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David Haber
Investing

David Haber

Investing

More About David

David Haber is a general partner at Andreessen Horowitz, where he focuses on technology investments in B2B software and financial services. He serves on the boards of Camber, Crux, Eve, Moment, Rutter, Setpoint, and Tennr.

David was previously a senior executive in Firmwide Strategy at Goldman Sachs where he helped lead partnerships, new ventures, and M&A. Before joining the firm, David was the Founder and CEO of Bond Street, which aimed to transform small business lending through technology, data, and design. Bond Street was acquired by Goldman Sachs in October 2017 as part of the firm’s digital finance business. Previously, David was a venture investor at Spark Capital and a founding associate of Locus Analytics, a start-up asset management firm.

David graduated from Harvard University with a degree in Biochemical Sciences.

Latest Content

  • Streamlining the Patient Referrals Chain with Trey HoltermanNew
    David Haber, Trey Holterman, Jay Rughani, Kris Tatiossian, and Olivia Webb

    In this episode, Tennr cofounder and CEO Trey Holterman sits down with a16z’s David Haber and Jay Rughani to unpack one of healthcare’s most overlooked pain points: patient referral logistics. When a patient is referred...

  • Investing in Camber
    David Haber and Marc Andrusko

    Camber is a company that is simplifying the healthcare reimbursement process for healthcare providers so they can focus on delivering quality care to their patients. 

  • Investing in Eve
    David Haber and Marc Andrusko

    Eve is the AI-native case workspace that acts as an intelligent partner for plaintiff attorneys, helping them take on 3-4x the number of cases that they were previously able to handle.

  • How AI is Transforming Labor Markets
    Alex Rampell, Angela Strange, and David Haber

    Did you know the U.S. nurse labor market is over $600 billion annually, but the dedicated software market for nurses is almost zero?

  • Every day, millions of SMBs waste countless hours synthesizing waves of unstructured information and entering data into systems of record. We call this the “messy inbox problem.”

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