Oliver Muoto

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Oliver Muoto

Born June 29, 1969
Poznan, Poland
Occupation entrepreneur
Children 2
Website
http://www.muoto.com

Oliver Muoto (born 1969) is a Polish-born serial entrepreneur responsible for co-founding several early stage companies including vFlyer (with Aaron Sperling), Epicentric (with Ed Anuff) and RandomNoise. Muoto served a a number of startup advisory boards including those of eGroups (acquired by Yahoo!), ActiveTelco (acquired by Tut Systems), Become.com and MerchantCirlce.

Born to a Nigerian father and Polish mother, he moved to Los Angeles, CA in 1988 to enroll at the University of Southern California. He received his bachelor's degree in Industrial and Systems Engineering and minor in Marketing from University of Southern California in 1993 where he was involved in at least two on-campus startups.[1] He moved to Silicon Valley in 1993 to join Coactive Computing.

In 1998, he began working on a project called PalmPoint with Wired executive Ed Anuff. The two had worked previously together in San Francisco for Motion Works Internation, a Canadian-based multimedia tools developer that had acquired Anuff's previous company. The project eventually led to the founding of Epicentric, a enterprise software company that become a leading provider of enterprise portal software.

In 2002, Muoto co-founded vFlyer with Aaron Sperling[2], a provider of marketing solutions aimed at helping online sellers and sales professionals syndicate and distribute their product and service listings more effectively on the web.

He also helped launch PayDemocracy, an online micropayments aggregator for small political contributions in 2003 (with Chad Williams)[3], ActiveTelco (acquired by Tut Systems), and TagWorld, a social network based in Los Angeles, CA[4]. In 2001, Muoto was also granted a key patent (US Patent # 6,327,628)[5] [6] related to enterprise portal software. He is currently president of Metablocks, a product and web design firm.


[edit] References

  1. ^ Eric Ransdell. "Portals for the People", Fast Company, April 2002. Retrieved on 2008-05-27. 
  2. ^ Bob Tedeschi. "Wanted: A Way to Profit by Simplifying Web Classifieds", New York Times, October 2, 2006. Retrieved on 2008-04-23. 
  3. ^ WSJ Article
  4. ^ BusinessWeek
  5. ^ Business Wire. "Epicentric Granted Patent on Administration of Portal User Privileges", Business Wire, December 4, 2001. Retrieved on 2008-05-27. 
  6. ^ Patent

[edit] External links