Paul Bragiel


Paul Bragiel is an internet entrepreneur and currently a managing partner of Bragiel Brothers

Early life

Bragiel, the oldest child of Mary and Walter Bragiel, was raised in Mt. Prospect and South Barrington, Illinois. In the late 1990s, he was involved in the demoscene.

Ventures

Bragiel graduated from University of Illinois in 1999. Shortly after graduating he founded his first company, Paragon 5, with offices in Chicago and Poland. In 2004, he founded the first location-based social network, Meetro. In 2008, he founded Lefora. which was sold to Crowdgather in the summer of 2010.
In 2010, he launched i/o Ventures, a seed fund and accelerator based in San Francisco.
In 2012, he launched three more technology-focused seed funds. Savannah Fund and Golden Gate Ventures were created to foster entrepreneurship in those regions. Gamefounders invests in companies building gaming-related products.
In 2015, he launched Presence Capital, a $10m venture fund investing in early-stage virtual reality and augmented reality companies.
In 2019, he launched SMOK Ventures, a $12m venture fund investing in early-stage companies in Poland.
He travels around the world to give lectures on startups and is an advisor to governments on their technology and entrepreneurship policy including Philippines, Singapore, Brazil and Tanzania.

Olympics

In 2013, Bragiel trained in cross country skiing in Finland with a view to competing in the 2014 Sochi Olympics under the Colombian flag. In order to participate, Bragiel obtained Colombian citizenship by presidential decree and was soon globally addressed as the man who was hacking his way into the Olympics.
For the 2016 Summer Olympics, Bragiel joined the Tonga delegation as team attaché.
During the 2018 Winter Olympics, Bragiel served as a coach for both the Colombia and Tonga cross-country ski teams. He is noted as being the first person to participate in the Opening and Closing Ceremonies for two different countries in the same Olympics.