David L. Cremin


David Lawrence Cremin is an American venture capitalist and co-founder of the seed stage venture capital firm DFJ Frontier.

Early career

Beginning in 1982, Cremin recorded and performed music, first as a member of Baton Rouge, and then as guitarist with Vincent Rocco. He then founded Vis-a-Vis Entertainment, Inc. representing and recording a number of artists including Michael Wolff, Downset and For Love Not Lisa. He also produced and recorded Engines of Aggression and Ether.
Subsequent to Vis-a-Vis Entertainment, Cremin began his venture capital career in 1998 co-founding Zone Ventures, an early stage venture capital firm focused on media technology ventures where he was responsible for fund management, fund raising, deal sourcing and due diligence. While at Zone Ventures, he helped lead an investment in DivX, a video compression technology and distribution company, which completed a successful IPO. He also served as a trustee for The BizWorld Foundation in San Francisco from 1999–2010.

Frontier

In 2002, Cremin co-founded Frontier with Scott Lenet and Draper Fisher Jurveston. He has helped lead investments in DivX, Prolacta Bioscience, Big Frame, AudioMicro, Clear Access, MaxPreps, among others. Cremin currently serves on the boards of MomentFeed, UCode, Livelist, and Ticketsauce.

Educational roles

Cremin started teaching venture capital and entrepreneurship at the Orfalea College of Business at California Polytechnic State University in San Luis Obispo in 2003; he was Adjunct Professor there until 2009. He has helped form and served on the Advisory Board of the Entrepreneurship Center at UC Santa Barbara, where he was an Adjunct Professor from 2003 to 2010. He has guest lectured at colleges and universities across North America and in Europe.
Cremin holds a B.S. in Industrial Engineering from Stanford University.

Personal life

Cremin is the son of Lawrence A. Cremin, a professor of education at Teachers College in New York, where he was president from 1974–1984 He was awarded a Pulitzer Prize for history in 1981 for "American Education: The National Experience, 1783-1876," the second volume of his three-volume history of U.S. schools
Cremin is the grandson of Arthur T. Cremin a serial entrepreneur, who among other things created a chain of music schools, providing inexpensive music lessons in neighborhoods across New York City, and providing frequent classical music concerts highlighting the schools’ students at various venues including Carnegie Hall.