Major Takeaways
Tristan Walker built one of the most successful Black-owned consumer tech companies in the United States.
His company Bevel proved Black-focused products can scale globally.
He now invests in the next generation of Black tech founders.
The Silicon Valley Disruptor Who Built Tech for Us, by Us
Thaddeus Myles here, family welcome back to Urban City’s Black Agenda, where we highlight the builders who are shaping tomorrow. Today is Day 20, and we are honoring a man who changed how Silicon Valley sees Black consumers, Black founders, and Black innovation. We are talking about Tristan Walker.
Tristan Walker was born and raised in New York City and grew up in a household that valued education and curiosity. He went on to attend Stanford University, where he studied African American Studies. While there, he became deeply interested in the intersection of technology, race, and opportunity. Walker noticed something early that would define his career: Black consumers were spending billions of dollars every year, yet almost no technology or consumer brands were being built specifically for them.
After graduating, Walker entered the technology industry and quickly began working at major Silicon Valley companies. He worked at Foursquare, Twitter, and later at Andreessen Horowitz, one of the most powerful venture capital firms in the world. While working at Andreessen Horowitz, Walker gained first hand exposure to how technology companies are funded, built, and scaled. He also noticed how few Black founders were being supported with venture capital.
That experience planted the seed for what would become his life’s work.
In 2013, Walker launched Walker & Company Brands, a consumer products company focused on the health and grooming needs of people of color. The company’s flagship product was Bevel, a shaving system designed specifically to address razor bumps and skin irritation that disproportionately affect Black men. For decades, major shaving brands had ignored this issue, even though millions of Black men experienced it.
Bevel was not just a product. It was a statement that Black consumers deserved companies that actually understood their needs.
The brand quickly gained traction. Black men across the country embraced Bevel because it worked. The company also built a strong cultural identity, using advertising and marketing that reflected real Black life instead of stereotypes. Walker made sure that the brand showed Black men as confident, professional, and diverse, which helped shift how Black masculinity was presented in mainstream marketing.
Walker & Company did not stop with Bevel. The company expanded into women’s hair care with Pattern Beauty and into other grooming and wellness products designed for people of color. Walker built his business not by copying existing companies but by filling gaps that the industry had ignored.
In 2018, Walker & Company Brands was acquired by Procter & Gamble, one of the largest consumer goods corporations in the world. The acquisition was historic. It marked one of the most significant exits ever for a Black founded consumer products company. The deal gave Walker the resources and platform to expand his mission even further.
After the acquisition, Walker became the global CEO of Bevel within Procter & Gamble and also served as a partner inside the corporation. But instead of simply settling into a corporate role, Walker continued pushing for change. He used his position to advocate for diversity in product development, marketing, and leadership.
In 2021, Walker launched a new venture capital firm called Walker & Company Brands Venture Fund and later joined Andreessen Horowitz as a general partner. In this role, he invests in early stage technology companies, with a special focus on founders from underrepresented communities. He has publicly stated that his goal is not only to fund Black founders but to ensure they have access to the same scale of opportunity as their peers.
Tristan Walker’s work has helped change how Silicon Valley thinks about Black consumers and Black entrepreneurs. By proving that companies built for people of color can be highly profitable, he challenged the false idea that Black markets are too small or too risky to invest in.
He also helped change how corporate America views inclusion. Instead of treating diversity as a marketing slogan, Walker demonstrated that it can be a core business strategy that creates real value.
Today, Tristan Walker is recognized as one of the most influential Black leaders in technology and entrepreneurship. His journey from Stanford to Silicon Valley to building and selling a successful company has inspired a new generation of Black founders who want to build companies that reflect their communities.
His story is a reminder that innovation is not just about technology. It is about seeing what others have ignored and building solutions that serve people who have been overlooked.
So on Day 20 of Urban City’s Black Agenda, we honor Tristan Walker not just as a founder, but as a builder of systems that make space for Black excellence in the modern economy.
I’m Thaddeus Myles, and as always, keep it locked to urbancitypodcast.com and the Urban City Podcast app all month long for Urban City Podcast’s Urban City Black Agenda, powered by 4AM Roastery at 4amroastery.com.








