Michael Jones (born August 13, 1975) is an American entrepreneur, investor and CEO of Science Inc.[1][2] In 2017, Jones was named one of Los Angeles's 500 most influential people by the Los Angeles Business Journal.[3]
Jones attended Lake Oswego High School and has a bachelor of arts in international business and marketing from the University of Oregon, where he was named Student Entrepreneur of the Year in 1997.[4][5]
In 2001, Jones founded Userplane, a Los Angeles-based company that provides instant messaging and other applications for companies such as Myspace and Honda. In 2006, Userplane was acquired by AOL.[6] In 2005, Jones began angel investing, primarily focused in the Los Angeles area. He has personally invested in more than 30 startups.[7] In 2008, Jones launched Tsavo Media, an online media network company which was later sold to Cybernex for $75 million.[8]
In 2010, Jones was hired as the CEO of Myspace where he was tasked with the company’s relaunch, one of the more high-profile turn-around challenges in the industry.[9] This included stabilizing a historically negative traffic and user trend, reducing the operational cost of the business by nearly 90 percent, and pivoting the product from its legacy as a social network to a social entertainment destination,[10] then selling the business on News Corp’s behalf to SpecificMedia.[11] Jones left Myspace in the summer of 2011.[12]
In 2011, Jones launched technology startup studio Science Inc.[13][14] Jones spent much of his time working with the companies’ CEOs and investors on strategy, growth and business development.[15] In 2011, Dollar Shave Club launched with investments from Science Inc. Science was Dollar Shave Club’s first investor, before the startup raised a $1 million seed round in March 2012.[16]
Other startups that have come from Science include Liquid Death, where Jones sits on the board; DogVacay (acquired by Rover); HelloSociety (acquired by The New York Times); HomeHero; FameBit (acquired by Google and rebranded as YouTube BrandConnect);[17] Delicious; Playhaven (acquired by RockYou); Kyoku (acquired by TheFeed); and Quarterly.[16][18][19][20][21][22][23][17][24] His exits in 2016 included Science portfolio companies HelloSociety (acquired by The New York Times),[17] and Dollar Shave Club (acquired by Unilever).[25]
In 2017, Science Inc. launched its initial coin offering for its blockchain-focused incubator, Science Blockchain. It was the first incubator to do so.[26]
In February 2018, Science Inc. closed on $75 million for its venture fund with traditional limited partners, including a fund of funds, sovereign wealth funds, foundations, and other institutional investors.[27] The capital will be used to back breakaway companies coming out of Science's incubators, co-invest in deals that were not seeded by Science, and will be used to co-invest alongside other venture investors.[27]
In September 2017, Science Inc. announced Science Blockchain, an incubator focused on blockchain-based companies, funded through an initial coin offering (ICO).[28] The offering falls within U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) private placement exemptions from registration under Regulation D (SEC) and Regulation S.[26] The ICO only allows accredited investors to buy tokens in the ICO.[26] The ICO offering is being managed by The Argon Group, via its subsidiary Argon Investment Management LLC, under the Regulation D Section 506(c) exemption from registration issued by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.[26]