Kickstarter CEO to step down

Yancey Strickler said he will stay on until the company finds a replacement and then he's on to some "new projects."

Kickstarter is a global community built around creativity and creative projects. Over 10 million people, from every continent on earth, have backed a Kickstarter project. Wednesday evening, CEO Yancy Strickler announced that he's moving on.

“Let me be the first to tell you: the job is great ... "

Strickler made the announcement in a post on Kickstarter’s website on Wednesday evening.

Kickstarter cofounder and CEO Yancey Strickler announced Wednesday evening he will step down from his role as CEO sometime this year, when a replacement is found.

Strickler made the announcement in a post on Kickstarter’s website.

“Let me be the first to tell you: the job is great. The team is seriously ridiculous. 2017 will be our eighth straight profitable year. Great stuff is cooking in the oven,” he wrote. “Being the CEO of Kickstarter is an unreal opportunity for someone with a deep connection to creative projects, someone who doesn’t believe in putting profit above all, and someone who’s excited by the challenge of building on a successful business that’s oriented to the long term.

Based in Greenpoint and founded in 2009 Kickstarter is one of the largest and oldest tech companies in Brooklyn.

Strickler, who has been CEO since 2014, said that dollars pledged on the platform have tripled during his tenure.

Kickstarter and Strickler have been vocal recently on social issues, joining a protest last week in support of net neutrality, joining a legal brief against the Trump administration’s travel ban and donating to the International Refugee Assistance Project.

Strickler did not explain why he’s leaving or what’s next for him, only that he’ll “be up to some new projects. Stay tuned.”
Tyler Woods is the lead reporter for Technical.ly Brooklyn. His work has previously appeared in the San Francisco Chronicle, the Houston Chronicle, CT Financial News and the New Canaan News. There's little he loves more than great tweets on Twitter.com.

Recently Published Stories

Gimlet raises a hefty $15 million to bolster podcasting empire

Read This Story

Maybe Etsy isn't a startup anymore?

Read This Story

Tech jobs this week: ProjectEconomics, Voodoo Manufacturing, goTenna, Gimlet

Read This Story

PicFic wins Make It In Brooklyn pitch competition

Read This Story

Why a Brooklyn startupper and a Warby Parker dev teamed up to make a site for political activism

Read This Story

Stink Studios is moving from Dumbo to Red Hook

Read This Story

We help organizations tell their innovation story

Let's Tell Share Story