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Renaud Laplanche

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Nationality
  
French

Role
  
Entrepreneur

Occupation
  
Entrepreneur

Alma mater
  
HEC Paris

Years active
  
1995–Present

Name
  
Renaud Laplanche


Renaud Laplanche Lending Club CEO Renaud Laplanche Visits Mad Money to Talk


Born
  
1970
France

Known for
  
MatchPoint, Lending Club

Residence
  
San Francisco, California, United States

Organizations founded
  
Lending Club

Renaud laplanche l entrepreneur fran ais qui a conquis wall street


Renaud Laplanche is a French-American entrepreneur and business executive. He is the founder and was for a decade the CEO of Lending Club, an American peer-to-peer lending company. He resigned from the position in May 2016 after losing the confidence of its board.

Contents

Renaud Laplanche httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

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Early life and education

Renaud Laplanche was born in 1970 and grew up in France. He was interested in sailing and raced competitively on the national level, winning the French sailing championships on Lasers, 13.5 ft, one-sail, one-man sailboats, in 1988 and 1990.

Renaud Laplanche Media Center

Laplanche studied business and law. He received a post-graduate DESS-DJCE (J.D.) degree in Tax and Corporate Law from Université de Montpellier, Montpellier, France, and an MBA degree from HEC Business School in Paris, France, and London Business School.

Cleary Gottlieb Steen & Hamilton

From 1995 to 1999, Laplanche worked as a securities lawyer and senior associate at the law offices of Cleary Gottlieb Steen & Hamilton, first in Paris and later in New York. The cases he worked on included mergers, acquisitions, joint ventures, and investment transactions involving technology companies.

TripleHop Technologies

In New York, Laplanche soon left the law offices and, in 1999, jointly with Franck Nazikian, started his own company, a software company called TripleHop Technologies. The company had an office in the North Tower of the New York World Trade Center that was destroyed in the September 11 attacks. TripleHop suffered major losses, including its computers and recently developed software code.

In 2003 TripleHop launched its MatchPoint crawler and search engine for enterprise content. The engine provided a single search point for structured and unstructured data (databases, e-mail, file and document systems, the internet), used Support Vector Machine algorithms for indexing and concept-based retrieval, and collaborative filtering for correlating related topics, created a user profile for each user on the basis of user's search history to tailor query results to particular users, and permitted context-sensitive search where queries were expanded by synonyms from domain-specific thesaurus-type taxonomies.

MatchPoint was adopted by many U.S. media companies (CNN, Turner Broadcasting, AOL, USA Today, ABC news, Dow Jones, New York Times and others) as their preferred search engine and attracted the attention of major software vendors. In June 2005, TripleHop Technologies was acquired by Oracle Corporation and MatchPoint was integrated with Oracle's other products. Laplanche reportedly earned 10 million USD from the acquisition. He moved to California and from June 2005 to October 2006 worked at Oracle as the Head of Product Management, Search Technologies, managing integration and overseeing sales of search engine products.

Lending Club

In 2006 Laplanche left Oracle and co-founded Lending Club. Laplanche had gotten the idea for the new company at the time when he started TripleHop and found that his credit card carried an 18% interest rate, while he was only earning 1.5% from the bank on high yield certificates of deposit. He thought that by connecting investors directly with borrowers, he could cut the banks out of the equation and deliver lower rates for borrowers and higher returns for investors. Lending Club first launched on Facebook to leverage existing connections among users for testing users' trust and willingness to help one another financially, and to gather user feedback about the new service. At that time, Lending Club was one of Facebook's first applications.

After receiving $12 million in funding from venture capital investors, including Canaan Partners, Norwest Venture Partners, and Morgenthaler Ventures, Laplanche developed Lending Club into a full-scale person-to-person lending company. Lending Club revenue for the fiscal year ending on March 31, 2012 was $15.8 million. In August 2011, Lending Club raised an additional 25 million USD in venture capital from Union Square Ventures and Thomvest, owned by Peter Thomson of Thomson-Reuters. In 2012, Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers became the newest investor in Lending Club, bringing the total amount of venture capital raised by the company to $100 million.

Lending Club is headquartered in San Francisco. As of March 31, 2012, the company had 81 full-time employees, with Laplanche continuing as the company CEO and Chairman of the Board of Directors. As of March 15, 2013, Lending Club has facilitated 100,000 loans for a total of $1.5 billion. The company completed its IPO on December 10, 2014. The stock price increased 56% on its first day of trading

On May 9, 2016, Laplanche resigned from his position as CEO following an internal investigation that found he had violated the company's business practices.

Recognition

Laplanche was named Entrepreneur of the Year at the 2012 BFM Awards. He is the winner of HEC Entrepreneur of the Year award in 2002 and is a member of the Young Presidents' Organization. In 2013 he received an Ernst & Young Entrepreneur Of The Year award for the Northern California region and was a national finalist. Between April 1 and September 22, 2015, Laplanche and the crew of the Lending Club 2, a 105-ft maxi-trimaran, held the speed record for sailing from Cowes to Dinard across the English Channel.

References

Renaud Laplanche Wikipedia