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Seth Goldstein (born 1970) is an American entrepreneur and angel investor. He has founded or co-founded six companies, including Crossfader, Turntable.fm, SiteSpecific, SocialMedia, and Majestic Research.


Early life and education

Goldstein was born in Waltham, Massachusetts. His father, Larry, was a software engineer, and his mother Faye, was an entrepreneur. He started acting as a child, and began to perform professionally at the age of 10. Goldstein attended high school at Newton South and spent his senior year at Interlochen Arts Academy, a private boarding school focused on the performing arts in Interlochen, Michigan. He attended college at Columbia University, where, as a student, he founded the Columbia Theater Network (CTN). Goldstein graduated in 1992 with a degree in dramatic literature.


Career


1993–2001: Riverbed Media, SiteSpecific, Flatiron Partners

Following his graduation, Goldstein worked as an archivist for Robert Wilson's Byrd Hoffman Foundation and then founded Riverhead Media with multi-media artist Paul Kaiser and publisher Joost Effers. In 1993 he received a fellowship and moved to Frankfurt, Germany where he was a multi-media artist-in-residence at the Center for Art and Media Technology, and later initiated the creation of a production and research laboratory for multimedia applications at Jeff Shaw's ZKM Institute for VisualMedia. While in Frankfurt, Goldstein also worked for the Frankfurt Ballet and collaborated with its director William Forsythe on the creation of ''Improvisation Technologies'', a CD-ROM that illustrated Forsythe's choreographic method. He returned to New York in late 1994, and worked briefly as an HTML producer for agency.com, Wolff New Media, and at Condé Nast. While there, he heard about an opportunity to create an internet presence for
Duracell Duracell Inc. is an American manufacturer of alkaline batteries, specialty cells, rechargeables and smart power systems, owned by Berkshire Hathaway. The company has its origins in the 1920s, through the work of Samuel Ruben and Philip Mallory, ...
, and in 1995, he and David Byman co-founded SiteSpecific, an interactive marketing company. Launched in Goldstein's apartment with computers financed through credit cards, SiteSpecific's initial focus was on Duracell. With a staff of three, the company developed a brand awareness campaign which included seeding images of the batteries on major internet sites. SiteSpecific later won a Clio for their work on the Duracell corporate site. Site Specific was acquired by
CKS Group CKS Group was an advertising agency based in Cupertino, California, that catered to technology companies. The initials CKS came from the three name partners, Bill Cleary, Mark Kvamme, and Tom Suiter. All three had previously worked for Apple Compu ...
in May 1997 for $6.5 million. In 1998 Goldstein joined the VC firm Flatiron Partners, founded by Fred Wilson and Jerry Colonna. An entrepreneur-in-residence and investment principal, he built and managed a $75 million new-technology portfolio of pervasive computing investments.


2002–2010: Majestic Research, Root Market, SocialMedia

After the dot-com collapse of 2001, in 2003, Goldstein launched Majestic Research, an investment research company which used ComScore and other data to generate proprietary guidance for buy side funds. He served as the company's founding CEO and then chairman until 2010, when the company was acquired by
Investment Technology Group Investment Technology Group, Inc. was a United States-based multinational agency brokerage and financial markets technology firm aimed at a hedge fund and asset management clientele. One of the first suppliers of electronic trading services, IT ...
for $75 million. In January 2005, with Jerry Neumann and Candice Sherman, Goldstein co-founded
Root Markets In vascular plants, the roots are the organs of a plant that are modified to provide anchorage for the plant and take in water and nutrients into the plant body, which allows plants to grow taller and faster. They are most often below the sur ...
, a financial exchange allowing consumers to sell online data about themselves. In late 2006, he and his family moved to the Bay Area, and in 2007, he launched SocialMedia.com, a social advertising platform for publishers. With Dave Gentzel, a 24-year-old programmer, Goldstein developed an app that let people throw virtual items of food at one another. To acquire the virtual food, users paid with virtual currency; to acquire the currency, users answered questions posed by marketers. Called FoodFight, it attracted 2 million users. FoodFight was followed by successful apps including, Happyhour and Appaholic, and SocialMedia. The company was sold to LivingSocial in 2011 for an undisclosed amount.


2010–Present: Stickybits, Turntable.fm, Crossfader, DJZ, LiveAds

In 2010, Goldstein launched Stickybits with Billy Chasen, an artist and programmer he had met in 2006. Originally envisioned as "digital graffiti," it enabled users to attach digital media to real-world objects using barcodes which could be read by smartphones. Stickybits launched with 300,000 Stickybits at SXSW in 2010, but struggled to become sustainable. Chasen and Goldstein subsequently relaunched the company as Turntable.fm. 'An "egalitarian online social music platform," it attracted more than 600,000 users in four months and raised $7 million in funding at a $37 million valuation. In early 2012, after disagreements over Turntable.fm's direction, Goldstein began to shift his focus towards new projects while remaining chairman of the company. A lifelong music fan, Goldstein was exposed to Electronic dance music while at Turntable.fm and at festivals such as
Burning Man Burning Man is an event focused on community, art, self-expression, and self-reliance held annually in the western United States. The name of the event comes from its culminating ceremony: the symbolic burning of a large wooden effigy, referred ...
. In September 2012, he launched DJZ, a content site which combined editorial, videos, DJ mixes, interviews, contests, and links to pages for popular DJs. It also offered a free iPhone app, called DJZTxT, that allowed users to create dance music through text messages using emojis. It was funded by Index Ventures, True Ventures and Google Ventures, in addition to
Troy Carter Troy Carter may refer to: * Troy Carter (physicist) (born 1973), American plasma physicist *Troy Carter (politician) (born 1963), American politician * Troy Carter (talent manager) (born 1972), American music talent manager Fictional characters *2 ...
and Shari Redstone. While at DJZ, Goldstein developed an app with iOS engineer Ilias Karim. Called Crossfader, it allowed users to create their own music through an iPhone-based remix and DJ platform that used loops and filters controlled by a gyroscope and accelerometer. In July 2016, he founded LiveAds, a creative agency and production studio.


Activism, philanthropy, and related work

Goldstein was the founding co-chairman of the Interactive Advertising Bureau's User Generated Content and Social Media committee, which set standard definitions, common metrics and industry best practices for the social media advertising industry. He has been an active advisor to the US State Department Global Entrepreneurship Program, and has traveled to Egypt, Greece and Turkey to as part of the program. In 2005, he co-founded the non-profit organization Attention Trust. It distributed free software designed to act as an interface between Web users and marketers and educated internet users on issues related to the marketing value of their online activities. Goldstein co-wrote ''The Secret to Raising Money'' with Michael Simpson. It was published in 2012. He has spoken at conferences including ''
Billboard A billboard (also called a hoarding in the UK and many other parts of the world) is a large outdoor advertising structure (a billing board), typically found in high-traffic areas such as alongside busy roads. Billboards present large advertise ...
'' magazine's FutureSound, the IAB Annual Leadership Forum, Big Omaha, and O'Reilly Web 2.0.


Personal

The father of two sons, Goldstein lives in Marin County, California.


Investments (partial list)

*Betaworks *bit.ly *
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* Del.icio.us * Etherpad *Gumroad *Joyride *Philz Coffee * Poshmark


Boards and affiliations

*Attention Trust, Founder, 2005–present *Director, Valassis, June 1999 – April 2006 *Director & Co-chair, Social Media Committee, Internet Advertising Bureau, April 2009 – April 2011


References


External links


Official websiteTwitter
{{DEFAULTSORT:Goldstein, Seth 1970 births Living people Angel investors American chief executives Columbia University alumni Internet pioneers