Jay Gould (born April 1, 1979) [1] is an American tech entrepreneur and the founder & CEO of Yashi. [2] Gould is also an active angel investor, and has backed web-based startups including DogVacay, [3] Tout, Buffer, and Fitocracy. [4]
Gould graduated from Rowan University in 2001, where he earned a bachelor's degree in Law & Justice. [5][ better source needed]
In December 2005, Gould sold his first business to Bolt Media for an undisclosed amount and joined Bolt as its President. [6] At the time of the sale, Gould's websites had 3.3 million U.S. unique visitors, according to comScore Media Metrics. [1]
While under Gould's management, Bolt's revenue grew to $7 million annually, 5.3 million U.S. visitors to their website monthly, [7][ failed verification] culminating in signing a definitive agreement to sell the company for up to $30 million. [8] [9] [10] Just prior to signing the $30 million definitive agreement, Universal Music Group filed a lawsuit against Bolt, MySpace and others for alleged copyright infringement. [11] Bolt was ultimately unable to reach a settlement with Universal Music, which resulted in the termination of Bolt's $30 million acquisition, eventually leading Bolt to file an assignment for the benefit of creditors. [12] [13]
During Gould's tenure at Bolt, he co-founded WikiYou, which raised $500,000 from investors, including Mayfield Fund, First Round Capital, and Reid Hoffman. [14]
Gould later founded GamersMedia, the first vertical-advertising network to bring brand advertisers to casual-gaming websites, which at its launch had over 20 million unique visitors across 40 sites. [15] [16] [17] On February 2, 2015, the company was acquired by Nexstar Media Group for $33 million. [18]
Jay Gould and Caitlin Gould founded Yashi in 2007. [19] Yashi became a location-focused advertising platform that targeted mobile and web video advertising. [20]
The company was named to Inc. Magazine's Inc. 5000 list of the Fastest-Growing Private Companies in America for four consecutive years from 2012–2015. [20] [21]
Yashi was acquired by Nexstar Broadcasting Group on February 2, 2015, for $33 million. [18]
In October 2011, Gould launched foundville.com, a video podcast site featuring interviews with successful Internet entrepreneurs. Gould has interviewed founders of companies such as HotOrNot, [22] RockYou, [23] Adify, [24] Mochi Media, [25] CapLinked, [26] The Receivables Exchange, [27] Wikia, [28] SitePoint, [29] and others.
Gould is an angel investor, with sizable contributions to companies such as Buffer, [30] CapLinked, Tout, iDoneThis, Fitocracy, and Cadee, among others. [31] In March 2012, Gould was part of a $1 million funding initiative for DogVacay, an online marketplace for residential dog boarding. [31]
In addition to startup capital, Gould also contributes his knowledge and expertise to entrepreneurs. He is a member of the Rowan University Entrepreneurship Program Advisor Council (ENTAC).
Jay Gould (born April 1, 1979) [1] is an American tech entrepreneur and the founder & CEO of Yashi. [2] Gould is also an active angel investor, and has backed web-based startups including DogVacay, [3] Tout, Buffer, and Fitocracy. [4]
Gould graduated from Rowan University in 2001, where he earned a bachelor's degree in Law & Justice. [5][ better source needed]
In December 2005, Gould sold his first business to Bolt Media for an undisclosed amount and joined Bolt as its President. [6] At the time of the sale, Gould's websites had 3.3 million U.S. unique visitors, according to comScore Media Metrics. [1]
While under Gould's management, Bolt's revenue grew to $7 million annually, 5.3 million U.S. visitors to their website monthly, [7][ failed verification] culminating in signing a definitive agreement to sell the company for up to $30 million. [8] [9] [10] Just prior to signing the $30 million definitive agreement, Universal Music Group filed a lawsuit against Bolt, MySpace and others for alleged copyright infringement. [11] Bolt was ultimately unable to reach a settlement with Universal Music, which resulted in the termination of Bolt's $30 million acquisition, eventually leading Bolt to file an assignment for the benefit of creditors. [12] [13]
During Gould's tenure at Bolt, he co-founded WikiYou, which raised $500,000 from investors, including Mayfield Fund, First Round Capital, and Reid Hoffman. [14]
Gould later founded GamersMedia, the first vertical-advertising network to bring brand advertisers to casual-gaming websites, which at its launch had over 20 million unique visitors across 40 sites. [15] [16] [17] On February 2, 2015, the company was acquired by Nexstar Media Group for $33 million. [18]
Jay Gould and Caitlin Gould founded Yashi in 2007. [19] Yashi became a location-focused advertising platform that targeted mobile and web video advertising. [20]
The company was named to Inc. Magazine's Inc. 5000 list of the Fastest-Growing Private Companies in America for four consecutive years from 2012–2015. [20] [21]
Yashi was acquired by Nexstar Broadcasting Group on February 2, 2015, for $33 million. [18]
In October 2011, Gould launched foundville.com, a video podcast site featuring interviews with successful Internet entrepreneurs. Gould has interviewed founders of companies such as HotOrNot, [22] RockYou, [23] Adify, [24] Mochi Media, [25] CapLinked, [26] The Receivables Exchange, [27] Wikia, [28] SitePoint, [29] and others.
Gould is an angel investor, with sizable contributions to companies such as Buffer, [30] CapLinked, Tout, iDoneThis, Fitocracy, and Cadee, among others. [31] In March 2012, Gould was part of a $1 million funding initiative for DogVacay, an online marketplace for residential dog boarding. [31]
In addition to startup capital, Gould also contributes his knowledge and expertise to entrepreneurs. He is a member of the Rowan University Entrepreneurship Program Advisor Council (ENTAC).