Loading AI tools
French entrepreneur and blogger (born 1972) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Loïc Le Meur (born 14 July 1972) is a French entrepreneur and blogger. He served as Executive Vice President EMEA at software company Six Apart after merging French blogging company Ublog with Six Apart in July 2004.[1] In late 2006 Le Meur became a public backer of French presidential candidate Nicolas Sarkozy and joined Sarkozy's campaign team as an advisor on Internet-related topics.[2][3]
Loïc Le Meur | |
---|---|
Born | France | 14 July 1972
Alma mater | HEC Paris |
Occupation(s) | Entrepreneur, blogger |
In 1996, Loïc Le Meur founded his first company, interactive agency B2L[citation needed], after graduating from HEC Paris.[4]
He also founded RapidSite France with his wife [5] a web hosting company for small businesses in France.[6] In 1999, he sold RapidSite to France Télécom where it became part of Wanadoo.[7]
In 2000, he founded application service provider Tekora.[6]
In 2003, he got involved with French weblog hosting company Ublog which he purchased from its founder, fellow Breton Stéphane Le Solliec in October 2003.[8] He then grew Ublog and merged the company with Six Apart where he became Executive Vice President in 2004.[9] He held his role as EVP EMEA until March 2007 when he handed his job over to long-time business partner Olivier Creiche. Le Meur remains Honorary Chair of Six Apart Europe.[10]
In 2015, he founded leade.rs, a platform for keynote speakers.[citation needed] In 2019, leade.rs was acquired by Animoca. Le Meur joined Animoca as a venture partner to assist in growth and expansion opportunities.[11]
In 2004 Le Meur became part of the team behind the official World Economic Forum blog.[12]
Since 2004, Le Meur has organized a conference focused on blogging and the web world with Géraldine Le Meur, his wife until recently.[13] In December 2006, he managed to get Shimon Peres, Nicolas Sarkozy, and French politician François Bayrou on stage at LeWeb '03.[14] More than 2,600 people from 60 different countries attended in 2010.[15] Approximately 3200 attended in 2014.[16]
In 2007, Le Meur moved to San Francisco to launch a new startup named Seesmic.[17]
Seesmic was initially focused on the creation of an online community of video bloggers. Following the 2008 economic crisis Seesmic's became a social media client company. In January 2010, Seesmic acquired Ping.fm [18] and allowed its users to update simultaneously more than 50 different social media statuses. In February 2011, Seesmic received funding from Salesforce.com and Softbank, bringing total funding to $16 million.[19] In September 2012, Seesmic was acquired by HootSuite.[20][21]
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Every time you click a link to Wikipedia, Wiktionary or Wikiquote in your browser's search results, it will show the modern Wikiwand interface.
Wikiwand extension is a five stars, simple, with minimum permission required to keep your browsing private, safe and transparent.