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Jeff Morris
Managing Partner at Chapter One
Jeff Morris Jr. is the Founder and Managing Partner of Chapter One, an early-stage venture fund focused on helping companies find product-market fit.4 He has a notable background in the tech industry, with experience as both an operator and investor.
Career Highlights
Operational Experience::
- Jeff previously served as the VP of Product, Revenue at Tinder from August 2015 to October 2019.2 During his tenure, Tinder became the #1 top-grossing app in the App Store and one of the top-grossing products in mobile history.1
- Prior to Tinder, he held roles such as Growth Lead at Zaarly, Inc. and worked in Media & Technology at FTI Consulting.2
Venture Capital::
- Founded Chapter One in February 2017, where he currently serves as Managing Partner.2
- Active angel investor with investments in companies like Lyft, Roam, and Superhuman.3
Expertise and Recognition
Jeff is known for his product leadership skills and is often considered "the" product person to have on a startup's cap table.3 He has been a frequent speaker and guest lecturer at various events and institutions, including Dreamforce, USC, UCLA, and Google Monetization Days in multiple countries.2
Current Focus
At Chapter One, Jeff and his team focus on early-stage investments, particularly in the web3 space.1 They aim to support founders in finding product-market fit and offer expertise drawn from their experiences as former product leaders at recognizable startups.45
Jeff also maintains an active online presence, sharing insights through his Twitter account (@jmj) and writing on "The New Internet" via his Substack newsletter.6
Highlights
Sometimes your portfolio becomes thematic by accident. You make a few early bets in a sector, some of them go well, and that pulls you toward the next opportunity, and the next. That’s what happened to us with financial services as one of our investment themes.
My original reason for investing in the category was simple - the products were terrible. Finance was clearly the largest category that hadn’t been consumerized yet & was a massive market where people were stuck using products they hated. Huge TAM, miserable NPS.
As an angel, I was one of the first investors and an early advisor at @atlascardhq. @patrickmro took product design as seriously as anyone I’d ever worked with, and he was applying that taste to building a new kind of consumer card product.
I was also lucky to get into the early rounds of @mercury, where @immad was just as thoughtful & bringing that same design rigor to startup banking.
We were seed investors in @FlexSuperApp, one of the most underrated financial services companies out there and only getting better. They focus on small and medium-sized business owners, and @zaidrmn has built an incredible product that Silicon Valley hasn’t fully appreciated yet.
More recently, we invested in @ether_fi, which brought consumer-grade financial products to crypto and became the fastest-growing crypto neobank in the world. When all is said and done, I think @MikeSilagadze will go down as one of the best crypto founders of his generation.
And we’ve been lucky to partner with @ereborbank, who are building financial products for the innovation economy & serving deep tech across defense, manufacturing, robotics, and other industries they understand at a deep level.
I don’t think of myself as a fintech investor, and I never planned to go this deep on the category.
But one thing leads to another, and suddenly you’ve gone down a rabbit hole that turns into a career-long passion.
I still feel that way about financial services today, and I hope to keep backing founders building innovative products in the space for years to come.
We just wired our 6th (!!!) investment for a Los Angeles-based company in less than a year.
Co-led the deal with a T1 Bay Area multi-stage firm who we love working with.
Imagine that... two firms co-leading a seed deal together. It still happens guys.

