Early career In 2012, at age 22, Wolfe joined Cardify, a startup led by
Sean Rad at the Hatch Labs business incubator. The project was later abandoned, but Wolfe joined the development team of
Tinder (initially called MatchBox) with Rad and Christopher Gulczynski. Before the app's launch, Wolfe was named vice president of marketing for Tinder. She has also been credited with fueling the app's initial popularity on college campuses and growing its user base. Wolfe resigned from Tinder in April 2014. In September of that year, she received a more than $1 million settlement from her lawsuit against the company for
sexual discrimination and
sexual harassment after dating a Tinder co-founder who became "verbally controlling and abusive".
Badoo founder
Andrey Andreev encouraged her to start a new dating app and brought her on as a partner in his company, MagicLab, later renamed
Bumble Inc. Andreev retained 79% ownership in the company for an investment of $10 million, along with additional investments, consulting services, and use of Badoo's infrastructure; Wolfe served as CEO and received a 20% ownership stake. In December 2014, Wolfe moved to
Austin, Texas to continue work on the app. By December 2015,
Bumble had reached more than 15 million conversations and 80 million matches. In May 2016, she was featured as one of ''
Elle's Women in Tech. She was also named to the Forbes'' 30 Under 30 lists in both 2017 and 2018. In 2018, she was featured as one of
InStyle’s "50 Women Who Are Changing the World" and
Time named her to the
Time 100 list. In April 2019, Bumble released the first print issue of
Bumble Mag in partnership with Hearst. In November 2019, Andreev sold a majority stake in
Bumble Inc. to
The Blackstone Group. Whitney Wolfe Herd received an ownership stake of approximately 19% and was named CEO of the company, then valued at $3 billion with an estimated 75 million users. In 2020,
Bumble Inc. replaced MagicLab as the parent company of both Bumble and Badoo. At the time, Bumble had more than 100 million users worldwide. In February 2021, Bumble Inc. became a
public company via an
initial public offering. Wolfe Herd's 18-month-old son was on her hip as she rang the Nasdaq bell. With this IPO launch, she became the world's youngest female billionaire as well as the youngest woman to lead an
initial public offering in the United States, at age 31. In 2021, Wolfe Herd was named to
Bloomberg's 50 Most Influential ranking. In 2022,
Forbes listed Wolfe Herd at number 33 of its top 100 "America's richest self-made women". In November 2023, Wolfe Herd announced she would enter the role of executive chair in January 2024, with
Lidiane Jones stepping into the position of CEO of Bumble. In May 2024, Wolfe Herd noted the potential for using
artificial intelligence to assist in online dating. In January 2025, Bumble announced that Wolfe Herd would return as CEO in mid-March, replacing Jones, who was stepping down for personal reasons. Wolfe Herd owns approximately 23 million shares of
Bumble Inc. ==Personal life==