Reid Hoffman
Co-Founder and Executive Chairman,
LinkedIn (Since 2003)
“Build a compact piece of work with the right leverage, and you can solve a very big problem”
“When you write a scholarly work, it tends to be understood by very few people, and has one publication point over time,” he said. “But when you build a service, you can touch millions, to hundreds of millions of people directly”
“Data will be foundational in the next wave of mass applications that go to hundreds of millions of people”
Reid Hoffman is a leading modern pioneering entrepreneur of 21st century and an angel investor (he has invested in some 114 tech startups since 1995, including juggernauts like Facebook, Flickr, Groupon and Zynga, both on his own and as a partner in the venture firm Greylock Partners). He is a creator of strategic products and organizations that would help the society to explore and adapt themselves to the changes in the future business arena. He had deeper insights of global financial structures and models, latest technology and a sharp acute vision to achieve synchronization between them. He became the major voice and navigator for the entrepreneurship, after he co-founded and took up the responsibility as Executive Chairman of LinkedIn, the most popular and the world’s largest professional networking site in the year 2003.
Reid Hoffman strongly believes that knowledge sharing through professional networks is one of the best ways of learning. This belief resulted in starting of LinkedIn. Under the strong leadership and vision of Hoffman, the company spread its wings and is serving more than 100 million users (44 million from U.S and 56 million from outside U.S), with the help of 1,700 employees, across 200 countries around the world, with a market capitalization of about 7.9 billion dollars as of now. The revenue comes from diversified areas of operations such as subscriptions, advertising, and software licensing. The company went public 8 months ago and the stock price of the company nearly doubled. | |||||||||||||||||||
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By the flop of Social Net, Reid was a bit frustrated. However, soon he realized that a product or a service should have a potential to touch millions of people. With the lesson learnt, Reid left Social Net in 1999 and joined Mr.Thiel at PayPal. Thiel was also co-student and his friend at Stanford. At that point of time, PayPal was struggling through many challenges regarding Visa and Master Cards. Reid Hoffman took up the responsibility of Executive Vice President of PayPal and turned around the company. His key role was to manage external relations of the company. He was jam packed with meetings to manage all business relationships such as business development, corporate development, international, government relations, and banking/payments infrastructure etc. He managed to convince and persuade credit card companies and regulators. He evolved as a strong and higher order strategist and a great connector at PayPal. PayPal survived and went public in 2002, making Reid and many of his colleagues multimillionaires. During his stance at PayPal, Hoffman was instrumental in acquisition by eBay and was responsible partnerships with Intuit, Visa, MasterCard and Wells Fargo. | |||||||||||||||||||
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Things took different turns, Kvamme and Reid had some debate of thoughts and relationships got disturbed. Reid was a person who was least bothered about corporate spending and margins and viewed the world in a broader perspective. | |||||||||||||||||||
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Young Reid with his Father | |||||||||||||||||||
The great American entrepreneur and venture capitalist was born in | |||||||||||||||||||
Awards and Honors | |||||||||||||||||||
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