he is the Chairman of the Board of Sustainable Conservation, a Director of Innovations for Poverty Action, and an active donor of the Jamal Poverty Action Lab at MIT. He also serves on the Advisory Board of USAIDs Global Development Lab. Previously he served on the board of the Positive Coaching Alliance, the Nueva School, and the Lucille Packard Foundation for Children’s Health.
Russell has made personal investments in over thirty-five technology start-ups.
Starting in 1996, Russell spent eleven years as a Partner at Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers, where he invested in consumer and technology related technologies and markets, including software, electronic commerce, Web services, semiconductors, mobile systems, media and telecommunications. He continues to serve on the boards of several KPCB companies.
Russell joined KPCB after seven years at Microsoft. At Microsoft he helped launch several networking and Windows products. Later he worked directly for Bill Gates, resulting in the formation the Microsoft Network (MSN), Microsoft’s online service. Russell became the first employee of this division and its General Manager and then Vice President. Under his direction, MSN was developed and launched and reached over one million paying members. Russell was also responsible for the formation of the Slate project, Microsoft’s World Wide Web political and arts commentary. He recruited the editor, Michael Kinsley, and was the business manager in charge of Slate until he left Microsoft in July 1996.
Before Microsoft, Russell was a software engineer who wrote artificial intelligence applications for the financial services industry at Applied Expert Systems, a Cambridge Massachusetts startup, and was also an engineering consultant. He earned his BS from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Physics in 1984 and an MBA from Harvard University where he was a Baker Scholar in 1989.