Kenneth Lin (entrepreneur)

Kenneth Lin is an American tech entrepreneur. Founded in 2007, his best known business is Credit Karma, an online credit score monitoring service. He continues to serve as the CEO..[1]

Kenneth Lin
Born
EducationBoston University
OccupationEntrepreneur
Known forCredit Karma

Early life and career

At the age of 4, he immigrated with his parents from China to the United States.[1] His parents worked working class jobs at casinos and restaurants to pay his tuition fees to attend Boston University.[1] In the late 1990s, Lin worked in the credit card industry.[2] He had previously founded Multilytics Marketing, a data driven marketing agency.

Credit Karma

Lin has said the inspiration for Credit Karma began in 2006 when he was discouraged by the cost of obtaining his credit score and sought to create an alternative.[3] Credit Karma was established to provide free credit scores and proved to be a hit, growing (according to the company) to over 85 million users by 2020.[4] Lin has sought to expand the offerings of the website by including analytical tools and calculators, credit monitoring, education videos, and other tools.[5] In an interview with the American Banker, he said the "ultimate goal" was to make the credit process more simple with the aim of being "able to make the application process two or three clicks instead of 20 or 30 minutes."

In raising venture capital funding, the company has also performed well, reaching a valuation of $3.5 billion according to Fortune magazine.[6] Although successful in finding investors, Lin has expressed a desire to avoid quickly taking the company public. In a column penned for Fast Company he wrote about a litany of negatives associated with an IPO. His column especially focused on the downsides of "quarterly scrutiny" endured by public companies which would get in the way of the "slow and steady implementation" he wanted.[7]

Credit Karma was finally acquired by Intuit for $7.1 billion in 2020. [8]

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gollark: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jazelle
gollark: Technically, Java bytecode can actually be run directly on certain ARM devices.
gollark: And you do compile Java. `javac` converts Java source to JVM bytecode.
gollark: What? Python generally has *more* builtins than Java for things.

References

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