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Jason Pontin
Partner, DCVC
Jason Pontin is a venture capitalist, angel investor, and accomplished science and technology writer. With a rich background in journalism where he served as editor in chief and publisher of various magazines, Pontin also plays a significant role on the boards of several life sciences and hard tech companies.
Pontin pursued his education at the University of Oxford, where he obtained a BA and MA (Oxon). He also has a background from Harrow School.
Currently, Pontin holds the position of Partner at DCVC. He has previously held prominent roles such as Board Chair at Strateos, Board Member at Evonetix Ltd, and Scientific Advisory Board Member at Adlai Nortye Biopharma Co., Ltd. Additionally, he has been involved in various capacities with companies like Menten AI and Totus Medicines as a Board Observer, Founding Board Member, Cofounder, and Investor.
Pontin's professional journey also includes roles such as Contributing Writer at WIRED, Senior Advisor at Flagship Pioneering, Strategic Advisor at Valo, Senior Partner at Flagship Pioneering, and Chairman at MIT Enterprise Forum. He has also served as the CEO, Editor in Chief, and Publisher at MIT Technology Review, showcasing his leadership and editorial skills.
Moreover, Pontin has a strong academic background, having been an Associate at the Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University. His editorial expertise is evident from his previous roles as Managing Editor, Editor, and Editorial Director at Red Herring Communications, as well as Senior Editor at InfoWorld.
Highlights
In general, people’s subjective feelings about their material well-being are unmoored from objective economic facts—are anchored, instead, to their relative feelings of wealth compared to neighbors, parents, and celebrities, their sense of precariousness, the inflation rate, and how much of their income goes to housing, healthcare, daycare, education, and taxes. There is no point in telling people they are well-off. They won’t believe you.
In general, people’s subjective feelings about their material well-being are unmoored from objective economic facts—are anchored, instead, to their relative feelings of wealth compared to their neighbors, parents, and celebrities, their sense of precariousness, the inflation rate, and how much of their income goes to housing, healthcare, daycare, education, and taxes.
