Sam Yagan | |
---|---|
Born | April 10, 1977 |
Nationality | American |
Alma mater |
Harvard University Stanford University |
Occupation | Co-founder of OkCupid Co-founder of SparkNotes Vice-Chairman of Match.com CEO of Shoprunner |
Years active | 1999–present |
Spouse(s) | Jessica Droste Yagan (m. 2003) |
Parent(s) | Al Yagan Dr. Haifa Yagan |
Sam Yagan is an American Internet entrepreneur best known as the co-founder of OkCupid. In 2013, he was named to TIME Magazine's '100 Most Influential People in the World' list. He is the Vice-Chairman of the e-dating site Match.com. He is currently the CEO of Shoprunner.com
The son of Syrian immigrants, Al and Dr. Haifa Yagan, Sam was instilled with an entrepreneurial spirit at a young age. He grew up in Bourbonnais, Illinois, and studied at the Illinois Math and Science Academy and eventually Harvard University. Yagan holds a bachelor's degree in Applied Mathematics and Economics from Harvard University and an MBA from Stanford University, where he earned distinction as a Siebel Scholar, an Arjay Miller Scholar, and the Henry Ford Scholar, the award granted to each class’s valedictorian. His brother Danny Yagan is an economics professor at the University of California, Berkeley. His wife Jessica Droste Yagan is the CEO of Impact Engine, an impact investing fund.
In 1999 during his senior year at Harvard, Yagan and two of his classmates, Chris Coyne and Max Krohn, started the online study guide SparkNotes.Christian Rudder joined shortly after the founding. A year later they sold the company to Barnes & Noble for $30 million.
By age 25 Yagan was the president of eDonkey (founded in 2002), a P2P file-sharing network. As the developer of eDonkey, Yagan testified before the Senate Judiciary Committee expressing a need for balance between innovation and intellectual property.
In 2003 Yagan again teamed up with his Harvard classmates, Chris Coyne and Max Krohn and founded OkCupid.
In 2009 Yagan and Troy Henikoff founded Excelerate Labs.
In 2011 Yagan sold his dating website (OkCupid) to IAC for $50 million and in 2012 Yagan became the CEO of Match.com (a subsidiary of IAC).