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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › John_DoerrJohn Doerr - Wikipedia

    L. John Doerr (born June 29, 1951) is an American investor and venture capitalist at Kleiner Perkins in Menlo Park, California. In February 2009, Doerr was appointed a member of the President's Economic Recovery Advisory Board to provide the President and his administration with advice and counsel in trying to fix America's economic ...

  2. Chairman. John is an engineer, venture capitalist, and the chair of Kleiner Perkins. He is the author of bestsellers Measure What Matters and Speed and Scale: An Action Plan for Solving Our Climate Crisis Now. For over 40 years, John has served entrepreneurs with ingenuity and optimism, helping them build bold teams and disruptive companies.

  3. www.forbes.com › profile › john-doerrJohn Doerr - Forbes

    5 days ago · Chairman, Kleiner Perkins. Investor John Doerr is chairman of venture capital firm Kleiner Perkins. Doerr joined the firm in 1980 after working at Intel and cofounding two companies. He famously ...

  4. For over 40 years, John Doerr has served entrepreneurs with ingenuity and optimism, helping them build disruptive companies and bold teams. He was one of the pioneers in the venture capital community investing in breakthrough clean technologies, deploying more than a billion dollars towards more efficient solar cells, better batteries, biofuels ...

  5. John Doerr. John is an engineer, venture capitalist, and the chair of Kleiner Perkins. He is the author of international bestsellers Measure What Matters and Speed and Scale: An Action Plan for Solving Our Climate Crisis Now. For over 40 years, John has served entrepreneurs with ingenuity and optimism, helping them build bold teams and ...

  6. Our leaders and institutions are failing us, but it's not always because they're bad or unethical, says venture capitalist John Doerr -- often, it's simply because they're leading us toward the wrong objectives.

  7. May 4, 2018 · John Doerr, the venture capitalist who’s funded companies including Google, Intuit, and Amazon, describes a system he calls “Objectives and Key Results,” or OKR, the subject of his new book.