Bradley Kellard · @BradleyKellard

The guy who played "Steve Jobs" made $1 billion. Not as an actor. But as a tech investor. He invested in Airb...

查看 @BradleyKellard 在 2025年4月9日 13:26 发布的这条 X/Twitter 推文。 这条内容包含 3 个视频和 9 张图片。

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查看 @BradleyKellard 在 2025年4月9日 13:26 发布的这条 X/Twitter 推文。 这条内容包含 3 个视频和 9 张图片。

The guy who played "Steve Jobs" made $1 billion.

Not as an actor. But as a tech investor.

He invested in Airbnb, Uber, and Spotify.

Here’s how Kutcher quietly built a $1B+ venture portfolio: 
Bradley Kellard media
Everyone thought Ashton Kutcher peaked in the early 2000s.

The good-looking, goofy actor.
The prank show host.
The guy who married Demi Moore.

But beneath the celebrity noise…

He was watching, learning, and preparing to move in silence. 
Bradley Kellard mediaBradley Kellard media
Kutcher wasn’t trying to stay relevant—he was trying to get smarter.

In 2009, he started sitting in rooms where no actors were.

Silicon Valley boardrooms.
Tech founder dinners.
Investor meetups.

He realized something: Hollywood talks. But tech prints. 
He made a decision most celebrities never do: he’d become a student.

He studied venture capital.
He asked questions.
He took notes.
He met with industry giants like Marc Andreessen and Reid Hoffman.

His goal wasn’t fame. It was leverage. 
Bradley Kellard media
Then came his first big bet: Skype.

He invested before Microsoft bought it for $8.5 billion in 2011.

That deal made his team millions—and more importantly, made people take him seriously.

The goofy actor had entered the game. 
Bradley Kellard media
In 2010, he co-founded his VC firm: A-Grade Investments.

Alongside talent manager Guy Oseary and billionaire Ron Burkle, he raised $30M.

People mocked them:

“Another celebrity fund.”
“What does he know about startups?”

They were about to find out. 
Kutcher didn’t invest like most celebrities.

He didn’t just throw money at shiny startups.
He used his platform strategically.
He offered distribution, not just dollars.

Founders quickly realized: Ashton wasn’t a liability—he was an advantage. 
Bradley Kellard media
Then he placed three bets that changed everything:

Kutcher invested:

- $2.5million in Airbnb
- $500,000 in Uber
- $3million in Spotify

He invested early—before the world knew what these companies would become.

And when they exploded, so did his reputation. 
By 2016, his $30M fund had grown to $250M.

An 8.5x return—better than most traditional VCs.

Airbnb IPO’d.
Uber went public.
Spotify became a global platform.

And the kid from Iowa became a serious investor. 
Bradley Kellard media
Today, he runs Sound Ventures, a VC firm managing over $1 billion in assets

They’ve backed:
– OpenAI
– Calm
– Affirm
– NotCo
– Dapper Labs
– Duolingo

He’s no longer just early to the party—he helps throw the party. 
Bradley Kellard media
Ashton Kutcher’s story is proof of one thing:

You don’t need to be taken seriously to do serious things.

You don’t need permission to play big.

And sometimes, the most underestimated people are the ones who change the game. 
Bradley Kellard media
By the way, I’ve been running 7 and 8-figure businesses for the past 20+ years

I send an email every week sharing insights I’ve learned over 20 years of my entrepreneurship journey.
If you want to start, grow, and scale your business, join my free newsletter now:

https://ontheup.beehiiv.com/
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