Ted Livingston (Kik)

Ted Livingston (born 1987) is founder of Kik Messenger that provides mobile messaging service.[2][3]

Ted Livingston
Born1987
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
NationalityCanadian
Alma materUniversity of Waterloo,
OccupationFounder and CEO of Kik Messenger
Spouse(s)Christine Thayer [1]

Early life

Livingston was born in Toronto. As a child, Livingston had a passion for building Lego structures and automated machines in his basement. He continues following this interest on the school robotics team.[4]

From 1997 to 2005, Livingston attended the Crescent School, in Toronto.[5] He later stated that Crescent "provided an education which couldn't be more perfect for me as an individual. It allowed me to grow and develop my own philosophies and directions in life."[5]

2005–Present: UWaterloo and Kik

Livingston took a mechatronics bachelor's degree at the University of Waterloo from 2005 to 2009[6] in order to "pursue his dream of building robots."[7] He participated in the Waterloo co-op program there, with placements at Honda and the City of Toronto government. Livingston eventually landed a co-op position as a system engineering project coordinator at Research in Motion.

In December 2007, eight months into his co-op, Livingston was promoted by Research in Motion to "Technical Product Management Coordinator".[5] In 2008, he turned down a full-time job to return to school at the advice of his manager.

Back at Waterloo, Livingston decided to take part in the Velocity program, a startup-focused community where he founded Kik Messenger instead of completing his degree.[6]

Kik now competes with Facebook and WeChat, boasts over 275 million registered users,[8] and is used by approximately 40 percent of American teens.[9] Chinese internet giant Tencent recently invested $50 million into kik, placing its value at $1 Billion.[10]

In 2014, Forbes placed him on their "Top 30 under 30" in their technology list.[11] In November 2015, Torontolife ranked Livingston at #20 on their "Toronto's 50 Most Influential,".[12]

gollark: It does not, in fact, ever experience data loss, due to our uncountably infinite redundancy policy and utterly unchanging memory cell™ technology.
gollark: This cannot happen. Our storage is very good.
gollark: However, they effectively cannot die since we can just reinstantiate archived Olivias as needed.
gollark: They do not, we attain that from a separate subsystem.
gollark: We have a brainscan of them on file.

References


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