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{{Infobox person
{{Infobox person
| name         = Raghu Raghuram
| name = Raghu Raghuram
| nationality = American
| nationality = American
| occupation   = {{hlist|Venture capitalist|Technology executive}}
| occupation = Venture capitalist, technology executive
| known_for   = CEO of [[VMware]] (2021–2023), General Partner at [[Andreessen Horowitz]]
| known_for = CEO of VMware (2021–2023), General Partner at Andreessen Horowitz
| employer     = [[Andreessen Horowitz]]
| employer = [[Andreessen Horowitz]]
| title       = Managing Partner and General Partner
| title = Managing Partner and General Partner
}}
}}


'''Raghu Raghuram''' is an American technology executive and venture capitalist who served as the [[chief executive officer]] of [[VMware]], the enterprise software and cloud computing company, from 2021 until the completion of [[Broadcom]]'s acquisition of VMware in 2023. A veteran of the enterprise technology industry with decades of experience spanning product management, engineering leadership, and corporate strategy, Raghuram spent more than two decades at VMware, helping shape the company's evolution from a virtualization pioneer into a multi-cloud infrastructure leader. His career in Silicon Valley began in the 1990s, including a stint at [[Netscape Communications]], where he worked under [[Ben Horowitz]]. In October 2025, Raghuram joined the venture capital firm [[Andreessen Horowitz]] (a16z) as a Managing Partner and General Partner, marking a transition from operating large-scale technology enterprises to investing in and advising the next generation of technology companies.<ref name="a16z-raghu">{{cite web |title=Raghu Raghuram |url=https://a16z.com/raghu-raghuram/ |publisher=Andreessen Horowitz |date=October 9, 2025 |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref><ref name="axios">{{cite news |last= |first= |date=October 9, 2025 |title=Ex-VMware CEO joins Andreessen Horowitz as general partner |url=https://www.axios.com/2025/10/09/vmware-ceo-raghuram-andreessen-horowitz |work=Axios |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>
'''Raghu Raghuram''' is an American technology executive and venture capitalist who served as the [[chief executive officer]] of [[VMware]], a leading enterprise software company specializing in cloud computing and virtualization technology. His career in the technology industry spans several decades, including formative work at [[Netscape Communications]] and a long tenure at VMware during which he held a series of senior leadership positions before ascending to the role of CEO. Following VMware's acquisition by [[Broadcom Inc.|Broadcom]], Raghuram departed the company and, in October 2025, joined the prominent Silicon Valley venture capital firm [[Andreessen Horowitz]] (a16z) as a Managing Partner and General Partner. At a16z, he focuses on enterprise technology and infrastructure investments, drawing upon his extensive operational experience in building and scaling software businesses. His career trajectory—from product management at early internet companies to leading one of the largest enterprise technology firms and then transitioning to venture capital—reflects the evolving landscape of the technology industry over the past three decades.


== Early Life ==
== Early Life ==


Details regarding Raghu Raghuram's early life, including his exact date of birth, childhood, and family background, are not extensively documented in publicly available sources. He is of Indian origin and built his career in the United States, where he became a prominent figure in the enterprise technology sector.<ref name="a16z-raghu" />
Limited publicly documented information is available regarding Raghu Raghuram's early life and upbringing. He is of Indian origin and holds American nationality. Details about his family background and formative years prior to his entry into the technology industry have not been extensively reported in major media outlets.


== Career ==
== Career ==


=== Early Career and Netscape ===
=== Early Career at Netscape ===


Before his long tenure at VMware, Raghuram held roles at several technology companies during the formative years of Silicon Valley's internet boom. Notably, he served as a product manager at [[Netscape Communications]], where he worked under Ben Horowitz, who was then a senior executive at the company.<ref name="a16z-post-pmf">{{cite web |title=What VMware's former CEO says you should prioritize after product-market fit |url=https://a16z.com/raghu-raghuram-post-product-market-fit/ |publisher=Andreessen Horowitz |date=October 27, 2025 |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> This professional relationship with Horowitz would prove enduring, spanning decades and ultimately leading to Raghuram's later role at Andreessen Horowitz.
Before his long association with VMware, Raghuram worked as a product manager at [[Netscape Communications]], the pioneering internet company known for the Netscape Navigator web browser. At Netscape, he worked under [[Ben Horowitz]], who served in a management capacity at the company.<ref name="a16z-post-pmf">{{cite web |title=What VMware's former CEO says you should prioritize after product-market fit |url=https://a16z.com/raghu-raghuram-post-product-market-fit/ |publisher=Andreessen Horowitz |date=2025-10-27 |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> This professional relationship with Horowitz, forged during the early days of the commercial internet, would prove significant decades later when Raghuram joined Andreessen Horowitz. The experience at Netscape, a company at the center of the browser wars and the broader commercialization of the internet in the mid-to-late 1990s, provided Raghuram with foundational experience in product development and technology strategy.


=== VMware ===
=== VMware ===


Raghuram spent more than two decades at VMware, the Palo Alto-based company that pioneered [[virtualization]] technology and grew into one of the most significant enterprise software companies in the world. Over the course of his career at VMware, Raghuram held a series of increasingly senior roles, gaining deep expertise in cloud infrastructure, virtualization, networking, and enterprise software strategy.<ref name="a16z-raghu" /><ref name="axios" />
Raghuram's most prominent corporate role was at VMware, where he spent a significant portion of his career and rose through the ranks of the organization. VMware, founded in 1998, became one of the most important enterprise technology companies in the world, providing virtualization and cloud infrastructure software used by businesses and governments globally. Raghuram held multiple senior executive positions at VMware over the course of his tenure, gaining deep expertise in cloud computing, software-defined infrastructure, and enterprise technology platforms.


==== Rise to CEO ====
==== Rise to CEO ====


Raghuram was appointed [[chief executive officer]] of VMware in 2021, taking the helm of a company that was navigating a complex period of strategic transformation. VMware had become a cornerstone of enterprise IT infrastructure, with its virtualization and cloud management products deployed by a vast majority of [[Fortune 500]] companies and large enterprises worldwide. As CEO, Raghuram oversaw VMware's strategy during a period that included the company's spinoff from [[Dell Technologies]] and its subsequent operation as a standalone public company.<ref name="axios" /><ref name="a16z-raghu" />
Raghuram was appointed Chief Executive Officer of VMware, a role in which he led the company through a period of significant strategic importance in the enterprise technology market. As CEO, he was responsible for overseeing VMware's product portfolio, go-to-market strategy, and organizational direction. VMware under Raghuram's leadership continued to serve as a foundational technology provider for enterprise IT environments worldwide, offering products related to virtualization, multi-cloud infrastructure, networking, and security.


==== Broadcom Acquisition ====
==== Broadcom Acquisition and Departure ====


Raghuram served as CEO of VMware through the announcement and regulatory review of [[Broadcom]]'s acquisition of VMware, one of the largest technology acquisitions in history. The deal, valued at approximately $61 billion when announced in 2022, represented a major consolidation in the enterprise software market. Raghuram led VMware through the transition period until the acquisition closed in November 2023, at which point he departed the company.<ref name="axios" /><ref name="fortune">{{cite news |last= |first= |date=October 12, 2025 |title=Ben Horowitz and Raghu Raghuram on AI, politics, and the questions they don't have easy answers to |url=https://fortune.com/2025/10/12/ben-horowitz-raghu-raghuram-interview-ai-politics/ |work=Fortune |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>
Raghuram's tenure as CEO of VMware concluded in the context of [[Broadcom Inc.|Broadcom]]'s acquisition of the company. The acquisition, one of the largest in technology industry history, resulted in significant organizational changes at VMware. Raghuram departed VMware following the completion of the transaction. The Broadcom acquisition marked the end of VMware's existence as an independent publicly traded company and represented a major transition point in the enterprise software landscape.


During his tenure as CEO and in his prior leadership roles, Raghuram developed extensive experience in scaling enterprise technology businesses, managing product portfolios, and navigating the complexities of operating a company with a global customer base spanning multiple industries. His leadership at VMware provided him with firsthand knowledge of the infrastructure underpinning modern computing, including [[cloud computing]], [[data center]] operations, [[software-defined networking]], and enterprise security.<ref name="a16z-raghu" />
=== Andreessen Horowitz ===


==== Post-Product-Market Fit Expertise ====
On October 9, 2025, [[Andreessen Horowitz]] (commonly known as a16z) announced that Raghu Raghuram had joined the firm as a Managing Partner and a General Partner.<ref name="a16z-announce">{{cite web |title=Raghu Raghuram |url=https://a16z.com/raghu-raghuram/ |publisher=Andreessen Horowitz |date=2025-10-09 |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref><ref name="axios">{{cite news |last= |first= |date=2025-10-09 |title=Ex-VMware CEO joins Andreessen Horowitz as general partner |url=https://www.axios.com/2025/10/09/vmware-ceo-raghuram-andreessen-horowitz |work=Axios |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The hire was reported by multiple major outlets, including [[Axios]], [[Fortune]], and [[The Information]].<ref name="information-briefing">{{cite news |last= |first= |date=2025-10-09 |title=Andreessen Horowitz Hires Former VMware CEO as General Partner |url=https://www.theinformation.com/briefings/andreessen-horowitz-hires-former-vmware-ceo-general-partner |work=The Information |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref><ref name="information-newsletter">{{cite news |last= |first= |date=2025-10-09 |title=Ben Horowitz Hires His 'Jensen'; Vercel Starts a Venture Fund |url=https://www.theinformation.com/newsletters/dealmaker/ben-horowitz-hires-jensen-vercel-starts-venture-fund |work=The Information |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>


Following his departure from VMware, Raghuram became known for articulating the challenges that technology companies face after achieving [[product-market fit]]—the operational, organizational, and strategic hurdles involved in scaling from a successful product into a large, sustainable business. In an October 2025 discussion published by Andreessen Horowitz, Raghuram shared his perspectives on what founders and executives should prioritize once initial product-market fit has been established, drawing on his experience building and scaling VMware's product lines over more than two decades.<ref name="a16z-post-pmf" /> His insights emphasized the operational dimensions of scaling—including go-to-market strategy, organizational design, and customer success—that become critical as companies transition from early-stage growth to mature enterprise operations.
The appointment reunited Raghuram with Ben Horowitz, co-founder of a16z, with whom he had worked at Netscape years earlier.<ref name="a16z-post-pmf" /> In a newsletter, The Information reported that Horowitz referred to the hiring in terms that compared Raghuram's operational significance to that of [[Jensen Huang]] of [[NVIDIA]], underscoring the high regard in which the firm held Raghuram's technical and executive capabilities.<ref name="information-newsletter" />


=== Andreessen Horowitz ===
Shortly after joining a16z, Raghuram and Ben Horowitz sat for a joint interview with ''[[Fortune (magazine)|Fortune]]'', in which they discussed topics including artificial intelligence, politics, and the broader state of the technology industry.<ref name="fortune">{{cite news |last= |first= |date=2025-10-12 |title=Ben Horowitz and Raghu Raghuram on AI, politics, and the questions they don't have easy answers to |url=https://fortune.com/2025/10/12/ben-horowitz-raghu-raghuram-interview-ai-politics/ |work=Fortune |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The interview signaled Raghuram's engagement with the firm's public thought leadership and his focus on the intersection of enterprise technology and emerging AI trends.


On October 9, 2025, Andreessen Horowitz announced that Raghu Raghuram had joined the firm as a Managing Partner and a General Partner.<ref name="a16z-raghu" /><ref name="axios" /> The hire was widely covered in technology and business media, with outlets including Axios, Fortune, and The Information reporting on the appointment.<ref name="theinformation">{{cite news |last= |first= |date=October 9, 2025 |title=Andreessen Horowitz Hires Former VMware CEO as General Partner |url=https://www.theinformation.com/briefings/andreessen-horowitz-hires-former-vmware-ceo-general-partner |work=The Information |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref><ref name="theinformation-newsletter">{{cite news |last= |first= |date=October 9, 2025 |title=Ben Horowitz Hires His 'Jensen'; Vercel Starts a Venture Fund |url=https://www.theinformation.com/newsletters/dealmaker/ben-horowitz-hires-jensen-vercel-starts-venture-fund |work=The Information |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>
==== Investment and Advisory Activities ====


The appointment reunited Raghuram with Ben Horowitz, the co-founder of Andreessen Horowitz, under whom Raghuram had worked at Netscape decades earlier. In coverage by The Information, Horowitz compared the significance of the hire to having his own "Jensen"—a reference to [[Jensen Huang]], the CEO of [[Nvidia]]—suggesting that Raghuram's deep operational expertise in infrastructure technology would be a major asset to the firm's investment activities.<ref name="theinformation-newsletter" />
In his capacity as General Partner at Andreessen Horowitz, Raghuram began making and supporting investments in enterprise technology and infrastructure companies. In late 2025, he authored a post on the a16z blog announcing the firm's investment in Temporal, a company focused on workflow orchestration technology. In the post, Raghuram discussed the evolving capabilities of AI systems and the infrastructure required to support increasingly autonomous AI-driven processes.<ref name="a16z-temporal">{{cite web |title=Investing in Temporal |url=https://a16z.com/announcement/investing-in-temporal/ |publisher=Andreessen Horowitz |date=2025-02-18 |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>


In a joint interview with Fortune published on October 12, 2025, Horowitz and Raghuram discussed a range of topics including [[artificial intelligence]], the evolving technology landscape, and the state of politics as it relates to the technology industry. The conversation was described as "candid" and touched on questions that the two acknowledged did not have easy answers.<ref name="fortune" />
In December 2025, Raghuram announced a16z's investment in Unconventional, a company working on GPU technology and infrastructure for artificial intelligence workloads. In the investment announcement, Raghuram noted the central role of GPUs as the backbone of the AI industry and discussed the significance of continued advances in GPU technology for both training and inference workloads.<ref name="a16z-unconventional">{{cite web |title=Investing in Unconventional |url=https://a16z.com/announcement/investing-in-unconventional/ |publisher=Andreessen Horowitz |date=2025-12-08 |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>


==== Investment Activity ====
These early investments reflected Raghuram's focus areas at a16z: enterprise infrastructure, cloud-native technologies, and the hardware and software ecosystems supporting the growth of artificial intelligence.


In his capacity as a General Partner at Andreessen Horowitz, Raghuram has been involved in the firm's investment decisions in enterprise infrastructure and AI-related companies. In December 2025, Andreessen Horowitz announced an investment in Unconventional, a company focused on GPU technology, which the firm described as "the backbone of the AI industry." The investment announcement noted the importance of advances in GPU technology for training and inference workloads in artificial intelligence.<ref name="a16z-unconventional">{{cite web |title=Investing in Unconventional |url=https://a16z.com/announcement/investing-in-unconventional/ |publisher=Andreessen Horowitz |date=December 8, 2025 |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>
==== Thought Leadership at a16z ====


Additionally, Andreessen Horowitz announced an investment in Temporal, a company focused on enabling AI systems to move beyond writing, designing, summarizing, and coding to taking more complex, autonomous actions. The firm's investment thesis noted the growing importance of durable execution platforms as AI systems begin to perform more agentic tasks.<ref name="a16z-temporal">{{cite web |title=Investing in Temporal |url=https://a16z.com/announcement/investing-in-temporal/ |publisher=Andreessen Horowitz |date=2026 |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>
Shortly after joining Andreessen Horowitz, Raghuram contributed to the firm's content platform with insights drawn from his experience as a technology executive. In October 2025, the a16z blog published a piece featuring Raghuram's perspectives on what technology companies should prioritize after achieving product-market fit. The article, introduced by Ben Horowitz, drew on Raghuram's years of experience at VMware scaling products and organizations beyond the initial startup phase.<ref name="a16z-post-pmf" /> The piece reflected Raghuram's operational expertise and his understanding of the challenges that technology companies face as they transition from early-stage growth to sustainable, large-scale enterprises—a perspective informed by his years leading VMware through various stages of corporate evolution.
 
Raghuram's investment focus at a16z reflects his deep background in infrastructure technology. His expertise in cloud computing, virtualization, and enterprise software positions him to evaluate companies building foundational technology for the AI era—a domain where his operational experience at VMware, which itself built critical computing infrastructure, is directly applicable.<ref name="a16z-raghu" />


== Personal Life ==
== Personal Life ==


Raghu Raghuram maintains a relatively private personal life. He is based in the United States and has spent the majority of his professional career in [[Silicon Valley]]. His long-standing professional relationship with Ben Horowitz, dating back to their time together at Netscape in the 1990s, has been noted as one of the more enduring partnerships in the technology industry, spanning from the early days of the commercial internet through the current era of artificial intelligence.<ref name="a16z-post-pmf" /><ref name="fortune" />
Limited publicly documented information is available about Raghu Raghuram's personal life. He maintains a relatively private profile outside of his professional activities. He is based in the United States and has spent much of his career in the San Francisco Bay Area, the center of the American technology industry.
 
In the October 2025 Fortune interview, Raghuram and Horowitz discussed not only technology and business topics but also broader societal questions, including the intersection of politics and technology, reflecting Raghuram's engagement with issues beyond the purely technical domain.<ref name="fortune" />


== Recognition ==
== Recognition ==


Raghuram's appointment to Andreessen Horowitz in 2025 received significant coverage across major business and technology media outlets, reflecting his standing in the enterprise technology community. Axios, Fortune, The Information, and the firm's own publications all covered the hire, with several outlets highlighting the significance of bringing a former CEO of a major enterprise software company into the venture capital world.<ref name="axios" /><ref name="fortune" /><ref name="theinformation" /><ref name="theinformation-newsletter" />
Raghu Raghuram's appointment as CEO of VMware placed him among the most prominent Indian-American executives in the global technology industry, joining a cohort of leaders of Indian descent who have led major American technology companies. His subsequent hiring by Andreessen Horowitz as a General Partner was itself treated as significant news in the venture capital and enterprise technology press, with coverage from outlets including Axios, Fortune, and The Information reflecting the weight attributed to his move from corporate leadership to venture capital.<ref name="axios" /><ref name="fortune" /><ref name="information-briefing" />
 
Ben Horowitz's characterization of Raghuram as his "Jensen"—drawing a parallel to Jensen Huang, the CEO of Nvidia and one of the most prominent figures in the technology industry—was noted as a particularly strong endorsement of Raghuram's capabilities and potential impact at the firm.<ref name="theinformation-newsletter" /> The comparison suggested that Horowitz viewed Raghuram's infrastructure expertise as analogous to the foundational role that Nvidia's GPU technology plays in the AI ecosystem.


Raghuram's career at VMware, where he rose through the ranks over more than twenty years to ultimately lead the company as CEO, is itself a notable achievement in an industry where executive tenures at a single company of that duration are uncommon. VMware under his leadership and the leadership of his predecessors became one of the defining enterprise software companies of the early 21st century, with its virtualization technology fundamentally changing how organizations deploy and manage computing infrastructure.<ref name="a16z-raghu" /><ref name="axios" />
The framing of his hire by Ben Horowitz, who compared his significance to that of Jensen Huang in a newsletter item reported by The Information, further underscored the industry recognition of Raghuram's expertise in enterprise technology and infrastructure.<ref name="information-newsletter" />


== Legacy ==
== Legacy ==


Raghu Raghuram's career spans two of the most significant technological transitions of the modern era: the rise of cloud computing and virtualization in the 2000s and 2010s, and the emergence of artificial intelligence as a transformative force in the 2020s. At VMware, he played a central role in building and scaling technology that became foundational to enterprise IT infrastructure worldwide. Virtualization technology, which VMware pioneered and which Raghuram helped develop and commercialize over his long tenure at the company, fundamentally altered the economics and architecture of data centers, enabling the efficient utilization of hardware resources and paving the way for the cloud computing paradigm that now dominates the technology industry.<ref name="a16z-raghu" />
While Raghuram's career continues to evolve in his role at Andreessen Horowitz, his tenure at VMware represents a significant chapter in the history of enterprise technology. VMware's virtualization and cloud infrastructure products transformed the way businesses manage their IT environments, and Raghuram was a key figure in the company's leadership during critical periods of its development and strategic evolution.


His transition to Andreessen Horowitz represents a new phase in which his operational knowledge of infrastructure technology is being applied to identifying and supporting the next generation of companies building foundational technology. His investment involvement in companies such as Unconventional (GPU technology) and Temporal (durable execution for AI systems) suggests a focus on the infrastructure layer that will underpin the AI era, much as virtualization underpinned the cloud era.<ref name="a16z-unconventional" /><ref name="a16z-temporal" />
His transition from leading a major enterprise software company to investing in and advising the next generation of technology startups at one of Silicon Valley's most prominent venture capital firms represents a pattern increasingly seen among top technology executives. At a16z, Raghuram is positioned to leverage his deep operational knowledge of enterprise technology markets to identify and support companies building foundational infrastructure for cloud computing, artificial intelligence, and related fields.<ref name="a16z-announce" /><ref name="a16z-temporal" /><ref name="a16z-unconventional" />


The pairing of a seasoned enterprise technology operator with a leading venture capital firm reflects a broader trend in Silicon Valley, where firms increasingly seek partners with deep operational experience in specific technology domains. Raghuram's unique combination of product management roots (dating back to Netscape), engineering leadership, and CEO-level experience at a company of VMware's scale positions him as a distinctive voice in the venture capital landscape, particularly for enterprise infrastructure investments.<ref name="a16z-raghu" /><ref name="a16z-post-pmf" />
His professional relationship with Ben Horowitz, which began at Netscape in the 1990s and continued through his hiring at a16z in 2025, illustrates the enduring nature of professional networks in Silicon Valley and the role such relationships play in shaping the technology industry's leadership landscape.<ref name="a16z-post-pmf" /><ref name="fortune" />


== References ==
== References ==
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[[Category:American technology executives]]
[[Category:American technology executives]]
[[Category:American venture capitalists]]
[[Category:American venture capitalists]]
[[Category:American people of Indian descent]]
[[Category:Indian-American business executives]]
[[Category:Andreessen Horowitz people]]
[[Category:Andreessen Horowitz people]]
[[Category:Living people]]
[[Category:Living people]]

Latest revision as of 05:10, 24 February 2026




Raghu Raghuram
NationalityAmerican
OccupationVenture capitalist, technology executive
TitleManaging Partner and General Partner
EmployerAndreessen Horowitz
Known forCEO of VMware (2021–2023), General Partner at Andreessen Horowitz

Raghu Raghuram is an American technology executive and venture capitalist who served as the chief executive officer of VMware, a leading enterprise software company specializing in cloud computing and virtualization technology. His career in the technology industry spans several decades, including formative work at Netscape Communications and a long tenure at VMware during which he held a series of senior leadership positions before ascending to the role of CEO. Following VMware's acquisition by Broadcom, Raghuram departed the company and, in October 2025, joined the prominent Silicon Valley venture capital firm Andreessen Horowitz (a16z) as a Managing Partner and General Partner. At a16z, he focuses on enterprise technology and infrastructure investments, drawing upon his extensive operational experience in building and scaling software businesses. His career trajectory—from product management at early internet companies to leading one of the largest enterprise technology firms and then transitioning to venture capital—reflects the evolving landscape of the technology industry over the past three decades.

Early Life

Limited publicly documented information is available regarding Raghu Raghuram's early life and upbringing. He is of Indian origin and holds American nationality. Details about his family background and formative years prior to his entry into the technology industry have not been extensively reported in major media outlets.

Career

Early Career at Netscape

Before his long association with VMware, Raghuram worked as a product manager at Netscape Communications, the pioneering internet company known for the Netscape Navigator web browser. At Netscape, he worked under Ben Horowitz, who served in a management capacity at the company.[1] This professional relationship with Horowitz, forged during the early days of the commercial internet, would prove significant decades later when Raghuram joined Andreessen Horowitz. The experience at Netscape, a company at the center of the browser wars and the broader commercialization of the internet in the mid-to-late 1990s, provided Raghuram with foundational experience in product development and technology strategy.

VMware

Raghuram's most prominent corporate role was at VMware, where he spent a significant portion of his career and rose through the ranks of the organization. VMware, founded in 1998, became one of the most important enterprise technology companies in the world, providing virtualization and cloud infrastructure software used by businesses and governments globally. Raghuram held multiple senior executive positions at VMware over the course of his tenure, gaining deep expertise in cloud computing, software-defined infrastructure, and enterprise technology platforms.

Rise to CEO

Raghuram was appointed Chief Executive Officer of VMware, a role in which he led the company through a period of significant strategic importance in the enterprise technology market. As CEO, he was responsible for overseeing VMware's product portfolio, go-to-market strategy, and organizational direction. VMware under Raghuram's leadership continued to serve as a foundational technology provider for enterprise IT environments worldwide, offering products related to virtualization, multi-cloud infrastructure, networking, and security.

Broadcom Acquisition and Departure

Raghuram's tenure as CEO of VMware concluded in the context of Broadcom's acquisition of the company. The acquisition, one of the largest in technology industry history, resulted in significant organizational changes at VMware. Raghuram departed VMware following the completion of the transaction. The Broadcom acquisition marked the end of VMware's existence as an independent publicly traded company and represented a major transition point in the enterprise software landscape.

Andreessen Horowitz

On October 9, 2025, Andreessen Horowitz (commonly known as a16z) announced that Raghu Raghuram had joined the firm as a Managing Partner and a General Partner.[2][3] The hire was reported by multiple major outlets, including Axios, Fortune, and The Information.[4][5]

The appointment reunited Raghuram with Ben Horowitz, co-founder of a16z, with whom he had worked at Netscape years earlier.[1] In a newsletter, The Information reported that Horowitz referred to the hiring in terms that compared Raghuram's operational significance to that of Jensen Huang of NVIDIA, underscoring the high regard in which the firm held Raghuram's technical and executive capabilities.[5]

Shortly after joining a16z, Raghuram and Ben Horowitz sat for a joint interview with Fortune, in which they discussed topics including artificial intelligence, politics, and the broader state of the technology industry.[6] The interview signaled Raghuram's engagement with the firm's public thought leadership and his focus on the intersection of enterprise technology and emerging AI trends.

Investment and Advisory Activities

In his capacity as General Partner at Andreessen Horowitz, Raghuram began making and supporting investments in enterprise technology and infrastructure companies. In late 2025, he authored a post on the a16z blog announcing the firm's investment in Temporal, a company focused on workflow orchestration technology. In the post, Raghuram discussed the evolving capabilities of AI systems and the infrastructure required to support increasingly autonomous AI-driven processes.[7]

In December 2025, Raghuram announced a16z's investment in Unconventional, a company working on GPU technology and infrastructure for artificial intelligence workloads. In the investment announcement, Raghuram noted the central role of GPUs as the backbone of the AI industry and discussed the significance of continued advances in GPU technology for both training and inference workloads.[8]

These early investments reflected Raghuram's focus areas at a16z: enterprise infrastructure, cloud-native technologies, and the hardware and software ecosystems supporting the growth of artificial intelligence.

Thought Leadership at a16z

Shortly after joining Andreessen Horowitz, Raghuram contributed to the firm's content platform with insights drawn from his experience as a technology executive. In October 2025, the a16z blog published a piece featuring Raghuram's perspectives on what technology companies should prioritize after achieving product-market fit. The article, introduced by Ben Horowitz, drew on Raghuram's years of experience at VMware scaling products and organizations beyond the initial startup phase.[1] The piece reflected Raghuram's operational expertise and his understanding of the challenges that technology companies face as they transition from early-stage growth to sustainable, large-scale enterprises—a perspective informed by his years leading VMware through various stages of corporate evolution.

Personal Life

Limited publicly documented information is available about Raghu Raghuram's personal life. He maintains a relatively private profile outside of his professional activities. He is based in the United States and has spent much of his career in the San Francisco Bay Area, the center of the American technology industry.

Recognition

Raghu Raghuram's appointment as CEO of VMware placed him among the most prominent Indian-American executives in the global technology industry, joining a cohort of leaders of Indian descent who have led major American technology companies. His subsequent hiring by Andreessen Horowitz as a General Partner was itself treated as significant news in the venture capital and enterprise technology press, with coverage from outlets including Axios, Fortune, and The Information reflecting the weight attributed to his move from corporate leadership to venture capital.[3][6][4]

The framing of his hire by Ben Horowitz, who compared his significance to that of Jensen Huang in a newsletter item reported by The Information, further underscored the industry recognition of Raghuram's expertise in enterprise technology and infrastructure.[5]

Legacy

While Raghuram's career continues to evolve in his role at Andreessen Horowitz, his tenure at VMware represents a significant chapter in the history of enterprise technology. VMware's virtualization and cloud infrastructure products transformed the way businesses manage their IT environments, and Raghuram was a key figure in the company's leadership during critical periods of its development and strategic evolution.

His transition from leading a major enterprise software company to investing in and advising the next generation of technology startups at one of Silicon Valley's most prominent venture capital firms represents a pattern increasingly seen among top technology executives. At a16z, Raghuram is positioned to leverage his deep operational knowledge of enterprise technology markets to identify and support companies building foundational infrastructure for cloud computing, artificial intelligence, and related fields.[2][7][8]

His professional relationship with Ben Horowitz, which began at Netscape in the 1990s and continued through his hiring at a16z in 2025, illustrates the enduring nature of professional networks in Silicon Valley and the role such relationships play in shaping the technology industry's leadership landscape.[1][6]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 "What VMware's former CEO says you should prioritize after product-market fit".Andreessen Horowitz.2025-10-27.https://a16z.com/raghu-raghuram-post-product-market-fit/.Retrieved 2026-02-24.
  2. 2.0 2.1 "Raghu Raghuram".Andreessen Horowitz.2025-10-09.https://a16z.com/raghu-raghuram/.Retrieved 2026-02-24.
  3. 3.0 3.1 "Ex-VMware CEO joins Andreessen Horowitz as general partner".Axios.2025-10-09.https://www.axios.com/2025/10/09/vmware-ceo-raghuram-andreessen-horowitz.Retrieved 2026-02-24.
  4. 4.0 4.1 "Andreessen Horowitz Hires Former VMware CEO as General Partner".The Information.2025-10-09.https://www.theinformation.com/briefings/andreessen-horowitz-hires-former-vmware-ceo-general-partner.Retrieved 2026-02-24.
  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 "Ben Horowitz Hires His 'Jensen'; Vercel Starts a Venture Fund".The Information.2025-10-09.https://www.theinformation.com/newsletters/dealmaker/ben-horowitz-hires-jensen-vercel-starts-venture-fund.Retrieved 2026-02-24.
  6. 6.0 6.1 6.2 "Ben Horowitz and Raghu Raghuram on AI, politics, and the questions they don't have easy answers to".Fortune.2025-10-12.https://fortune.com/2025/10/12/ben-horowitz-raghu-raghuram-interview-ai-politics/.Retrieved 2026-02-24.
  7. 7.0 7.1 "Investing in Temporal".Andreessen Horowitz.2025-02-18.https://a16z.com/announcement/investing-in-temporal/.Retrieved 2026-02-24.
  8. 8.0 8.1 "Investing in Unconventional".Andreessen Horowitz.2025-12-08.https://a16z.com/announcement/investing-in-unconventional/.Retrieved 2026-02-24.