From 2004 to 2006, Jordan was the president of
PayPal.[2] Prior to that, Jordan was senior vice president and general manager at
eBay North America for five years,[2] where he ran eBay.com and led eBay’s acquisitions of PayPal and
Half.com.[3] Before eBay, Jordan held various executive roles at
Hollywood Entertainment (CFO)[4] and
The Walt Disney Company. Prior to his stint at the Walt Disney Company, Jordan was a management consultant at the Boston Consulting Group upon graduating from the Stanford Graduate School of Business.[5]
Jordan was President and CEO of OpenTable from 2007 to 2011.[6][7] In May 2009, OpenTable’s initial public offering raised $31.4 million, giving the company a market capitalization of $432 million.[8] OpenTable shares rose 72 percent during its first day of trading on
NASDAQ[8] and its IPO was considered an “extremely healthy” one during the economic recession.[9]
Jordan has also served on the board of directors for OpenTable,[10]Wealthfront and
Zoosk.[11][12] In June 2017, he joined the Cadre board, a real estate investing company Andreessen Horowitz is investing in.[13] He's also been an active investor and adviser in Silicon Valley for several years, with involvements in Pure Digital (the maker of the
Flip Video camera later acquired by
Cisco),
Hotwire.com (acquired by
Expedia), Tiny Prints (acquired by
Shutterfly) and
CafePress (which went public in 2012).[14]
Andreessen Horowitz
Jordan became Andreessen Horowitz’s fifth general partner in June 2011.[15] In July 2011, Jordan led
Airbnb’s $112 million Series B funding from a group of investors including Andreessen Horowitz;[16] he also serves on their board. Jordan’s additional board seats on behalf of Andreessen Horowitz include Belly,[17] Circle,
Tilt.com,[18]Fab.com,[19] Instacart,[20]Lookout,[21] Twice,[22] Walker & Co.,[23] 500px,[24] Accolade and
Pinterest.[25] Jordan also oversees the firm’s investments in Fanatics, Julep [26] and Zulily.[27]
Philanthropy
In April 2012, Jordan along with Andreessen Horowitz General Partners
Marc Andreessen,
Ben Horowitz, John O’Farrell,
Scott Weiss, and
Peter Levine pledged to give half of their lifetime income from venture capital to charity.[28]