Jurvetson's father Tõnu Jürvetson fled
Estonia through Germany just before
Soviet re-occupation in 1944. Tõnu was married to another Estonian immigrant, Tiiu Tia Jürvetson. Even though within the family, the Estonian language was used, Steve never learned it and his parents used it as a secret language between themselves.[18] Steve Jurvetson was the first US-born Estonian to become an
e-resident of Estonia.[19]
Jurvetson grew up in
Dallas, where he graduated from
St. Mark's School of Texas in 1985. At
Stanford University, Jurvetson finished his degree in
electrical engineering in 2.5 years[20] and graduated No. 1 in his class. He then earned an M.S. in electrical engineering and an M.B.A., also from Stanford. His first job out of Stanford[21] was working as an R&D engineer at
Hewlett-Packard (HP). After two years at HP, he moved on as a product marketer at
Apple and then
NeXT Software.[12]
As a consultant with
Bain & Company, Jurvetson developed marketing, sales, engineering and business strategies for a wide range of companies in the software, networking, and semiconductor industries.[7] He first joined DFJ after his second year of business school, and became a partner after proving his talent on several investments.[23]
At DFJ, Jurvetson was involved in lucrative investments with
Hotmail, Interwoven, Kana,
Tradex, and Cyras.[24] Cyras in particular was acquired for US$8 billion.[24] Less favorably, DFJ and Jurvetson were an early financial backer of
Elizabeth Holmes and the disgraced blood-testing firm
Theranos.[25]
On November 13, 2017, Jurvetson stepped down from his role at DFJ Venture Capital in addition to taking leave from the boards of SpaceX and Tesla following an internal DFJ investigation into allegations of sexual harassment.[27] While there were allegations of inappropriate behavior, DFJ did not receive an official complaint of harassment or misconduct.[28][29] While the findings of the investigation were not made public, anonymous sources alleged that the investigation "uncovered behaviors by Jurvetson that were unacceptable related to a negative tone toward women entrepreneurs."[16] Jurvetson stated that stepping down from his role was unrelated to the allegations, writing "I am leaving DFJ to focus on personal matters" in a statement posted to
Twitter.[30]Recode reported that Jurvetson was placed on a
leave of absence and then later voted out of the company.
Current
Jurvetson cofounded a new venture fund, Future Ventures, in April 2018. The inaugural $200M venture capital fund focuses on environmentally sustainable transportation, food technology and high power computer systems.[31][32] Future Ventures closed second and third rounds of funding in January 2021 and April 2023, respectively, each for $200 million.[33][34]