Paul Sciarra is an American entrepreneur best known as a co-founder of the social media platform Pinterest and as the executive chairman of the electric aviation company Joby Aviation.[1]
Born around 1981, Sciarra graduated from Yale University with a bachelor's degree.[1][2]
During his time at Yale, he met future collaborator Ben Silbermann, with whom he co-founded the mobile app developer Cold Brew Labs in 2008; the company's Tote shopping app inspired the concept for Pinterest, which they launched in 2010 alongside Evan Sharp.[1][3]
As Pinterest's initial president and CEO, Sciarra helped grow the platform from a niche tool into a major site with hundreds of millions of users, before stepping down in April 2012 to pursue new opportunities.[3]
Following his departure, he joined the venture capital firm Andreessen Horowitz as an entrepreneur-in-residence and invested in early-stage startups.[3]
In 2014, Sciarra became executive chairman of Joby Aviation, leading the company through significant funding rounds and its 2021 public listing via SPAC merger; he holds approximately a 7% stake in the firm as of 2025, which develops electric vertical takeoff and landing aircraft for urban air mobility.[1][3][4]
Sciarra retains about a 7% stake in Pinterest, which went public in 2019 and contributed to his billionaire status.[1]
In 2019, he and his wife, Jennifer, signed the Giving Pledge, committing to donate the majority of their wealth to philanthropic causes during their lifetimes or in their wills.[5][1]
Based in San Francisco, Sciarra continues to focus on innovative technologies in consumer internet and sustainable transportation.[1]
Early years
Upbringing and family
Paul Sciarra was born around 1981 and holds United States citizenship.[1]
He grew up in New York.[3]
Publicly available information on his upbringing and immediate family remains limited, with no verified details disclosed about his parents, siblings, or specific childhood environment.[3][6]
He later attended Yale University for his higher education.[1]
Education
Paul Sciarra attended Yale University from 1999 to 2003, earning a Bachelor of Arts degree in philosophy.[2][7]
His undergraduate studies at Yale occurred during the early 2000s, a period marked by the lingering influence of the dot-com boom, which sparked widespread interest in technology and entrepreneurship among students.[8]
A pivotal aspect of Sciarra's Yale experience was his connection to fellow student Ben Silbermann, whom he met as classmates and with whom he would later co-found Pinterest.[1][9] This early relationship helped cultivate an entrepreneurial network that proved instrumental in his future tech career.[10]
Professional career
Early professional roles
After graduating from Yale University in 2003 with a bachelor's degree, Paul Sciarra entered the venture capital industry by joining Radius Ventures, a New York-based firm specializing in healthcare and life sciences investments, around 2005.[9] As an associate at the firm, he contributed to investment analysis and evaluation of early-stage companies, building foundational expertise in venture capital deal sourcing and product assessment within the sector.[11][12]
During his approximately three-year tenure amid the mid-2000s startup landscape, Sciarra honed skills in identifying high-potential opportunities in innovative companies, drawing on the firm's focus on transformative health technologies to develop a broader understanding of emerging business models.[9] This period provided him with practical exposure to the dynamics of early-stage investments, including due diligence and strategic advisory roles that informed his later entrepreneurial pursuits.[13]
In August 2008, Sciarra departed Radius Ventures to focus on independent entrepreneurial endeavors, marking his transition from structured venture capital roles to founding his own ventures.[9][14]
Founding and leadership at Pinterest
Paul Sciarra co-founded Pinterest in January 2010 alongside Ben Silbermann and Evan Sharp, building on their earlier venture, the Tote mobile shopping app, which they launched in early 2009 under the incubator Cold Brew Labs. Tote functioned as a virtual catalog for iPhone users, allowing them to browse and save products from retailers, but it struggled to gain traction. Drawing from this experience, the trio pivoted the concept toward a web-based platform for visual discovery and bookmarking, emphasizing user-curated collections of images rather than direct shopping. This shift addressed Tote's limitations by focusing on inspiration and organization, transforming the app's "save for later" feature into Pinterest's core pinning mechanism.[3][14]
As Pinterest's first president and CEO from 2010 to 2012, Sciarra concentrated on business development and securing funding to support the platform's growth, leveraging his prior experience at the venture capital firm Radius Ventures. Under his leadership, the company launched a private beta in March 2010, initially limited to a small group of invitees, which helped refine the product through user feedback. The company raised $10 million in a Series A round in May 2011 led by Bessemer Venture Partners. A pivotal moment came in October 2011 when Sciarra spearheaded a $27 million Series B funding round led by Andreessen Horowitz, valuing Pinterest at around $200 million and enabling team expansion and infrastructure improvements. His efforts in fundraising were crucial during a period of widespread VC skepticism, as the startup faced rejections from numerous investors before this breakthrough. By early 2012, Pinterest had achieved rapid user growth, reaching over 10 million registered users, driven by viral word-of-mouth and its appeal to niche communities interested in design, fashion, and hobbies.[3][14][15]
Sciarra played a key role in shaping Pinterest's early company culture, hosting initial operations from his home in Palo Alto, California, which served as the makeshift headquarters in a resource-constrained environment typical of bootstrapped startups. This informal setup fostered a collaborative atmosphere among the small team, who operated on a "bring your own computer" basis without formal benefits. In April 2012, Sciarra announced his departure from day-to-day executive duties, transitioning to an advisory role while retaining an approximately 8% stake in the company. He cited personal reflection as the reason, allowing Ben Silbermann to assume the full CEO position and lead the next phase of expansion.[14][3][15]
Post-Pinterest ventures
After departing Pinterest in April 2012, Paul Sciarra joined Andreessen Horowitz as an entrepreneur-in-residence, where he advised on technology investments and product strategies for the firm's portfolio companies.[16][17]
In 2014, Sciarra became the first outside investor in Joby Aviation, an electric vertical takeoff and landing (eVTOL) startup focused on air mobility, and assumed the role of executive chairman.[18][1] Under his leadership, the company navigated multiple funding rounds, including a strategic pivot from initial designs to a four-seat aircraft model optimized for urban air taxi services, and achieved a public listing through a SPAC merger with Reinvent Technology Partners in August 2021.[19][1]
As of 2025, Sciarra holds approximately a 10% stake in Joby Aviation and remains actively involved in key milestones, such as the company's Q3 2025 earnings report, which highlighted $978 million in cash and short-term investments.[1][20] In September 2025, he sold 500,001 shares of Joby stock for approximately $7.15 million as part of a pre-arranged trading plan.[21]
Sciarra has influenced Joby's adoption of a service-based business model, emphasizing operated air taxi networks over aircraft sales, drawing on his experience scaling consumer technology platforms.[18] His strategic guidance has also supported international expansions, including the announcement of commercial operations in Dubai, where Joby conducted piloted flight tests in 2025 and plans passenger services by 2026.[22][23]
Personal life
Family and residence
Paul Sciarra is married to Jennifer Sciarra.[3][1]
The couple has resided in San Francisco, California, since the early 2010s, following Sciarra's relocation from New York after his early career there.[3][1][24]
Sciarra maintains a private family life, with no publicly available details regarding children or extended family.[3]
Their home in the Bay Area places them within the heart of the tech ecosystem, offering proximity to Silicon Valley's professional networks while supporting a low-profile personal routine away from public scrutiny.[3][1]
Philanthropy and interests
In May 2019, Paul Sciarra and his wife, Jennifer, signed the Giving Pledge, committing to donate the majority of their wealth— at least 50%—to philanthropic causes during their lifetimes or in their wills.[5][1]
As of 2025, Sciarra's net worth is $1.6 billion, establishing him as a self-made billionaire with a Forbes self-made score of 8; this wealth stems primarily from his approximately 5% stake in Pinterest following its 2019 initial public offering and his approximately 6% holding in Joby Aviation.[1][25][4]
Sciarra and his wife are supporters of the Giving Network at the Aspen Community Foundation, which funded local nonprofits in 2025.[26]
Sciarra's interests center on sustainable technology and innovation, particularly in areas like electric aviation through his investments in Joby Aviation, though he has not established specific foundations or publicly detailed targeted causes beyond the Giving Pledge commitment.[1][27]
Recognized as a low-profile philanthropist, Sciarra's charitable activities have largely remained under the radar, with his wealth notably increasing due to Joby Aviation's 2021 public listing via SPAC merger and strong stock performance in 2025.[27][28][29]