Which College Major Has The Best Odds Of ‘Producing’ A Unicorn? Hint: It’s Not Business
What College Major Has The Best Chance Of 'Producing' A Unicorn?
What College Major Has The Best Chance Of 'Producing' A Unicorn?

Hoping to found a billion-dollar company some day, but not sure what the best academic path is? Your best bet may not be an MBA.

That’s because even though a plurality of “unicorns” — companies with billion-dollar valuations — founded in the last 26 years had at least one member who studied business at the graduate level, the odds are slightly less than even that your company will achieve unicorn status.

Or so the data suggests. A new trove of it was released recently by Ilya Strebulaev, founder of Stanford’s Venture Capital Initiative, which analyzes the venture capital and innovation ecosystem, especially unicorns. In releasing the VCI’s latest batch of unicorn data, he asks the question, “What graduate majors have a higher likelihood of ‘producing’ a unicorn?” And the answer: not business, but medicine, followed by computer science and mathematics.

TROVE AFTER TROVE OF VC DATA

Ilya A. Strebulaev
Ilya A. Strebulaev

Ilya A. Strebulaev of the Stanford Graduate School of Business

Strebulaev, a finance professor at Stanford Graduate School of Business since 2004 and one-time Poets&Quants Professor of the Week, regularly posts new data on his LinkedIn page. When last we checked in with him in August, he had announced a new set of numbers showing that his academic home had launched the careers of more than 300 startup founders who have created more than 200 unicorns. — more than 40 more billion-dollar companies than the next closest school, Harvard.

Strebulaev wrote August 31 that the VCI had found that 33% of all venture capital deals have a founder and an investor who studied at the same university. “Interestingly, there is a significant variation in the presence of shared alumni connections in VC deals, even among schools of similar prestige,” Strebulaev wrote, noting that the results are based on his research paper “Alumni Networks in Venture Capital Financing,” co-authored with Jon Garfinkel, Erik J. Mayer, and Emmanuel Yimfor.

“For instance,” he wrote, “while 45% of the deals involving investors from Harvard also involve at least one founder from Harvard, the figure drops to 20% for deals involving investors from MIT and founders from MIT.”

There’s been more data on unicorns from the VCI — much more. In late 2021, Strebualev reported that the best age to become a unicorn founder was between 30-34 years; that unicorn founders don’t need an academic degree, but it helps to have one; and that 94.5% of the founders of VC-backed startups between 1991 and 2018 were male. Earlier this year, Strebulaev reported that data suggests an MBA is not a prerequisite to entrepreneurial success by showing that unicorns are more likely than not to have achieved their status without the help of a founder with an MBA — or who attended business school at all.