Swizzle Ventures launches $5M fund to improve women’s health and wealth

Jessica Kamada, Founder of Swizzle Ventures | Image source: Jessica Kamada/LinkedIn
WT default author logo
Women's Tabloid News Desk

Swizzle Ventures, founded by Jessica Kamada, former COO of the marketing agency Bamboo, has raised just over $5 million for its Fund I, according to an SEC filing. There was no target raise amount.

The firm, which quietly opened in 2023, is an early-stage firm looking to invest in companies that address some of the most pressing concerns facing women, including caretaking, health and wellness, and finances. It has invested in at least one company so far, according to PitchBook: the mental healthcare platform Mavida Health.

Kamada posted a year ago that she had left her job at Bamboo after seven and a half years without any plan for what to do next. At the company, she was the vice president of growth marketing, before becoming COO and joining the board of directors. She also used to work at RedDrop, which provides menstrual education to tweens, as a growth adviser. Bamboo is known for working with startups and tech firms like Great Jones, Lemonaid, and Dropbox, it says.

Swizzle is entering the industry at an important time for innovation targeting women. The caregiving industry is undergoing a crisis due to the cost of supporting ailing family members; women are facing a historic boom in finances from the predicted upcoming “wealth transfer”; and women’s health has always been a hot topic, even more so now with the overturn of Roe.

Share:

Related Insights

Proparco secures loan agreement with Nigerian agritech firm Agriarche

Minderoo Foundation backs female founders with major Startmate funding deal

Elation Health acquires Aster to expand agentic AI capabilities in United States primary care sector

Melinda French Gates pledges $215 million to tackle global gaps in women’s healthcare

Helaina and Nestlé partner to develop new bioactive proteins for infant nutrition

London-based children’s nutrition brand Lune & Wild secures £2 million in Series A funding round

Scalare Partners purchases tech start-up hub Fishburners out of voluntary administration

Connecticut Science Center secures long-term Aetna partnership for youth training