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Going Global:

International Journey of Brazilian Scale-Ups

BRAZIL RESEARCH

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Letter from Cesar Carvalho

Chairman, Endeavor Brazil

I have always believed that international expansion is less about pre-built formulas and more about intentionality.

In Brazil, we have a unique advantage: a market with such scale and complexity that internationalization is not a survival requirement, but an option. Yet this comfort can be a double-edged sword, potentially limiting our ambition — and, as a result, our true potential.

For the entrepreneurs who have expanded or are planning to expand their operations into new countries, I would like to share a few reflections:

  • Protect the Core Business: expansion cannot come at the expense of the strength that made it possible in the first place. Growing outward without losing energy at home is the real challenge.
  • Culture is part of the product: caring for people is just as important as developing the product itself. Leadership grounded in “being a good person” — to oneself and to others — is the only path to sustainable growth.
  • Real Priority: internationalization cannot be a side project. It only works when it becomes the number one priority for the founder and the leadership team.
  • The Multiplier Effect: success should not happen in a vacuum. When we share learnings, shortcuts, and — most importantly — mistakes, we turn inspiration into a real ecosystem.

Not every scale-up will become global by default, but the future calls for greater ambition. We need to play both offense and defense.

Let’s build not only bigger companies, but also companies that are more human and accessible.

Moving forward with intention and optimism. 

The video series of Going Global will launch on March 26, 2026.

We asked 5 Endeavor Entrepreneurs to share their stories about international expansion. They told us how they captured global opportunities starting from a large domestic market.

Brazilian founders scale their companies at the intersection of two powerful forces: a large domestic market and the ambition to capture global opportunity.

Brazil’s market is big enough to sustain significant growth, which creates space (and sometimes comfort) to delay international moves. At the same time, the country has consistently matured its entrepreneurial ecosystem and global exposure. 

In 2025, the primary growth priority reported by the 161 Brazilian Endeavor Entrepreneurs was market-related. For 26% of entrepreneurs, global expansion emerged as a specific priority.

Yet the path is far from straightforward. International expansion requires complex business and leadership capabilities that go well beyond market entry. 

In order to better understand this dynamic, we conducted a national survey with 101 Brazilian Scale-Up founders — primarily from the Endeavor Network — to capture their expectations and experiences around international expansion. We also conducted 20 in-depth interviews with entrepreneurs and ecosystem experts. 

In parallel, we analyzed 50 unicorns — 25 from Brazil and 25 from across Latin America — assessing whether their core business thesis was predominantly domestic or inherently global at the time they reached a $1B valuation.

Timing of geo-expansion is not a universal rule.

In emerging markets, rigid adherence to imported growth formulas can become a blind spot rather than a competitive edge. At the same time, excessive comfort in the Brazilian market can erode ambition, limiting a company’s long-term impact before fully testing its potential beyond borders.

Brazilian scale-ups have more optionality for expansion.

While market potential is cited as the main trigger for expansion (75%), only 17% report expanding due to domestic market saturation and just 6% feel threatened by international competitors.

Not every next Brazilian scale-up will be global by default, but a growing share of companies will.

Among companies founded between 2015 and 2019, 44% have already expanded internationally and another 28% are planning to. Among the newer generation ( founded between 2020–2024), 33% have already begun expanding, while 29% report plans to do so.

Geo-expansion is not a one-size-fits-all journey.

We identified at least 8 distinct entry paths used by Brazilian founders. The two most common are opening a local office, adopted by 51% of founders, and international sales, used by 43%.

Where We Come From

Brazil, home to the largest population in Latin America with over 214 million people, and ranked among the top 10 largest global economies, is a sufficiently dynamic market to support “Brazil-first strategies”.

That dynamic shifts quickly in smaller economies. In countries such as Argentina and Colombia, with nearly a quarter of the Brazilian population, a greater share of unicorns were built with an international thesis.

When they reached a $1B valuation, 60% of the 25 Brazilian unicorns had a predominantly domestic thesis, compared to just 16% of unicorns from the rest of Latin America.

Source: Crunchbase data, company websites, press releases, and media coverage, analyzed by the Endeavor Brazil Team.

International expansion tends to be more common in sectors with more portable models, such as SaaS, marketplaces, and delivery platforms. Nearly 75% of SaaS unicorns in Latin America were built with an international thesis. In fintech, that share is lower (53%), likely reflecting the regulatory requirements that make cross-border scaling more complex. 

Still, Brazil remains a powerful domestic market even for SaaS. According to Riverwood Capital, 93% of revenue from Brazilian SaaS companies still comes from the domestic market, suggesting a more locally anchored growth profile.

In absolute terms, Brazil still concentrates more unicorns with an international thesis than any other country in the region individually. However, the data reinforces an optionality (flexibility to pursue multiple future paths): the Brazilian entrepreneur can choose when to internationalize.

In our survey, only 17% of founders cite the saturation of the Brazilian market or limitation in local growth as motivation for expansion, and only 6% felt threatened by the entry of an international competitor. 

This optionality creates both advantages and trade-offs. It can reduce the sense of urgency for expansion, making it difficult to develop a global mindset. Even the founders committed to international expansion might end up being frequently demanded by the core business in Brazil, where opportunities seem more immediate and predictable.

“Brazil is big enough to be self-sufficient, which can become a comfort zone. We still lack the mindset of building from day one with a global vision, aside from businesses constrained by highly local or regulatory factors. Overall, the size of the Brazilian market reduces the urgency to think globally.”

Michele Levy, Ilhabela Holdings

What We’re Seeing

We do not expect every next Brazilian scale-up to be global by default. But the share of companies that view international expansion as a core part of their growth strategy is steadily increasing.

According to our survey responses, the global ambition among founders is increasing, even if it is not yet universal.

Among companies founded between 2015 and 2019, 44% implemented international expansion and 28% are in the planning phase. Among the newer generation of companies (founded between 2020 and 2024), 33% have already begun expanding, and 29% report plans to do so.

Founded: 2016

Founders: Ricardo Josuá, Daniela Binatti, Marcelo Parise and Juliana Motta.

Operations and clients around the globe, including Latin America, Europe, Asia and North America.

Strategy: Globally experienced talent for B2B Enterprise

Pismo embodies a global ambition embedded from inception. Founded in 2016, as a cloud-native payments and core banking platform, it entered a sector long dominated by global incumbents, where being international was a prerequisite to compete, and went on to build a solution robust enough to be acquired by Visa. Before its acquisition, Pismo was already operating in five countries, including India and Australia. Two years after being acquired by Visa, in January 2026, Pismo had expanded to 16 countries, including the United States, the United Kingdom, and the Netherlands, reinforcing how building for the world from day one can shape both scale and outcome.

The data from our survey suggests that global ambition is forming earlier in the company lifecycle. Still, any expansion is going to be carefully planned. Among founders planning to expand, only 14% intend to start within the next six months. Most (65%) anticipate expanding within two years, while 21% project a three-to-five year horizon.

The Expansion Levers

International expansion is not driven by founder ambition or market size alone. External forces, from currency cycles to global liquidity, can accelerate or delay these moves. 

For founders operating from an emerging economy such as Brazil, a few macro signals are worth watching:

In today’s global landscape, technology waves spread rapidly across borders, accelerating competition. In this context, identifying structural similarities across markets can make international expansion a logical next step. 

Zenvia followed this approach when entering Mexico. As a messaging platform built on telecom infrastructure, the company recognized that the telecommunications market structure is largely similar across Latin America. Mexico combined the largest market in the region with a value chain closely aligned with Brazil’s, making it a natural first step beyond its home base.

CASSIO BOBSIN

Building the Right to Win

In conversations with specialists from the Endeavor Network, there is a very mature understanding that there is no ideal moment for expansion

The assumption that remaining local is a sign of inertia can overlook the challenges and opportunities of building a company within the Brazilian market. The founder’s experience is far more nuanced.

The timing of expansion is directly linked to the nature of the product, the business model, and the strategic ambition of the company.

Regardless of industry, business model, or stage of growth, founders pursuing international expansion must have strong conviction in their product’s differentiation (right to win) before entering a new market.

FUNDAMENTAL QUESTIONS

Who are the competitors and how is the product positioned against them?

How does the product differentiate itself, in a relevant way, from these competitors?

Does the product have a defensible moat, so that it cannot be easily replicated?

“International expansion rests on three pillars: strategy, structure, and capital. You define why you are going abroad and how you will execute your strategy, but you also need the funding to sustain that plan. It’s not enough to have strategy and structure if you don’t have the capital to support them. Otherwise, you risk ending up in a desperate funding round because cash burn is high or because things took longer than expected.”

Bruno Lino, Valutia

"It all starts with the product. You need to be sure that it is truly differentiated, strong, and competitive for the international market. Without this, it makes no sense to expand."

Bernardo Piquet

Key Components of Geo-Expansion

Geo-expansion is not a one-size-fits-all journey. Every decision reflects the company’s unique context and realities. As expansion unfolds, founders revisit and refine these choices over time.

1. Where To Expand?

Choosing where to expand is as important as deciding when. The question is not which market is “right”, but which strategy compounds learning faster for the business being built.

Among the founders surveyed who have already expanded internationally, 63% targeted the United States, followed closely by Latin America (60%) and Europe (49%), with Portugal and Spain emerging as common entry points. The prominence of the United States reflects its scale, purchasing power, and global relevance as the world’s largest technology market.

Founded: 2012

Founders: João Del Valle, Alphonse Voight and Wagner Ruiz

EBANX began expanding its payment operations in 2015.
By 2025, 65% of gross profit came from markets outside Brazil (20% outside LATAM).
36% of Total Payment Volume (TPV) was generated by APAC companies.

Strategy: From LATAM to the world

Some founders prefer starting with culturally or geographically closer markets, which was the case of João Del Valle, CEO and co-founder of EBANX. After consolidating its position in Brazil, the company expanded across Latin America — entering Mexico, Colombia, Peru, and Chile between 2015 and 2016.

In recent years, EBANX has continued to grow and now counts on local experts in every market where it operates, including Latin America, India, Africa countries, and the Southeast Asia region. As part of this expansion flywheel, it recently inaugurated its APAC headquarters in Singapore, strengthening its ability to support Asia-Pacific merchants expanding internationally and global brands — particularly from the US and Europe — entering the region.

Others choose to launch in larger markets, which was the case of Nomad. The company’s financial platform began with a U.S.-focused strategy in order to give Brazilians direct access to the American market. The company structured itself as a binational operation with teams in both Brazil and the United States.

Operating in one of the world’s most regulated and competitive financial systems required Nomad to navigate dual regulatory frameworks, adopt English for governance and compliance, and appoint U.S.-resident executives and directors. It also pushed the company to meet American institutional and cultural standards, raising its operational rigor from the very beginning.

LUCAS VARGAS

Across all regions, market potential and customer demand are the main drivers for expansion. In the United States, 81% of founders cite market potential as a motivation, while 44% highlight the customer demand. In Latin America, there is a similar pattern, with 61% expanding due to market potential and 31% due to customer demand.

Examples like Nomad show that, while the United States is the largest venture capital market and one of the most liquid ecosystems for technology companies, founders really value proximity to clients. According to a global research by Index Ventures, 76% of founders go to the U.S. to be closer to customers. This dynamic is reflected in the growing presence of Brazilian companies in the United States. According to the U.S. Consulate General in São Paulo, hundreds of Brazilian companies have invested in the United States over the years, creating more than 100,000 jobs and generating billions of dollars in U.S. exports. Each state, through its economic development agencies, maintains programs to encourage investments that create jobs. Entrepreneurs are advised to conduct extensive research, as each state is different. A starting point is to consider both the location of their current or potential customer base and the available transportation connections that would allow them to bring their products to market, including from a neighboring state.

Rather than defaulting to the largest available market, founders should prioritize the market that aligns with their strategy, capabilities, and positioning: the one where they can establish competitive advantage and accelerate traction most efficiently.

2. How Founders Enter New Markets

We often equate expansion with opening a local office. But this is just one possible outcome. Founders can begin with cross-border sales, test channels, layer in remote commercial coverage, and establish their local leadership after reaching density in the market.

Among the founders surveyed, opening a local office remains the most cited strategy (51%), but a significant share (43%) used international sales to step into new markets.

Early international moves tend to favor lean teams and controlled burn, avoiding heavy fixed-cost structures before product-market fit is proven abroad. 

But it has its limits. In enterprise markets, regulatory navigation and trust-building with consultative sales do require boots on the ground.

The right model of expansion is the one that strengthens competitive advantage while preserving execution quality as the organization scales internationally.

Founded: 2015

Founder: Alessio Alionço

While the company serves customers in over 100 countries, the majority of its workforce is still based in Brazil.

Strategy: Made Brazil the center of its talent base

Pipefy’s trajectory illustrates this. Founded in Curitiba in 2015, the company provides workflow automation software to enterprise clients in more than 100 countries, while keeping the majority of its workforce and operations anchored in Brazil. Its expansion began fully digital, with an English-language product and inside sales based in Brazil. As deal size and complexity increased, the model adapted.  While mid-market accounts were served remotely, large enterprise contracts (particularly U.S. and India) demanded local presence.

Founded: 2003

Founders: Marcos Boschetti and Fabiano Kerber

Accelerated global expansion through M&A, expanding its client network and international talent pool.

Strategy: Advanced global expansion through M&A

Nelogica followed a different path.  Founded in Porto Alegre, the company accelerated its global presence through an M&A transaction that significantly expanded its client base, adding more than 300,000 users to its portfolio. The acquisition also brought substantial manpower into the organization, and the current priority is integrating operations and capturing synergies. 

Today, Nelogica operates with a decentralized structure: developers distributed across Europe, a marketing team in Italy, a sales team in the United States, and teams in Brazil and other Latin American countries such as Colombia. Its footprint spans every continent except Asia.

3. Challenges of Expansion

Expansion looks less like a geographic extension of domestic success and more like an operational rebuild. Product, go-to-market, and talent strategies present founders with complex adaptation challenges.

In a new market, founders often arrive as unknown players, competing against incumbents with local relationships and familiarity with regulatory and cultural patterns. The credibility, network density, and brand equity built at home rarely travel with you. 

One of the most frequent consequences of this reality is the need to rethink the go-to-market strategy from the ground up

Logcomex, founded in Curitiba in 2016, develops a platform for international trade and logistics. As the company entered new markets, the team realized that neither the product nor the growth engine could simply be replicated from Brazil. They had to adapt the product to local dynamics and, at the same time, rediscover which channels actually unlocked growth in each geography, rebuilding product–market and channel fit market by market.

CARLOS SOUZA

In the United States, the main challenges are related to integrating into the market: access to talent (52%) and go-to-market (48%). In Latin American markets, the same two challenges lead the list(35% and 46%, respectively). In Europe, the challenge landscape is more diversified, with go-to-market and regulatory requirements cited by 29% of founders. Regardless of location, entrepreneurs seeking to mitigate risks should avoid attempting to replicate their domestic scale straightforwardly.  Building large, capital-intensive structures under the assumption that acceptance will transfer automatically often amplifies the risk of expansion rather than reducing it.

4. Leadership Commitment

Expansion only works when it is a real priority for the founder. Entrepreneurs and investors repeatedly mentioned how critical it is for the founder or a very senior leader to be present at the beginning of the expansion, with allocation of time, people, and capital. Expanding “little by little, when there’s time left” usually leads to fragile initiatives.

VTEX’s early international expansion illustrates this dynamic. The move was driven by the conviction of its founders and co-founders, who treated expansion as a strategic priority rather than a side initiative. The company’s first office abroad, in Argentina, was opened by Mariano Gomide, one of the company’s founders, and Alexandre Soncini, a co-founder, themselves. By being directly involved on the ground, they were able to validate the thesis, refine the model, and demonstrate that international expansion was not only viable, but repeatable.

Where founders cannot be physically present, the importance of a strong “landing team” increases. It must be someone deeply embedded in the company’s culture and strategy, with enough legitimacy and autonomy to represent headquarters in moments of ambiguity. 

In our survey, 44% of founders relocated or intend to do so, 47% hired senior talent, and 30% neither relocated nor hired talent.

While 28% of founders surveyed say the relocation was decisive for the strategy, 55% of those who hired talent evaluated the move as successful. 

“When there is conviction in the product and a solid team managing the original market, it is common to see founders personally go to the new market. M&A can work, but statistically, the biggest success stories tend to be companies where founders themselves settled in the country they believed in.”

Alex Szapiro, SoftBank

Permanently or not, entrepreneurs who successfully lead global expansions are somehow engaged in the new market. Many founders adopt a hybrid rhythm.

At EBANX, João Del Valle maintains a rhythm of at least one intercontinental trip per month. With commercial teams operating across multiple countries, especially in enterprise sales contexts, executive presence becomes a strategic lever. For global partners, it reinforces long-term commitment. For local teams, it creates proximity to leadership and sharpens alignment.

Beyond symbolic value, the exposure feeds the founder’s own judgment. Being on the ground provides insight that goes beyond performance metrics, capturing cultural dynamics, market atmosphere, and leadership quality — elements that directly influence execution. 

When founders cannot be physically present, they should appoint trusted senior leaders with cultural authority and autonomy to represent the company, ensuring that expansion is led with conviction rather than treated as a peripheral initiative.

5. Conserving The Core Business

Expansion also should not come at the expense of the business that made it possible.

Across conversations with founders, one principle surfaced repeatedly: expansion only works when the core remains strong. The leadership team who stays is just as critical as the one that goes. Companies that scaled internationally without eroding their original market had something in common: autonomous, credible operators capable of sustaining execution, culture, and growth at home.

Expansion, therefore, demands discussions around succession and decision rights. Who owns the core? Who owns the frontier? 

Founded: 2000

Founders: Mariano Gomide and Geraldo Thomaz

Present in 40+ countries, the founders lead international expansion while a strong leadership team runs the core business in Brazil.

Strategy: Founder-led global expansion

At VTEX, Mariano Gomide and Geraldo Thomaz understood that it would be impossible to lead global expansion and simultaneously guard the Brazilian core. So they chose to personally lead the entry into new markets, while building a strong internal structure of partners, vice presidents, and managers at the core.

“If the founder wants to expand to the world and at the same time protect their central region, they end up neither expanding nor protecting. We went out there, because it is essential to see with your own eyes what needs to be adapted. But we built a team that ensured VTEX was very well executed in the countries where Geraldo and I no longer acted.”

Mariano Gomide, VTEX

Throughout the journey, the core must generate cash, financing the early mistakes of the international operation, while global expansion can simultaneously strengthen the core business through the lessons learned in other markets.

For Grupo Trigo, entering the U.S. pushed the company to compete at a different level. Eduardo Ourivio describes it as “playing a truly professional game, at another level,” which accelerated learning in management, quality standards, and operational discipline. In 2016, the group brought that mindset back to Brazil, applying the management and quality model experienced in the U.S. to Spoleto. The shift transformed the brand’s trajectory: the chain surpassed 400 restaurants and reached the best moment in its 25-year history in sales, brand perception, and expansion, achieving record average sales per store even in a challenging domestic environment.

eduardo ourivio

6. Building The Team

Expansion rewards companies that work well with people as carefully as they work with their products.

Building the team requires defining which capabilities must be physically embedded in the new market and which can remain centralized. 

HEADQUARTERS

Technical, product, and performance-driven functions

NEW MARKET

Functions closest to the customer, such as sales and partnerships

Roles that require cultural nuance — branding, communications, community

Close coordination with HR and legal: Compensation, Benefits, Employment Law and Culture

This becomes even more pronounced in mature, highly competitive hubs. Senior professionals often have multiple offers from established global companies, with brand, scale, and stability on their side. 

On Pipefy’s early expansion efforts, Alessio Alionço recalls that competing for engineers against global incumbents proved difficult. They had to pay more, offer more equity, and still risk being a secondary choice. The change came when the company doubled down on Brazilian talent. There were highly capable professionals who had never had the opportunity to build a global product from their home country as a value proposition. With the same level of investment, the long-term ambition and engagement from Brazilians, especially in challenging moments, proved to be materially different.

Still, in B2B enterprise markets, hiring locals is inevitable to compound credibility faster through trusted intermediaries. Ricardo Josuá credits part of Pismo’s international success to the hiring of the very experienced Vishal Dalal as Global CEO. Based initially in England, and later overseeing offices in England, India, and Singapore, Vishal’s network shortened cycles that would have been difficult to compress remotely.

7. Making The Culture Match

Founders should treat team design as a strategic lever of expansion: which roles must be embedded locally, and which remain centralized? How to pair trusted internal leaders with regional talent?

When teams begin to operate across borders and time zones, communication, decision-making, and cultures change. Investing early in an integrated culture becomes essential to sustain alignment, decision-making quality, and execution standards at scale.

“I wouldn’t underestimate the cultural issue. When you bring together people of different nationalities, working interdependently, the level of energy needed to generate synergy is much greater. Invest from the beginning in building a unique and integrated culture.”

Alessio Alionço, Pipefy

While accessing local talent fast is essential, hiring too quickly, before cultural foundations are clear, often generates fragmentation and identity loss. 

A balanced, 50/50 approach often proves  more effective: pairing an internal leader who deeply understands the company’s culture with local talent who brings regional expertise.

At Hotmart, both approaches have been put into practice: sending internal leaders to launch new markets and hiring local executives who go through onboarding in Brazil before taking on operations abroad. Each model brings different levels of risk and integration challenges, particularly in markets where the brand is still unknown. As Mateus Bicalho reflects:

“Sending someone from inside reduces risk. You rely on a leader you already trust and who deeply understands the business, instead of betting on an external hire who still needs to prove themselves. I prefer starting with an internal leader and then building the local team around them, creating a stronger foundation before scaling in a market where your brand is still unknown.”

Mateus Bicalho, Hotmart

8. Bringing Network and Capital

The first generation of international success stories proved that global expansion was possible and paved the first references. But references alone are not enough. We believe that a more global, inter-connected Brazilian ecosystem  requires one generation supporting the other: investors backing founders abroad, entrepreneurs promoting connections, sharing their learnings, and becoming advisors. 

Founders in our survey consistently point to trusted relationships as a decisive factor: 68% have received external support during their expansion, while only 32% relied exclusively on their internal team. 

This becomes even more critical in large and dense ecosystems such as the United States, where access, introductions, and reputation are often difficult. 

In our survey, after the internal team (51%), investors are the most relevant ally in international expansion (42%). In the American context, according to Index Ventures, 52% of founders consider it important or extremely important to have at least one U.S. investor for the entry strategy.

Investors who understand the mechanics of cross-border growth are highly valuable. The ones who have seen expansion cycles before help founders avoid costly mistakes such as premature hiring, regulatory frictions, overbuilding local infrastructure, or entering the wrong market altogether. In some cases, the most valuable intervention can be restraint, a timely “not yet”.

RIGHT INVESTOR

Bring market intelligence, access to networks, and credibility at a moment where the company has none locally.

WRONG INVESTOR

Push for speed without structure, scale without validation, or entry before readiness.
or
Discourage global ambition without strategic assessment, delay expansion even when it could unlock meaningful growth.

At Nelogica, this kind of partnership supported the expansion process. Beyond capital, investors elevated the quality of strategic decisions. They opened the right doors, facilitated key introductions, and shared practical insights on how to navigate unfamiliar markets with discipline and clarity. For Marcos Boschetti, their insights and contribution opening doors and making introductions influenced how the company sequenced markets, assessed risks, and defined its pace of expansion.

Expansion is capital-intensive. Therefore, capital should not be raised to “figure out what to do abroad”, but bring traction to what already exists. It consumes leadership attention, organizational bandwidth, and cash, sometimes more than originally planned.

Investors look for practical business evidence — revenue, clients, proof of competitiveness — rather than an abstract ambition. Mature companies should treat expansion as a defined investment thesis: they allocate a specific budget, separated from the core, with clear milestones and an explicit learning horizon. 

By learning from founders who have already walked this path, choosing investors who understand cross-border growth, and grounding their plans in realistic assumptions, Brazilian entrepreneurs can become more confident with international expansion. We invite founders to not fear or see this as a solitary journey. As each experience succeeds, we collectively strengthen the reputation of Brazilian talent abroad and reinforce Brazil as one of the most vibrant and globally relevant ecosystems within Elsewhere, the markets historically overlooked by traditional venture capital.

Acknowledgments

This report was made possible thanks to the support of:

This project would not have been possible without the collaboration, insights, and support from many people in our network.

Media Partner:

Endeavor Global Insight team: Leah Barto, May Galani and Carol Martinez

Survey supporters: Alexia Ventures, General Atlantic, NXTP Ventures, Canary, Norte Ventures, ONEVC, Monashees, DGF, Valor Capital Group

Interviewees

Entrepreneurs
João Del Valle (Ebanx)
Mariano Gomide (VTEX)
Ricardo Josuá (Pismo)
Alessio Alionço (Pipefy)
Lucas Vargas (Nomad)
Marcos Boschetti (Nelogica)
Mateus Bicalho (Hotmart)
Cassio Bobsin (Zenvia)
Carlos Souza (Logcomex)
Eduardo Ourivio (Grupo Trigo)

Endeavor Staff
Caela Tanjangco (Endeavor Global)
Patrick Kaper (Endeavor México)

Endeavor Network
Alex Szapiro (SoftBank) – Ambassador
Luiz Ribeiro (General Atlantic) – Ambassador
Michele Levy (Ilhabela Holdings) – Ambassador
Kiko Lumack (Valutia)
Eduardo Fuentes (Valutia)
Bruno Lino (Valutia)
Alexandre Soncini (VTEX)
Bernardo Piquet
Maristela Calazans (Nubank)
Christel Hupfeld (Gunderson Dettmer)
Benjamin Wohlauer (USA Consulate in Brazil)

About Endeavor Brazil

We are the Global Network of Trust of, by, and for entrepreneurs — those who dream bigger, scale faster, and reinvest their success. Guided by our belief that high-impact entrepreneurs transform economies, Endeavor has been building thriving entrepreneurial ecosystems in emerging and underserved markets since 1997. In Brazil, our mission is to consolidate the country among the world’s leading innovation ecosystems. 

Endeavor Brazil’s Research contributes to this ambition by generating data-driven insights and practical case studies on the drivers of the Brazilian entrepreneurial ecosystem. Leveraging Endeavor’s footprint, our studies explore the conditions that foster high-growth entrepreneurship, equipping founders and ecosystem leaders with the knowledge to scale companies and strengthen Brazil’s innovation landscape. 

For more information, contact karina.almeida@endeavor.org.br