Maneesh Sethi

Maneesh Sethi
Born Maneesh Singh Sethi
(1987-11-04) November 4, 1987
Phoenix, Arizona
Alma mater Stanford University
Occupation Founder and CEO of Pavlok
Relatives Ramit Sethi (brother)
Website pavlok.com and www.hackthesystem.com

Maneesh Singh Sethi (born November 4, 1987) is an American author and internet entrepreneur. He authored the internationally best-selling book and textbook Game Programming for Teens at sixteen years old.[1] He is best known as the founder of the behavior modification wristband Pavlok. Sethi is the chairman and chief executive officer of Behavioral Technology Group, Inc.[2]

In 2011, Sethi founded SaveThem.net, a NGO focused on providing public schools in Rajasthan with electricity and internet connectivity.[3] Sethi launched Pavlok in July 2013.[2]

Background

Early years

Sethi grew up in Fair Oaks, a suburb of Sacramento, California. He began using computers and writing software in middle school, and started "StandardDesign", a web design company, when he was twelve years old. He tutored other students in programming and video game design, and wrote his first book, Game Programming for Teens, at the age of fourteen.[4] His book went on to become an international best-seller and a textbook in Poland.[1] At sixteen years old, he held monthly segments on video game programming on TechTV.[5] He graduated from Bella Vista High School in 2005, as valedictorian of the class.[6]

College years

Sethi began classes at Stanford University in 2005, majoring in science, technology and society under B.J. Fogg. He studied abroad in Florence, Italy, where he read The 4-Hour Workweek, which inspired him to take a two-year leave from his classes in 2008. In 2009, author Tim Ferriss held a contest calling for videos of applicants living a "4-hour workweek", which Sethi entered and won.[7] Following the popularity of his video-entry, Sethi created Hack the System, a blog on productivity and travel-hacking. He used the award money from the contest to start his NGO, SaveThem.net.

Hack the System

In 2010, Sethi launched Hack the System, a blog on self-improvement and travelling.[8] Authoring articles and e-books led Sethi to take a 2-year absence from Stanford to focus on travelling and writing. In 2012, Hack the System was featured on NY Daily News, CNET, Huffington Post, and other news outlets when Sethi hired a woman off of Craigslist to slap him across the face whenever he was distracted from his work.[9][10][11] The viral success of Sethi's experience with operant conditioning led him to launch Behavioral Technology Group in July 2013.[12]

Behavioral Technology Group, Inc.

Pavlok

In July 2014, Behavioral Technology Group created its first product, Pavlok.[13] Parallel to the interests of Sethi's Hack the System, Pavlok is a wearable device that modifies behavior through operant conditioning, using audio and haptic feedback. Users are able to break habits and addictions through courses similar to aversion therapy, and may establish new routines by pairing behaviors with positive stimuli.

After having raised funds through angel investment, Sethi launched a fundraising campaign for Pavlok on Indiegogo. He used Bolt, a business incubator, for hardware production, before moving into Pavlok's WeWork office in October 2014. Soon after, Pavlok was accepted into the 2015 MassChallenge startup accelerator program.[14]

Pavlok has raised funds from Maneesh's contacts in the blogging world including Steve Kamb, Matt Kepnes, Ramit Sethi, John Romaniello, Dave Asprey and more.[15]

See also

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Friday, March 25, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.