Blake Scholl
Cofounder of Boom Technology From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Blake Scholl (born c. 1981) is an American tech entrepreneur. He founded Boom Technology in 2014, and in 2025 Boom Technology became the first private American company to build a plane that flies at supersonic speeds (that is, the aeroplane project in question was not commissioned by US government; naturally there are plenty of examples of supersonic aeroplanes that were built by American private companies and ordered by US government, see for example Bell X-1).[1][2]
Blake Scholl | |
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![]() Scholl in July 2024 | |
Born | Cincinnati, Ohio, U.S. |
Alma mater | Carnegie Mellon University |
Occupation | businessman |
Title | Founder and CEO, Boom Technology |
Early life
Scholl was born in Cincinnati, Ohio to an electrical engineer father and a French teacher mother.[3] A high school dropout,[4] he won a scholarship for early entry into Carnegie Mellon University, where he majored in computer science.[3][1]
Career
Scholl worked for Jeff Bezos in the "early days" of Amazon.[3] He then cofounded Kima Labs, a mobile technology startup that was acquired by Groupon in 2012.[1][5] In early 2014, Scholl took aircraft design classes, built an aerodynamics model, and sought feedback from a Stanford professor, who reviewed his calculations and encouraged him to aim higher, saying his estimates in his spreadsheet model for supersonic flight were conservative.[6] Scholl invested half of his share of the proceeds from the sale into his next venture, Boom Technology, which he founded later that year.[7][5] He has been the CEO of the company since October 2019.[8] The company's aircraft Boom XB-1 performed its first supersonic flight test in 2025.[9][10]
Personal life
Scholl obtained his private pilot license in 2007.[11] He has four children.[4]
References
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