While at Stanford, founders Hanrahan and Stolte, as well as Diane Tang, created the predecessor to Tableau, named Polaris; Polaris was a data visualization software tool, built with the support of a
United States Department of Energy defense program, the Accelerated Strategic Computing Initiative (ASCI). ASCI was formed to facilitate the simulation and modeling of nuclear weapons. Tableau was formally founded in January 2003 by
Pat Hanrahan, Christian Chabot, and Chris Stolte, and moved its headquarters to the
Fremont neighborhood of
Seattle, Washington, the following year. The company has since expanded its Fremont headquarters and announced plans in 2016 for an auxiliary campus in suburban
Kirkland, Washington. A new headquarters building opened near
Gas Works Park in
Wallingford in March 2017 and was followed by a new building in Fremont that opened in 2018. In August 2016, Tableau announced the appointment of Adam Selipsky as president and CEO, effective September 16, 2016, replacing co-founder Christian Chabot as CEO. In June 2018, Tableau acquired Empirical Systems, a
Cambridge, Massachusetts based
artificial intelligence startup, with plans to integrate the company's technology into the Tableau platform. Tableau also announced plans to establish an office in Cambridge as a result of the deal. On June 10, 2019, Tableau was acquired by
Salesforce in an all-stock deal worth $15.7 billion, being the largest acquisition in Salesforce's history at the time. In March 2021, Tableau announced the appointment of Mark Nelson as president and CEO, replacing Adam Selipsky. Current CEO of Tableau is a longtime Salesforce exec Ryan Aytay. Notable Tableau employees include
Jock Mackinlay and computer scientist and author
Leland Wilkinson. == Finances ==