Kevin Hartz

Kevin Hartz is Co-Founder and Chairman of Eventbrite (NYSE: EB). He is an early-stage investor and advisor to successful startups including PayPal, Pinterest, Uber, Airbnb, Trulia, Thumbtack, Gusto, Joby Aviation, and Newfront Insurance. He is also Co-Founder of Xoom (IPO 2013, acquired by PayPal).

Early life and education

Hartz was born in Berkeley, California and raised in Orinda, California. He holds a BAS from Stanford University in history, as well as an MA in British history from University College, Oxford.[1]

Career

Hartz began his career at Silicon Graphics (SGI) as the product manager for Virtual reality browser Cosmo Player. Subsequently, Hartz was a co-founder of ConnectGroup, a startup providing high-speed Internet access to the hotel industry.[2] Five months after incorporating the company, it was acquired by LodgeNet[3] (NASDAQ: LNET).

In 2001, Hartz co-founded Xoom, an international money remittance business, along with Alan Braverman. He served as CEO until 2005 and served on the Board of Directors through its 2012 IPO[4] and subsequent acquisition by PayPal in 2015. The company had a total equity value of $1.1 billion[5]

Hartz founded Eventbrite, the global self-service ticketing platform, in 2006 with Julia Hartz and Renaud Visage.

Hartz joined Founders Fund in September 2016 and served as a partner but announced his exit from the company in June 2018.[6] He currently serves on the Board of Directors for Eventbrite (Chairman) and Lookout.

Investments

Hartz began his early stage investing after the sale of ConnectGroup to LodgeNet. He took the profits from that sale, and invested in a little-known company called FieldLink, which later became Confinity, which then became PayPal.[7][8][9] This early investment in PayPal influenced his later founding of Xoom and Eventbrite. Other investments include:

Personal life

Hartz lives in San Francisco with his wife, Julia Hartz, and two daughters.

gollark: It's not a frequency.
gollark: No, that's a speed.
gollark: =wolf
gollark: See, it's important to recognize that distinction.
gollark: What do you mean you "perceive" time as discrete? You mean you *arbitrarily think so*, or what?

References

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