Amasia Research
Investment Thesis
Amasia is a values-driven early-stage venture capital firm founded in 2013 by Ramanan Raghavendran and John Kim. The firm's core thesis is deceptively simple but profoundly different from typical VC: long-term value is built by companies that help humans live healthier, happier lives. Rather than pursuing short-term financial returns at any cost, Amasia takes a single-bottom-line approach grounded in measurable human flourishing.
The firm has evolved its thinking over time, particularly deepening its focus on climate and sustainability through a behavior-change lens. Unlike traditional climate tech investors who focus on renewable energy or carbon removal, Amasia believes that behavior change at scale is the most important lever for fighting climate change. They ask fundamental questions: How do we help individuals, corporations, and governments make better decisions about sustainability? How can we accelerate the shift toward circular consumption? How do we make supply chains less wasteful? How does the built environment impact climate? These questions guide their portfolio construction.
Investment Focus & Stage
Amasia invests exclusively in software and software-enabled businesses at the Seed and Series A stages. Their business model has remained remarkably consistent since founding:
- Entry stages: Primarily Seed and Series A
- Investment style: They typically lead or co-lead rounds, though they remain open to following in select cases
- Portfolio discipline: They make a limited number of investments each year (approximately 15-20 annually) to ensure they can fully support their companies
- Check size: Estimated $1M-$5M based on portfolio analysis (though exact figures not published)
Their stage preference reflects a belief that early support allows them to have the greatest influence on company trajectory and values alignment.
Sustainability & Behavior Change Framework
Amasia's sustainability thesis, formalized around 2020-2022, centers on five behavior-change themes:
Theme 1: Data-Driven Climate Decisions - Companies that provide climate intelligence, carbon footprint tracking, and sustainability data to consumers, corporations, and governments. Portfolio examples: Clarity (climate intelligence), Commons (personal carbon footprint tracking).
Theme 2: Circular Consumption & Reuse - Companies extending product and resource lifespans through resale, repair, and recycling systems. Portfolio example: Topanga (reuse systems management).
Theme 3: Wasteful Supply Chains - Companies reducing waste in consumer goods supply chains. Portfolio examples: TreeDots (food waste reduction), Super (supply chain simplification).
Theme 4: Built Environment Impact - Companies reducing environmental impact of buildings and workplaces. Portfolio examples: Dialpad (remote communications), Skillshare (remote education, reducing need for physical buildings).
Theme 5: Energy Efficiency & Clean Energy Uptake - Companies strengthening electrical grids, improving energy management, and facilitating clean energy adoption.
This framework demonstrates sophisticated thinking about climate impact—moving beyond obvious solutions to systemic behavior change.
Geographic Reach
Amasia's portfolio reflects global ambitions. Their companies operate across:
- United States (primary focus area)
- Asia (significant investment activity, particularly in fintech, edtech, and commerce)
- Europe (growing presence)
- Latin America (selective investments)
The firm brings deep global networks from Ramanan's experience leading investments in Asia and Europe at General Atlantic and other firms.
Team & Values
The firm is built around two complementary founders:
Ramanan Raghavendran - General Partner and co-founder with 30+ years of venture investing experience. Previously at General Atlantic, Insight Partners, TH Lee Putnam Ventures, and co-founder of Kubera Partners. His experience spanning multiple continents and deep involvement with Penn University, NGOs (Magic Bus works with 500K+ at-risk children in South Asia), and the Natural Capital Project at Stanford demonstrates a lifelong commitment to impact. His technical background (BS in Computer Science and Economics from Penn, plus ongoing studies at Stanford) grounds his investment approach in both technical and humanistic thinking.
John Kim - General Partner and co-founder whose background spans startups, music (which reached millions of people), and investment. His involvement with North Korean entrepreneurship development (Choson Exchange) and the Institute for Carbon Management at UCLA reflects deep commitment to impact-oriented work. His Wharton and Penn Engineering background provides similar technical grounding as Ramanan.
Both partners exemplify the firm's values-first approach, with extensive board service and advisory roles at universities and non-profits working on education, entrepreneurship, and environmental management.
Portfolio Characteristics
Amasia has built a diverse portfolio of 50+ companies spanning multiple sectors:
Sectors represented:
- AI & Data Analytics (climate-focused and beyond)
- Commerce & E-commerce (Asia-heavy)
- EdTech (global reach)
- FinTech (particularly Asia)
- Health & Digital Health
- Media & Communications
- SaaS (across multiple industries)
- Sustainability (primary focus of Thesis 2.0)
Notable portfolio companies:
- Commons (personal carbon tracking, Series A led by Sequoia)
- Clarity (climate intelligence platform)
- ClimateTrade (carbon offset platform)
- TreeDots (food waste reduction)
- Topanga (circular economy/reuse platforms)
- Dialpad (enterprise communications)
- Skillshare (online learning)
- GO1 (corporate learning)
- Inbenta (conversational AI)
- Lob (marketing automation)
- Platzi (Latin American edtech)
- Ripio (crypto/blockchain)
- The Athletic (sports media)
- Scrimba (code learning)
The portfolio reflects investment theses across two eras: "Thesis 1.0: Global Expansion" (2013-2019, broader sectors including commerce, fintech, edtech) and "Thesis 2.0: Climate & Sustainability" (2019-present, deepening focus on behavior change for environmental impact).
Decision Making & Process
- Lead tendency: Typically leads or co-leads rounds
- Decision process: Partnership-based (Ramanan and John make decisions collaboratively)
- Investment discipline: Limited number of investments yearly (vs. other VCs) allows deep support
- Warm introductions: Preferred but not required; their strong global networks make referrals valuable
- Involvement level: Active board observers and advisors; they provide operational support and global networks
- Timeline to decision: Not explicitly stated, but their "artisanal" approach suggests thoughtful deliberation (estimated 4-8 weeks)
Recent Activity & Fund Status
Amasia continues to actively deploy capital. Recent investments (2024-2025) indicate:
- Ongoing deployment across Sustainability, SaaS, AI, and Edtech categories
- Particular focus on climate-adjacent companies combining AI and sustainability
- Strong activity in Asia across commerce and fintech
- European investments in edtech and sustainability
The firm appears to be actively raising/deploying capital with no signals of between-funds periods.
Founder Preferences
Based on team profiles and portfolio, Amasia favors:
- Values-aligned founders - Those who care deeply about impact and human flourishing
- Global ambitions - Founders seeking to scale beyond single markets
- Technical depth - Both founders are technically trained and invest in technical founders
- Experienced operators - Portfolio spans those with prior startup experience
- Mission-driven founding teams - The sustainability focus attracts founders solving real-world problems
Investment Criteria
For sustainability-focused companies, Amasia evaluates using a five-part impact screen:
- Positive Impact Alignment - How well aligned with behavior-change thesis
- Intentionality - How core is climate action to business model
- Scale - Global scalability potential
- Depth - Significance of impact to end-users and their carbon footprint
- Additionality - Uniqueness of impact vs. competitors
This structured approach distinguishes Amasia from both pure financial VCs and impact-first investors, positioning them at the intersection.
Outlook & Strategy
Amasia's consistent 13-year business model, deep values alignment between founders, and increasingly sophisticated sustainability framework position them as established players in impact-driven early-stage investing. The firm's evolution from "global expansion" to "climate & sustainability" reflects both market opportunity and founder conviction.
Their selective investment approach and deep founder support differentiate them from high-volume VCs, making them ideal partners for founders who value impact alongside returns.