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CommentaryVenture Capital

The most contrarian and durable bet in AI is 85 million moms

By
Allison Stern
Allison Stern
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By
Allison Stern
Allison Stern
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June 3, 2026, 9:30 AM ET
Allison Stern is the Founder and General Partner of Mother Ventures, the first venture capital firm focused exclusively on the mother-as-consumer. She is also a mom of two.
as
Allison Stern is the Founder and General Partner of Mother Ventures.Brandi Rollins

There is a pattern hiding in plain sight across the biggest consumer success stories in history. They all start with moms.

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Chrysler, on the verge of bankruptcy, bet the company on designing the ultimate vehicle for moms. They created the minivan, and it saved them. Three women from Utah told Stanley their real customer wasn’t an outdoorsman – it was a mother on the go. That turned into $680 million in revenue growth. DoorDash went to birthing conventions in the early days to reach new parents and famously won the delivery war by focusing on the suburbs, not cities. The company is now worth nearly $70 billion. 

Every one of these companies discovered the same thing: when you solve for mothers, you unlock a market that is large, loyal, and loud. Despite these realities, moms are generally overlooked and belittled. “Mommy blogger” is said with derision not the glorification of an internet pioneer. 

It’s worked throughout history, but now is the time to really pay attention. AI makes this the best moment in decades to build for mothers.

She doesn’t want tools. She wants outcomes

Eighty-five million mothers make 85% of household purchases and control roughly $2.4 trillion in annual consumer spending in the United States. Moms are the primary decision-maker for her family’s healthcare, education, food, childcare, and financial planning. She is running a small enterprise — managing vendors, budgets, schedules, personnel — without a team, without infrastructure, and without anyone treating her like the sophisticated customer she is.

When something goes wrong — a developmental delay, a broken furnace, a childcare gap, a health mystery— she doesn’t want more information to sift through. She is already drowning in information. She wants the problem solved. She wants the outcome.

Until recently, delivering that at scale was structurally impossible. The coordination required to match her specific problem to the right solution, at the right time, in a form she could actually access, was beyond what any startup could manage profitably.AI changes the math entirely.

The autopilot she always needed

Sequoia’s Julien Bek recently argued that the next great companies won’t sell software, they’ll sell the work itself. Not the tool that helps you close the books, but closed books. Every improvement in AI makes the service better rather than making it obsolete.

He was mapping this across B2B: accounting, legal, insurance. He wasn’t thinking about mothers.

But mothers are the original autopilot customer. They have always wanted outcomes, not interfaces. What AI unlocks is the ability to deliver those outcomes at a price point and scale that was never before possible — to bring the specialist to her door, to match the right caregiver to her specific family, to navigate a broken healthcare system on her behalf. 

Mothers approach purchasing decisions more like B2B buyers than ordinary consumers. They evaluate vendors, conduct research, compare options across price and quality, and sign off on spending across food, healthcare, education, childcare, home, and transportation. They are not impulsive. They are thorough. 

The companies winning right now aren’t selling AI to mothers. They’re using AI to deliver what she’s always wanted. In each case, the moat is owning the outcome. The relationship. The trust. The last mile. AI is both central and invisible to the consumer. 

Coral Care puts pediatric occupational, physical, and speech therapists directly in families’ homes. The therapist is the product. AI is the infrastructure that makes the model scalable — faster intake and insurance submission, smarter scheduling, better outcomes tracking. Sunfish provides a fertility intelligence platform that predicts, supports, and helps finance individual IVF journeys, using personalized data at scale to turn one of the most overwhelming and expensive medical experiences a woman can face into something navigable. Rosie guarantees in-home childcare, housekeeping, and meal prep on demand. AI matches, trains, schedules, and gets smarter with every session.  

When you get it right, she tells everyone

There is no more powerful distribution engine in the consumer economy than a mother who has found something that actually works. She doesn’t casually recommend a pediatric occupational therapist. She recommends that therapist because she has done the work — spent her own precious, limited time on research to find someone who can help her child. Her endorsement carries weight that no paid channel can replicate.

Tin Can is proof of this. The product is a wifi-enabled landline phone for kids — peer-to-peer calling, no apps, no social media, no browser. It exists to solve one of the most acute and unresolved tensions in modern parenting: you want your child to have independence and connection, but you are not ready to hand them the internet. Every parent can relate to the moment your kid asks for a smartphone.  

Tin Can built the solution. A cool and cute landline phone that’s free to call other friends with a Tin Can. Less than a year into business, the company had sold hundreds of thousands of devices with no marketing budget and no splashy launch. One mother at a Kansas City school spearheaded a push that got 95% of K-5 families to sign on and has since fielded more than 100 inquiries from parents at other schools. The product went so viral that Jimmy Kimmel included it in his monologue. That is what happens when you solve a real problem for this customer—she’ll move markets and shape culture for her kid

The most durable bet in the AI era

We are living through a moment of genuine uncertainty about what AI will displace and what it will create. But in the middle of it, there is one consumer whose needs are not going away, whose spending is not discretionary, and whose problems are not getting simpler.

I started Mother Ventures as the first venture fund to invest in mother-as-consumer. Two years in, our thesis is working. We’ve deployed $4 million into fourteen portfolio companies—including breakout winners like Tin Can and Coral Care. Early investments have raised over $50 million in follow-on funding from top-tier investors. 

The mother is the nation’s caregiver, its primary consumer, its most reliable economic bellwether. For generations, the companies that figured this out — sometimes by accident, sometimes by design — built some of the most enduring businesses in American history.

The difference now is that AI makes it possible to build for her deliberately, at scale, in a way that actually delivers what she has always been asking for.

Founders and investors who recognize this signal now will build the defining consumer companies of the AI era.

As go moms, so goes the nation.

The opinions expressed in Fortune.com commentary pieces are solely the views of their authors and do not necessarily reflect the opinions and beliefs of Fortune.

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By Allison Stern
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