9 Incredibly Successful Startups That Were Born At Stanford
Instagram cofounders Kevin Systrom and Mike Krieger met through the Stanford alumni network.
Trulia cofounders Pete Flint and Sami Inkinen met during class at the Graduate School of Business.
Flint and Inkinen were inspired to create Trulia when they saw how difficult it was to find a place to live in Palo Alto. They developed their real estate aggregation site during two semesters in Stanford's competitive "Startup Garage" class.
The Monday after graduation, they had lined up meetings with several VCs interested in funding their company.
As of June 2014, Trulia had 54 million monthly active users. Trulia was bought by Zillow for $3.5 billion in July.
The idea for StubHub came out of a business plan competition at Stanford.
Eric Baker and Jeff Fluhr met in a class at Stanford's Graduate School of Business. After sharing stories of the problems they had had selling event tickets online, they entered a competition with the business plan for a company they called needaticket.com. After the plan made the final round, they pulled out of the competition, and in 2000, Fluhr dropped out of school to work on the company full-time.
Baker and Fluhr used Stanford computer labs and classrooms to build their site, now a major player in secondary ticket sales for sports and entertainment events.
The company was bought by eBay for $300 million in 2007.
Loopt was founded by three Stanford sophomores.
The location-based app was created by Sam Altman, Nick Sivo, and Alok Deshpande, who met during their second year in school. They left Stanford soon after to get to work building their app.
Loopt was bought by Green Dot Corporation for $43.4 million in 2012, and Altman now works as president of top tech incubator Y Combinator.
He'll be returning to Stanford this fall, leading a class called "How to Start a Startup", with big-name tech executives like Paul Graham, Peter Thiel, Marc Andreessen, Ron Conway, and Marissa Mayer joining for weekly lectures.
Bonobos cofounders Brian Spaly and Andy Dunn were housemates.
Both students at the Stanford Graduate School of Business, Spaly and Dunn founded Bonobos as a way to improve online shopping for men. Company lore has it that Spaly sewed the prototype for the first Bonobos pants in the house the two lived in near campus.
Spaly went on to found personal-stylist company Trunk Club, while Dunn stayed on as CEO of Bonobos. The company recently raised $55 million to expand its offline presence.
"Formation of New Ventures, Entrepreneurship and Venture Capital, and Product Market Fit," Spaly said to the Graduate School of Business' news service. "All are comically relevant to what I’ve done in the last handful of years."
Snapchat cofounders Evan Spiegel and Bobby Murphy were frat brothers.
Snapchat cofounders Evan Spiegel and Bobby Murphy lived across the hall from each other in Stanford's Kappa Sigma fraternity house.
"We weren’t cool," Murphy told Forbes. "So we tried to build things to be cool."
Snapchat now reportedly has 100 million users and is close to finishing a $20 million fundraising round at a $10 billion valuation.
Ren Ng created the technology for the Lytro camera while researching at Stanford.
Ng has bachelor's, master's, and doctorate degrees in computer science from Stanford. During his doctorate research, he began researching the light-field technology that would eventually become the highly successful Lytro camera.
Ng's company got a boost when he met Manu Kumar, founder of K9 Ventures and a fellow Stanford engineering alumnus.
"I met Manu at an all-day celebration of the fortieth anniversary of Stanford's computer science department," Ng told the news service for Stanford's School of Engineering. "I showed him the camera and the software and he slid a check across the table."
Pulse was created by two Stanford grad students in a "Launchpad" class.
Ankit Gupta and Akshay Kothari were enrolled in the School of Engineering's design program — or d.school, as it's often called — when they started developing their mobile news aggregation app.
Their "Launchpad" product design class started on the same day in 2010 that Apple announced the iPad, and Gupta and Kothari saw an opportunity to develop for a format that no other programmers had breached.
Just a few months later, Steve Jobs himself highlighted Pulse as one of the premier apps available for the iPad during his WWDC keynote. In April of 2013, LinkedIn purchased Pulse for $90 million, with the plan to make use of the startup's many content partnerships.
Coursera was founded by two Stanford professors.
This online-learning platform was created by Daphne Koller and Andrew Ng, two professors in Stanford's computer science department.
The idea for Coursera evolved out of an extremely popular machine learning class Ng taught in 2011. Out of 104,000 people enrolled online, more than 46,000 completed at least one homework assignment, and 13,000 received a "statement of accomplishment," according to AllThingsD.
Now Coursera offers more than 600 free courses and has seven million registered students. Ng was recently hired as chief scientist at Baidu Research, while Koller has stayed on as president of Coursera. The company continues to receive millions in funding.
Stanford ranked at No. 1 on our list of the best colleges in America. Now see the rest of the list.
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