Andrew Mason: Difference between revisions

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| image        = Andrew Mason (cropped).jpg
| image        = Andrew Mason (cropped).jpg
| caption      = Mason in 2011
| caption      = Mason in 2011
| birth_date  = 1981
| birth_date  = {{birth year and age|1981}}
| birth_place  = [[Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania]], U.S.
| birth_place  = [[Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania]], U.S.
| nationality  = American
| nationality  = American
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| known_for    = Founder and former CEO of [[Groupon]]; founder and CEO of [[Descript]]
| known_for    = Founder and former CEO of [[Groupon]]; founder and CEO of [[Descript]]
| spouse      = Jenny Gillespie
| spouse      = Jenny Gillespie
| website      =
}}
}}


'''Andrew D. Mason''' (born 1981) is an American entrepreneur and technology executive who founded [[Groupon]], the Chicago-based e-commerce platform that became one of the fastest-growing companies in Internet history. Born in [[Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania]], Mason built Groupon from a side project into a global daily-deals giant that famously turned down a reported $6 billion acquisition offer from [[Google]] in 2010 before going public in 2011.<ref name="google-deal">{{cite news |date=2010-12-03 |title=Confirmed: The Groupon/Google Deal is Off |url=https://techcrunch.com/2010/12/03/confirmed-the-groupongoogle-deal-is-off/ |work=TechCrunch |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref><ref name="mashable-deal">{{cite news |date=2010-12-07 |title=Groupon Reportedly Turns Down $6 Billion Google Offer |url=http://mashable.com/2010/12/07/groupon-800-million/ |work=Mashable |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> Mason served as Groupon's CEO until his ouster in February 2013, after which he pursued ventures in music, audio tour technology, and audio/video editing software. He is the founder and CEO of [[Descript]], a software company that develops audio and video editing tools powered by machine learning.<ref name="descript-founding">{{cite news |title=Groupon Founder Andrew Mason's New Startup Descript |url=https://www.businessinsider.com/groupon-founder-andrew-mason-new-startup-descript-detour-2017-12/ |work=Business Insider |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>
'''Andrew D. Mason''' (born 1981) is an American businessman and entrepreneur best known as the founder and former chief executive officer of [[Groupon]], the Chicago-based daily deals platform that grew from a modest group-buying concept into one of the fastest-growing companies in Internet history. Born in [[Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania]], and educated in music at [[Northwestern University]], Mason built Groupon from its origins as a side project of his earlier venture, The Point, into a global commerce enterprise that famously turned down a reported $6 billion acquisition offer from [[Google]] in 2010. His tenure as CEO ended in February 2013, when the company's board removed him amid declining stock prices and questions about the firm's long-term business model. In the years following his departure from Groupon, Mason launched new ventures including Detour, a location-based audio walking tour startup later acquired by [[Bose Corporation]], and [[Descript]], an audio and video editing platform powered by [[machine learning]]. His career trajectory — from music student to billionaire-on-paper CEO to fired executive to startup founder once again — has made him one of the more distinctive figures in the American technology industry of the early 21st century.


== Early Life ==
== Early Life ==


Andrew D. Mason was born in 1981 in [[Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania]].<ref name="chicagomag">{{cite news |title=On Groupon and Its Founder Andrew Mason |url=http://www.chicagomag.com/Chicago-Magazine/August-2010/On-Groupon-and-its-founder-Andrew-Mason |work=Chicago Magazine |date=August 2010 |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> Details about his parents and upbringing in Pittsburgh remain largely private, though Mason has been described in profiles as having shown an early interest in both technology and music. He grew up in the Pittsburgh area before relocating to the Chicago metropolitan region to attend college at [[Northwestern University]].<ref name="chicagomag" />
Andrew D. Mason was born in 1981 in [[Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania]].<ref name="ChicagoMag">{{cite news |title=On Groupon and Its Founder Andrew Mason |url=http://www.chicagomag.com/Chicago-Magazine/August-2010/On-Groupon-and-its-founder-Andrew-Mason |work=Chicago Magazine |date=August 2010 |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> Details about his parents and family background during his childhood years in Pittsburgh remain limited in published sources. Mason grew up in the Pittsburgh area before relocating to the Chicago metropolitan region to attend college. According to profiles published during his rise at Groupon, Mason displayed an early aptitude for technology and creative pursuits, interests that would eventually converge in his entrepreneurial career.<ref name="ChicagoMag" />


Mason's formative years in Pittsburgh coincided with the rise of the early Internet era in the 1990s, which would later inform his interest in web-based businesses. His dual interests in creative pursuits and technology became a defining theme throughout his career, shaping the unconventional leadership style he would later bring to Groupon and his subsequent ventures.<ref name="chicagomag" />
Mason's upbringing in Pittsburgh, a city with deep roots in industry and a growing technology sector, provided context for his later work in building Internet-based businesses. He moved to [[Evanston, Illinois]], to attend [[Northwestern University]], a decision that would place him in the broader Chicago ecosystem where he would eventually build Groupon into a major enterprise.<ref name="Northwestern">{{cite web |title=Andrew Mason |url=http://alumni.northwestern.edu/node/4654 |publisher=Northwestern University Alumni |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>


== Education ==
== Education ==


Mason attended the [[Bienen School of Music]] at [[Northwestern University]] in [[Evanston, Illinois]], where he earned a [[Bachelor of Arts]] degree in Music in 2003.<ref name="Northwestern">{{cite web |title=Andrew Mason |url=http://alumni.northwestern.edu/node/4654 |publisher=Northwestern University Alumni Association |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> His music education background distinguished him from the typical profile of a technology startup founder and later informed several of his post-Groupon creative endeavors, including a motivational music album released in 2013.<ref name="nydaily-album">{{cite news |title=Ex-Groupon CEO Andrew Mason Releases Motivational Business Music Album |url=http://www.nydailynews.com/entertainment/music-arts/ex-groupon-ceo-andrew-mason-releases-motivational-business-music-album-article-1.1389361 |work=New York Daily News |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>
Mason enrolled at [[Northwestern University]]'s [[Bienen School of Music]], where he studied music and earned a [[Bachelor of Arts]] degree in 2003.<ref name="Northwestern" /> His academic background in music rather than business or computer science distinguished him from many of his peers in the technology startup world. Despite his formal training in the arts, Mason had developed skills in web development and technology that he would deploy in his post-college career.<ref name="ChicagoMag" />


After completing his undergraduate studies, Mason remained in the Chicago area. He later enrolled in a public policy program at the [[University of Chicago]] but did not complete a graduate degree, choosing instead to focus on his emerging entrepreneurial projects.<ref name="chicagomag" />
After completing his undergraduate degree, Mason remained in the Chicago area. He later began graduate studies in [[public policy]] at the [[University of Chicago]], though he did not complete the program, leaving to pursue entrepreneurial ventures full-time.<ref name="ChicagoMag" /> This decision to abandon graduate school in favor of a startup would prove to be a pivotal turning point in his career.


== Career ==
== Career ==


=== The Point and the Genesis of Groupon ===
=== The Point and Early Ventures ===


Before founding Groupon, Mason created a web platform called '''The Point''', a social activism and collective-action website that allowed users to organize campaigns around shared goals. The Point operated on a "tipping point" model in which campaigns would only activate once a critical mass of participants had committed. The concept of collective buying power that underpinned The Point would become the foundational idea behind Groupon.<ref name="chicagomag" /><ref name="BI-truth">{{cite news |title=Inside Groupon: The Truth About the World's Most Controversial Company |url=http://www.businessinsider.com/inside-groupon-the-truth-about-the-worlds-most-controversial-company-2011-10/ |work=Business Insider |date=October 2011 |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>
Before founding Groupon, Mason worked in the Chicago technology scene. He conceived of a web platform called '''The Point''', a social activism site built around the concept of collective action users could rally around causes and pledge to act only once a tipping point of participation was reached.<ref name="ChicagoMag" /> The Point was backed by [[Eric Lefkofsky]], a Chicago-based entrepreneur and investor who would become a central figure in the Groupon story. The tipping-point mechanism of The Point — where an action would only be triggered once a sufficient number of people committed — became the conceptual foundation upon which Groupon was built.<ref name="BIInside">{{cite news |title=Inside Groupon: The Truth About The World's Most Controversial Company |url=http://www.businessinsider.com/inside-groupon-the-truth-about-the-worlds-most-controversial-company-2011-10/ |work=Business Insider |date=October 2011 |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>


The pivot from The Point to Groupon emerged when Mason and his team noticed that collective buying—groups of people pooling together to unlock a discount from a local merchant—was one of the most popular uses of the platform. This observation led to the creation of Groupon, a portmanteau of "group" and "coupon," in November 2008. The site offered one deal per day in a single city, Chicago, with the deal activating only if a minimum number of buyers committed—a direct application of The Point's tipping-point mechanism.<ref name="chicagomag" /><ref name="timeout">{{cite news |title=Groupon 2.0 |url=http://timeoutchicago.com/shopping-style/shopping/95595/groupon-20 |work=Time Out Chicago |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>
The Point itself did not achieve significant commercial traction, but one particular use case stood out: users were leveraging the platform to organize group purchases, aggregating demand to negotiate bulk discounts from local businesses.<ref name="TimeOut">{{cite news |title=Groupon 2.0 |url=http://timeoutchicago.com/shopping-style/shopping/95595/groupon-20 |work=Time Out Chicago |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> This observation led Mason and his backers to pivot toward a dedicated group-buying platform, which launched in November 2008 as Groupon — a portmanteau of "group" and "coupon."


=== Groupon's Rapid Growth ===
=== Founding and Growth of Groupon ===


Groupon experienced extraordinarily rapid expansion following its founding. The company's model—offering deep discounts on restaurants, spas, entertainment, and other local services in exchange for guaranteed customer volume to merchants—resonated with consumers during the economic downturn of the late 2000s. Within two years, Groupon expanded from a single-city operation to a presence in hundreds of markets across North America and internationally.<ref name="BI-truth" /><ref name="chicagomag" />
Groupon launched in Chicago in November 2008 with a simple premise: the platform would offer a single daily deal from a local business — a restaurant, spa, retailer, or service provider — at a significant discount, typically 50 percent or more off the regular price. The deal would activate only if a minimum number of buyers committed, applying the tipping-point model from The Point.<ref name="BIInside" /> The business model proved extraordinarily popular. Groupon expanded rapidly from its Chicago base to other cities across the United States and then internationally.


The company's growth attracted significant attention from both investors and potential acquirers. In late 2010, [[Google]] reportedly offered approximately $6 billion to acquire Groupon, which would have been one of the largest acquisitions in Internet history at the time. Mason and the Groupon board rejected the offer, a decision that generated substantial debate in the technology and business press.<ref name="google-deal" /><ref name="mashable-deal" /> Some observers viewed the rejection as a bold bet on the company's continued growth trajectory, while others questioned whether the decision was sound given the company's unproven long-term business model.
Mason served as CEO during this period of explosive growth. Under his leadership, Groupon grew at a pace that drew comparisons to some of the fastest-growing Internet companies in history.<ref name="ChicagoMag" /> The company's model was attractive to consumers, who received steep discounts, and to small businesses, which gained exposure to new customers, though the economics for merchants were the subject of ongoing debate.


Mason served as the public face of Groupon during this period, cultivating an image that was notably more informal and irreverent than the typical Silicon Valley CEO. Profiles described his management style as unconventional, blending humor and an anti-corporate ethos into the company's culture and marketing.<ref name="chicagomag" /><ref name="BI-truth" />
By 2010, Groupon had expanded to hundreds of markets worldwide and employed thousands of people. The company's workforce included a large editorial team responsible for writing the humorous, irreverent descriptions that accompanied each deal — a feature that became part of the Groupon brand identity and reflected Mason's own sensibility.<ref name="BIInside" />


=== Groupon IPO and Public Company Challenges ===
=== Google Acquisition Offer ===


Groupon filed for an initial public offering in June 2011 and began trading on the [[NASDAQ]] stock exchange on November 4, 2011. The IPO was one of the most closely watched technology offerings since [[Google]]'s own public debut in 2004. The company was valued at approximately $12.7 billion at its IPO, making it one of the largest Internet IPOs at the time.<ref name="BI-truth" />
In late 2010, Groupon became the subject of one of the most talked-about acquisition offers in technology industry history. [[Google]] reportedly offered approximately $6 billion to acquire the company, which would have been one of the largest acquisitions in the Internet sector at the time.<ref name="Mashable">{{cite news |last= |first= |date=December 7, 2010 |title=Google Offered $6 Billion for Groupon |url=http://mashable.com/2010/12/07/groupon-800-million/ |work=Mashable |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> Mason and Groupon's board ultimately rejected the offer, a decision confirmed in early December 2010.<ref name="TCGoogle">{{cite news |title=Confirmed: The Groupon/Google Deal Is Off |url=https://techcrunch.com/2010/12/03/confirmed-the-groupongoogle-deal-is-off/ |work=TechCrunch |date=December 3, 2010 |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>


However, Groupon's tenure as a public company proved turbulent. The company faced criticism over its accounting practices, particularly its use of a non-standard metric called "adjusted consolidated segment operating income" (ACSOI), which excluded certain costs that traditional accounting methods would include. The company was required to restate its fourth-quarter 2011 results due to a "material weakness" in its internal controls, further eroding investor confidence.<ref name="bloomberg-ouster">{{cite news |date=2013-03-01 |title=Mason Ouster Leaves Groupon Seeking CEO to Uncover Coupon Profit |url=https://www.bloomberg.com/news/2013-03-01/mason-ouster-leaves-groupon-seeking-ceo-to-uncover-coupon-profit.html |work=Bloomberg News |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>
The decision to turn down Google's bid was one of the most scrutinized business decisions of the era. Supporters argued that Groupon's growth trajectory justified holding out for a higher valuation, while skeptics questioned whether the company's business model was sustainable enough to warrant such confidence. The rejection set the stage for Groupon's pursuit of an [[initial public offering]].<ref name="Mashable" /><ref name="TCGoogle" />


Mason's salary during his time as CEO drew media attention for being unusually modest by Silicon Valley standards. Reports indicated his annual salary was $756.72, a figure widely noted for its apparent quirkiness.<ref name="BI-salary">{{cite news |title=Bizarre: Groupon CEO Andrew Mason's Salary Is Just $756.72 |url=http://www.businessinsider.com/bizarre-groupon-ceo-andrew-masons-salary-is-just-75672-2012-5 |work=Business Insider |date=May 2012 |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> While Mason held significant equity in the company, the nominal salary figure underscored his unconventional approach to corporate leadership.
=== Initial Public Offering ===


Groupon's stock price declined significantly from its IPO highs as the company struggled to demonstrate sustainable profitability and fend off competition from rivals including [[LivingSocial]] and Amazon's local deals service. The daily deals market, which had boomed in 2010 and 2011, began showing signs of saturation, and merchants increasingly questioned whether the deep discounts offered through Groupon generated loyal repeat customers or merely attracted one-time bargain seekers.<ref name="bloomberg-ouster" />
Groupon filed for its initial public offering in June 2011 and went public on the [[NASDAQ]] stock exchange in November 2011. The IPO valued the company at approximately $13 billion, making it one of the largest Internet IPOs since Google's own offering in 2004.<ref name="BIInside" /> Mason, as the founder and CEO of a publicly traded company, became one of the most prominent young executives in American business.


=== Departure from Groupon ===
However, the IPO process was not without controversy. Groupon's financial disclosures drew scrutiny from regulators and analysts, particularly regarding the company's use of non-standard accounting metrics. The [[U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission]] raised questions about certain financial measures the company had presented in its prospectus.<ref name="BIInside" />


On February 28, 2013, Groupon's board of directors removed Mason from his position as CEO.<ref name="marketwatch-fired">{{cite news |date=2013-02-28 |title=Groupon Ousts CEO Andrew Mason |url=http://www.marketwatch.com/story/groupon-ousts-ceo-andrew-mason-2013-02-28?link=MW_latest_news |work=MarketWatch |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The dismissal came after a prolonged period of declining stock prices and missed revenue expectations. Mason's departure was notable for the candid and self-deprecating letter he sent to Groupon employees, which became widely circulated in the media. In the letter, he acknowledged that he had been "fired" rather than employing the corporate euphemism of "stepping down," and took responsibility for the company's disappointing performance as a public company.<ref name="dealbook-fired">{{cite news |date=2013-02-28 |title=Remembering the Long, Strange Trip of Groupon's Now-Fired Chief |url=https://dealbook.nytimes.com/2013/02/28/remembering-the-long-strange-trip-of-groupons-now-fired-chief |work=The New York Times DealBook |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>
Despite the successful IPO, Mason's salary as CEO was notable for its modesty relative to the company's valuation. Reports indicated that his annual salary was $756.72 — a figure that attracted attention for its unusually low amount, though he held substantial equity in the company.<ref name="BISalary">{{cite news |title=Bizarre: Groupon CEO Andrew Mason's Salary Is Just $756.72 |url=http://www.businessinsider.com/bizarre-groupon-ceo-andrew-masons-salary-is-just-75672-2012-5 |work=Business Insider |date=May 2012 |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>


The ouster left Groupon searching for a new chief executive to chart a sustainable path to profitability. Executive Chairman [[Eric Lefkofsky]], who had been an early backer and co-founder of the company, stepped in as interim leader.<ref name="bloomberg-ouster" /> Mason's departure marked the end of an era for one of the most talked-about Internet companies of the early 2010s.
=== Decline and Termination as CEO ===


=== Motivational Music Album ===
Following the IPO, Groupon's stock price experienced a significant decline as investors grew concerned about the company's profitability, its competitive position, and the sustainability of the daily deals model. The stock fell substantially from its IPO price over the course of 2012, and the company faced increasing competition from rivals including [[LivingSocial]] and Amazon's entry into the local deals space.<ref name="Bloomberg">{{cite news |title=Mason Ouster Leaves Groupon Seeking CEO to Uncover Coupon Profit |url=https://www.bloomberg.com/news/2013-03-01/mason-ouster-leaves-groupon-seeking-ceo-to-uncover-coupon-profit.html |work=Bloomberg News |date=March 1, 2013 |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>


In a move that surprised observers in both the technology and entertainment industries, Mason released a motivational music album titled ''Hardly Workin''' in July 2013, just months after his departure from Groupon.<ref name="nydaily-album" /><ref name="tc-album">{{cite news |date=2013-07-01 |title=Andrew Mason Raises Your Hands Up in the Air |url=https://techcrunch.com/2013/07/01/andrew-mason-raises-your-hands-up-in-the-air/?ncid=tcdaily |work=TechCrunch |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The album featured seven tracks of motivational rock songs with titles focused on business and self-improvement themes. Mason described the project as a genuine creative effort rather than a joke, though media coverage frequently noted its eccentricity.<ref name="nbc-album">{{cite news |title=Fired Groupon CEO Releases Rock Album |url=https://www.nbcnews.com/business/fired-groupon-ceo-releases-rock-album-6C10523106 |work=NBC News |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>
On February 28, 2013, Groupon's board of directors removed Mason as CEO.<ref name="MarketWatch">{{cite news |title=Groupon Ousts CEO Andrew Mason |url=http://www.marketwatch.com/story/groupon-ousts-ceo-andrew-mason-2013-02-28?link=MW_latest_news |work=MarketWatch |date=February 28, 2013 |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> Mason's response to his termination drew widespread attention for its unusual candor. Rather than issuing a standard corporate statement, he sent a memo to Groupon employees acknowledging his firing directly. In the memo, he took responsibility for the company's underperformance and wished his successor well.<ref name="DealBook">{{cite news |title=Remembering the Long, Strange Trip of Groupon's Now-Fired Chief |url=https://dealbook.nytimes.com/2013/02/28/remembering-the-long-strange-trip-of-groupons-now-fired-chief |work=The New York Times DealBook |date=February 28, 2013 |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>


The album drew attention in part because of Mason's educational background in music from Northwestern University's Bienen School of Music, lending the project a degree of credibility that a typical tech executive's musical foray might not possess.<ref name="Northwestern" /><ref name="nbc-album" /> Reviews and media reactions were mixed, with many outlets treating the release as a curiosity rather than a serious musical endeavor, though some commentators praised Mason's willingness to pursue an unconventional post-CEO path.
The departure was widely covered in the business and technology press. Commentators noted that Mason's firing represented the end of a rapid and dramatic arc — from founding a startup to leading a company valued in the billions to being removed by the board in the span of roughly four years.<ref name="Bloomberg" /><ref name="DealBook" />
 
=== Post-Groupon: Music Album ===
 
In the months following his departure from Groupon, Mason took an unexpected creative detour. In July 2013, he released a motivational business music album titled ''Hardly Workin''', which featured seven tracks with titles related to business and corporate life.<ref name="NYDNEWS">{{cite news |title=Ex-Groupon CEO Andrew Mason releases motivational business music album |url=http://www.nydailynews.com/entertainment/music-arts/ex-groupon-ceo-andrew-mason-releases-motivational-business-music-album-article-1.1389361 |work=New York Daily News |date=2013 |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The album, which Mason described in earnest terms, drew extensive media coverage for its novelty — a recently fired CEO of a multi-billion-dollar public company releasing a music album was, by any measure, an unusual career move.<ref name="TCMusic">{{cite news |title=Andrew Mason Raises Your Hands Up In the Air |url=https://techcrunch.com/2013/07/01/andrew-mason-raises-your-hands-up-in-the-air/?ncid=tcdaily |work=TechCrunch |date=July 1, 2013 |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref><ref name="NBC">{{cite news |title=Fired Groupon CEO Releases Rock Album |url=https://www.nbcnews.com/business/fired-groupon-ceo-releases-rock-album-6C10523106 |work=NBC News |date=2013 |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>
 
Mason's background in music — he had earned his bachelor's degree in the subject from Northwestern — lent some context to the project, though most observers treated it as an eccentric post-firing diversion rather than a serious career pivot.<ref name="NYDNEWS" />


=== Detour ===
=== Detour ===


Following his departure from Groupon and the release of his music album, Mason founded '''Detour''', a startup focused on location-based audio walking tours. Detour offered immersive, GPS-triggered audio experiences that guided users through cities with narrated stories about neighborhoods, landmarks, and local culture. The app represented a departure from the e-commerce and daily deals space, drawing instead on Mason's interests in storytelling, technology, and urban exploration.<ref name="seattle-detour">{{cite news |title=In Person: Andrew Mason |url=http://seattletimes.com/html/businesstechnology/2025649296_inpersonmasonxml.html |work=The Seattle Times |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>
After his musical interlude, Mason returned to the technology sector. He founded '''Detour''', a startup that produced location-based audio walking tours. The app used [[GPS]] technology to deliver narrated walking tours that adapted to a user's pace and location, offering immersive audio experiences in cities including [[San Francisco]], [[New York City]], [[Austin, Texas|Austin]], and [[Chicago]].<ref name="SeattleTimes">{{cite news |title=In Person: Andrew Mason |url=http://seattletimes.com/html/businesstechnology/2025649296_inpersonmasonxml.html |work=The Seattle Times |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>


In April 2018, [[Bose Corporation]] acquired Detour. The acquisition was seen as part of Bose's broader interest in augmented audio experiences and wearable technology.<ref name="tc-bose">{{cite news |date=2018-04-24 |title=Bose Acquires Andrew Mason's Walking Tour Startup Detour |url=https://techcrunch.com/2018/04/24/bose-acquires-andrew-masons-walking-tour-startup-detour/?guccounter=1 |work=TechCrunch |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The sale of Detour to Bose provided a successful exit for the venture and allowed Mason to turn his attention to his next project.
Detour represented a different approach from the mass-market scale of Groupon. The product was more niche, focused on the intersection of audio storytelling and geographic exploration. In April 2018, [[Bose Corporation]], the audio equipment manufacturer, acquired Detour.<ref name="TCBose">{{cite news |title=Bose Acquires Andrew Mason's Walking Tour Startup Detour |url=https://techcrunch.com/2018/04/24/bose-acquires-andrew-masons-walking-tour-startup-detour/ |work=TechCrunch |date=April 24, 2018 |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The acquisition reflected Bose's interest in location-aware audio experiences and augmented reality audio technologies.


=== Descript ===
=== Descript ===


In 2017, Mason founded '''Descript''', a software company developing audio and video editing tools powered by machine learning and artificial intelligence. Descript's flagship product allows users to edit audio and video by editing a text transcript—a novel approach that makes media editing more accessible to users without professional editing experience. The software uses speech recognition and AI to generate transcripts of audio and video files, enabling users to cut, rearrange, and modify content by manipulating text rather than navigating traditional timeline-based editing interfaces.<ref name="descript-founding" />
Mason's next venture, '''Descript''', became his most significant post-Groupon project. Founded in 2017, Descript is an audio and video editing software platform that uses [[machine learning]] and [[artificial intelligence]] to enable users to edit media by manipulating text transcripts rather than traditional waveform or timeline editing.<ref name="BIDescript">{{cite news |title=Groupon Founder Andrew Mason's New Startup Descript |url=https://www.businessinsider.com/groupon-founder-andrew-mason-new-startup-descript-detour-2017-12/ |work=Business Insider |date=December 2017 |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>


Mason has served as CEO of Descript since its founding. The company has attracted attention in the podcasting, journalism, and content creation communities for its innovative approach to editing workflows. Descript represents Mason's continued interest in building technology products that simplify complex processes, a thread that connects back to his work at Groupon in making local commerce more accessible to consumers.<ref name="descript-founding" />
The core innovation of Descript was its approach to editing: the software transcribes audio and video content into text, and users can edit the media by editing the transcript — deleting a word from the transcript deletes the corresponding audio or video, for instance. This approach represented a significant departure from conventional editing workflows and made audio and video editing more accessible to users without specialized technical skills.<ref name="BIDescript" />
 
Mason serves as the founder and CEO of Descript, which is based in [[San Francisco]]. The company has attracted attention from the technology industry for its application of AI to creative tools, positioning it within the broader trend of machine learning-powered productivity software.<ref name="BIDescript" />


== Personal Life ==
== Personal Life ==


Mason is married to Jenny Gillespie, a musician and singer-songwriter based in Chicago.<ref name="chicagobusiness-wife">{{cite news |date=2012-08-08 |title=Jenny Gillespie, Also Known as Mrs. Andrew Mason, to Take Stage |url=http://www.chicagobusiness.com/article/20120808/BLOGS03/120809830/jenny-gillespie-also-known-as-mrs-andrew-mason-to-take-stage |work=Crain's Chicago Business |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> Gillespie has maintained her own independent musical career alongside Mason's entrepreneurial activities. The couple has largely kept the details of their personal life private.
Mason married '''Jenny Gillespie''', a musician and singer-songwriter. Their relationship became a subject of public interest given Mason's profile as a technology executive. Gillespie has performed and recorded music independently of her husband's business career.<ref name="ChicagoBusiness">{{cite news |title=Jenny Gillespie, Also Known as Mrs. Andrew Mason, to Take Stage |url=http://www.chicagobusiness.com/article/20120808/BLOGS03/120809830/jenny-gillespie-also-known-as-mrs-andrew-mason-to-take-stage |work=Crain's Chicago Business |date=August 8, 2012 |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>


Mason has been based in the Chicago area for much of his adult life, having settled there after attending Northwestern University. His personal interests, as reflected in his career choices and public statements, span music, technology, urban exploration, and creative media production.<ref name="chicagomag" /><ref name="seattle-detour" />
Mason has maintained a relatively low public profile compared to his Groupon-era visibility. His personal interests, including music — both through his formal education and his post-Groupon album — have been documented in various media profiles. He relocated from Chicago to the [[San Francisco Bay Area]] in connection with his post-Groupon ventures.<ref name="SeattleTimes" />


== Recognition ==
== Recognition ==


Mason's founding of Groupon brought him significant public attention during the company's peak growth period from 2009 to 2012. He was featured in numerous national and international media profiles as the face of the daily deals phenomenon, with outlets including ''Chicago Magazine'', ''Time Out Chicago'', ''The New York Times'', ''Bloomberg News'', and ''Business Insider'' covering his career and leadership style.<ref name="chicagomag" /><ref name="BI-truth" /><ref name="dealbook-fired" /><ref name="bloomberg-ouster" />
Mason's career has generated extensive media coverage and analysis, primarily centered on his role at Groupon. During the company's peak growth period in 2010 and 2011, he was the subject of major profiles in publications including ''[[Chicago Magazine]]'', ''[[Time Out Chicago]]'', ''[[The Seattle Times]]'', and numerous technology and business outlets.<ref name="ChicagoMag" /><ref name="TimeOut" /><ref name="SeattleTimes" />
 
The decision to reject Google's reported $6 billion acquisition offer in 2010 was one of the most discussed business decisions of that year, generating commentary across financial and technology media.<ref name="Mashable" /><ref name="TCGoogle" /> The subsequent IPO and Mason's eventual firing further cemented his status as a figure of significant public interest in the technology business world.


Groupon's rejection of Google's reported $6 billion acquisition offer in 2010 and its subsequent IPO placed Mason among the most discussed technology entrepreneurs of the early 2010s.<ref name="google-deal" /><ref name="mashable-deal" /> His candid firing letter in 2013, in which he openly acknowledged his dismissal and took responsibility for Groupon's underperformance, was widely circulated and praised for its honesty in an industry where executive departures are typically announced with carefully worded press releases about "pursuing other opportunities."<ref name="dealbook-fired" /><ref name="marketwatch-fired" />
Mason's candid farewell memo following his termination from Groupon attracted attention for its tone, which contrasted with the typical corporate communications associated with executive departures. ''The New York Times'' described the end of his Groupon tenure as a "long, strange trip," reflecting the unusual trajectory of his leadership of the company.<ref name="DealBook" />


Mason's post-Groupon ventures, including Detour's acquisition by Bose and the founding of Descript, have demonstrated his continued relevance in the technology industry beyond the daily deals era.<ref name="tc-bose" /><ref name="descript-founding" />
His post-Groupon ventures have also been covered in major technology publications, with particular interest in how a founder who experienced both rapid ascent and a public fall would approach subsequent entrepreneurial endeavors.<ref name="BIDescript" /><ref name="TCBose" />


== Legacy ==
== Legacy ==


Andrew Mason's career is most closely associated with the rise and subsequent challenges of the daily deals industry. Groupon, under his leadership, popularized the concept of group buying and daily discount offers, creating an entirely new category of e-commerce that at its peak attracted hundreds of imitators worldwide. The company's trajectory—from a small Chicago startup to a multi-billion-dollar public company facing questions about its long-term viability—became a frequently cited case study in the technology industry about the risks of rapid scaling, the challenges of transitioning from startup to public company, and the sustainability of business models built on deep discounting.<ref name="BI-truth" /><ref name="bloomberg-ouster" />
Andrew Mason's career is most closely associated with the rise and fall of the daily deals industry. Groupon, under his leadership, popularized the concept of group buying and daily deals in a way that reshaped local commerce and digital marketing for small businesses in the early 2010s. At its peak, the company operated in hundreds of markets across dozens of countries and employed thousands of people, establishing a new category of e-commerce.<ref name="BIInside" />
 
The rejection of Google's $6 billion offer and the subsequent decline in Groupon's stock price after its IPO became a case study in technology company valuations, startup governance, and the challenges of sustaining high-growth business models. Business schools and industry analysts have examined the Groupon story as an illustration of both the opportunities and risks inherent in rapid scaling of Internet-based businesses.<ref name="Bloomberg" /><ref name="DealBook" />


Mason's rejection of Google's acquisition offer remains one of the most debated decisions in recent technology business history. While the decision was criticized in hindsight as Groupon's stock price fell below its IPO price, it also reflected the confidence—and the risk appetite—that characterized the era's most ambitious technology founders.<ref name="google-deal" /><ref name="mashable-deal" />
Mason's transition from Groupon to subsequent ventures — first the audio walking tour company Detour, then the AI-powered editing platform Descript — demonstrated a pattern of applying technology to media and consumer experiences. His career after Groupon illustrated the capacity of Silicon Valley's startup ecosystem to provide second acts for founders, even after high-profile setbacks.<ref name="BIDescript" /><ref name="TCBose" />


His post-Groupon career has demonstrated a pattern of pursuing ventures at the intersection of technology and creative media. From the audio walking tours of Detour to the AI-powered editing tools of Descript, Mason has consistently sought to build products that use technology to make creative and experiential activities more accessible.<ref name="tc-bose" /><ref name="descript-founding" /> His willingness to pivot between industries and his comfort with public failure—exemplified by his candid firing letter and his unconventional motivational music album—have made him a distinctive figure among American technology entrepreneurs.<ref name="dealbook-fired" /><ref name="nbc-album" />
His management of the Groupon page, from the founding through rapid growth, the rejection of Google's offer, the IPO, and eventual termination, remains one of the more dramatic narratives in the history of American Internet companies. The candor of his public response to being fired — unusual in a corporate culture that typically favors carefully managed messaging — contributed to his reputation as an unconventional executive.<ref name="DealBook" /><ref name="MarketWatch" />


== References ==
== References ==
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Latest revision as of 06:43, 24 February 2026



Andrew Mason
Mason in 2011
Andrew Mason
BornTemplate:Birth year and age
BirthplacePittsburgh, Pennsylvania, U.S.
NationalityAmerican
OccupationEntrepreneur, software executive
Known forFounder and former CEO of Groupon; founder and CEO of Descript
EducationBachelor of Arts in Music (2003)
Spouse(s)Jenny Gillespie

Andrew D. Mason (born 1981) is an American businessman and entrepreneur best known as the founder and former chief executive officer of Groupon, the Chicago-based daily deals platform that grew from a modest group-buying concept into one of the fastest-growing companies in Internet history. Born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, and educated in music at Northwestern University, Mason built Groupon from its origins as a side project of his earlier venture, The Point, into a global commerce enterprise that famously turned down a reported $6 billion acquisition offer from Google in 2010. His tenure as CEO ended in February 2013, when the company's board removed him amid declining stock prices and questions about the firm's long-term business model. In the years following his departure from Groupon, Mason launched new ventures including Detour, a location-based audio walking tour startup later acquired by Bose Corporation, and Descript, an audio and video editing platform powered by machine learning. His career trajectory — from music student to billionaire-on-paper CEO to fired executive to startup founder once again — has made him one of the more distinctive figures in the American technology industry of the early 21st century.

Early Life

Andrew D. Mason was born in 1981 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.[1] Details about his parents and family background during his childhood years in Pittsburgh remain limited in published sources. Mason grew up in the Pittsburgh area before relocating to the Chicago metropolitan region to attend college. According to profiles published during his rise at Groupon, Mason displayed an early aptitude for technology and creative pursuits, interests that would eventually converge in his entrepreneurial career.[1]

Mason's upbringing in Pittsburgh, a city with deep roots in industry and a growing technology sector, provided context for his later work in building Internet-based businesses. He moved to Evanston, Illinois, to attend Northwestern University, a decision that would place him in the broader Chicago ecosystem where he would eventually build Groupon into a major enterprise.[2]

Education

Mason enrolled at Northwestern University's Bienen School of Music, where he studied music and earned a Bachelor of Arts degree in 2003.[2] His academic background in music rather than business or computer science distinguished him from many of his peers in the technology startup world. Despite his formal training in the arts, Mason had developed skills in web development and technology that he would deploy in his post-college career.[1]

After completing his undergraduate degree, Mason remained in the Chicago area. He later began graduate studies in public policy at the University of Chicago, though he did not complete the program, leaving to pursue entrepreneurial ventures full-time.[1] This decision to abandon graduate school in favor of a startup would prove to be a pivotal turning point in his career.

Career

The Point and Early Ventures

Before founding Groupon, Mason worked in the Chicago technology scene. He conceived of a web platform called The Point, a social activism site built around the concept of collective action — users could rally around causes and pledge to act only once a tipping point of participation was reached.[1] The Point was backed by Eric Lefkofsky, a Chicago-based entrepreneur and investor who would become a central figure in the Groupon story. The tipping-point mechanism of The Point — where an action would only be triggered once a sufficient number of people committed — became the conceptual foundation upon which Groupon was built.[3]

The Point itself did not achieve significant commercial traction, but one particular use case stood out: users were leveraging the platform to organize group purchases, aggregating demand to negotiate bulk discounts from local businesses.[4] This observation led Mason and his backers to pivot toward a dedicated group-buying platform, which launched in November 2008 as Groupon — a portmanteau of "group" and "coupon."

Founding and Growth of Groupon

Groupon launched in Chicago in November 2008 with a simple premise: the platform would offer a single daily deal from a local business — a restaurant, spa, retailer, or service provider — at a significant discount, typically 50 percent or more off the regular price. The deal would activate only if a minimum number of buyers committed, applying the tipping-point model from The Point.[3] The business model proved extraordinarily popular. Groupon expanded rapidly from its Chicago base to other cities across the United States and then internationally.

Mason served as CEO during this period of explosive growth. Under his leadership, Groupon grew at a pace that drew comparisons to some of the fastest-growing Internet companies in history.[1] The company's model was attractive to consumers, who received steep discounts, and to small businesses, which gained exposure to new customers, though the economics for merchants were the subject of ongoing debate.

By 2010, Groupon had expanded to hundreds of markets worldwide and employed thousands of people. The company's workforce included a large editorial team responsible for writing the humorous, irreverent descriptions that accompanied each deal — a feature that became part of the Groupon brand identity and reflected Mason's own sensibility.[3]

Google Acquisition Offer

In late 2010, Groupon became the subject of one of the most talked-about acquisition offers in technology industry history. Google reportedly offered approximately $6 billion to acquire the company, which would have been one of the largest acquisitions in the Internet sector at the time.[5] Mason and Groupon's board ultimately rejected the offer, a decision confirmed in early December 2010.[6]

The decision to turn down Google's bid was one of the most scrutinized business decisions of the era. Supporters argued that Groupon's growth trajectory justified holding out for a higher valuation, while skeptics questioned whether the company's business model was sustainable enough to warrant such confidence. The rejection set the stage for Groupon's pursuit of an initial public offering.[5][6]

Initial Public Offering

Groupon filed for its initial public offering in June 2011 and went public on the NASDAQ stock exchange in November 2011. The IPO valued the company at approximately $13 billion, making it one of the largest Internet IPOs since Google's own offering in 2004.[3] Mason, as the founder and CEO of a publicly traded company, became one of the most prominent young executives in American business.

However, the IPO process was not without controversy. Groupon's financial disclosures drew scrutiny from regulators and analysts, particularly regarding the company's use of non-standard accounting metrics. The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission raised questions about certain financial measures the company had presented in its prospectus.[3]

Despite the successful IPO, Mason's salary as CEO was notable for its modesty relative to the company's valuation. Reports indicated that his annual salary was $756.72 — a figure that attracted attention for its unusually low amount, though he held substantial equity in the company.[7]

Decline and Termination as CEO

Following the IPO, Groupon's stock price experienced a significant decline as investors grew concerned about the company's profitability, its competitive position, and the sustainability of the daily deals model. The stock fell substantially from its IPO price over the course of 2012, and the company faced increasing competition from rivals including LivingSocial and Amazon's entry into the local deals space.[8]

On February 28, 2013, Groupon's board of directors removed Mason as CEO.[9] Mason's response to his termination drew widespread attention for its unusual candor. Rather than issuing a standard corporate statement, he sent a memo to Groupon employees acknowledging his firing directly. In the memo, he took responsibility for the company's underperformance and wished his successor well.[10]

The departure was widely covered in the business and technology press. Commentators noted that Mason's firing represented the end of a rapid and dramatic arc — from founding a startup to leading a company valued in the billions to being removed by the board in the span of roughly four years.[8][10]

Post-Groupon: Music Album

In the months following his departure from Groupon, Mason took an unexpected creative detour. In July 2013, he released a motivational business music album titled Hardly Workin', which featured seven tracks with titles related to business and corporate life.[11] The album, which Mason described in earnest terms, drew extensive media coverage for its novelty — a recently fired CEO of a multi-billion-dollar public company releasing a music album was, by any measure, an unusual career move.[12][13]

Mason's background in music — he had earned his bachelor's degree in the subject from Northwestern — lent some context to the project, though most observers treated it as an eccentric post-firing diversion rather than a serious career pivot.[11]

Detour

After his musical interlude, Mason returned to the technology sector. He founded Detour, a startup that produced location-based audio walking tours. The app used GPS technology to deliver narrated walking tours that adapted to a user's pace and location, offering immersive audio experiences in cities including San Francisco, New York City, Austin, and Chicago.[14]

Detour represented a different approach from the mass-market scale of Groupon. The product was more niche, focused on the intersection of audio storytelling and geographic exploration. In April 2018, Bose Corporation, the audio equipment manufacturer, acquired Detour.[15] The acquisition reflected Bose's interest in location-aware audio experiences and augmented reality audio technologies.

Descript

Mason's next venture, Descript, became his most significant post-Groupon project. Founded in 2017, Descript is an audio and video editing software platform that uses machine learning and artificial intelligence to enable users to edit media by manipulating text transcripts rather than traditional waveform or timeline editing.[16]

The core innovation of Descript was its approach to editing: the software transcribes audio and video content into text, and users can edit the media by editing the transcript — deleting a word from the transcript deletes the corresponding audio or video, for instance. This approach represented a significant departure from conventional editing workflows and made audio and video editing more accessible to users without specialized technical skills.[16]

Mason serves as the founder and CEO of Descript, which is based in San Francisco. The company has attracted attention from the technology industry for its application of AI to creative tools, positioning it within the broader trend of machine learning-powered productivity software.[16]

Personal Life

Mason married Jenny Gillespie, a musician and singer-songwriter. Their relationship became a subject of public interest given Mason's profile as a technology executive. Gillespie has performed and recorded music independently of her husband's business career.[17]

Mason has maintained a relatively low public profile compared to his Groupon-era visibility. His personal interests, including music — both through his formal education and his post-Groupon album — have been documented in various media profiles. He relocated from Chicago to the San Francisco Bay Area in connection with his post-Groupon ventures.[14]

Recognition

Mason's career has generated extensive media coverage and analysis, primarily centered on his role at Groupon. During the company's peak growth period in 2010 and 2011, he was the subject of major profiles in publications including Chicago Magazine, Time Out Chicago, The Seattle Times, and numerous technology and business outlets.[1][4][14]

The decision to reject Google's reported $6 billion acquisition offer in 2010 was one of the most discussed business decisions of that year, generating commentary across financial and technology media.[5][6] The subsequent IPO and Mason's eventual firing further cemented his status as a figure of significant public interest in the technology business world.

Mason's candid farewell memo following his termination from Groupon attracted attention for its tone, which contrasted with the typical corporate communications associated with executive departures. The New York Times described the end of his Groupon tenure as a "long, strange trip," reflecting the unusual trajectory of his leadership of the company.[10]

His post-Groupon ventures have also been covered in major technology publications, with particular interest in how a founder who experienced both rapid ascent and a public fall would approach subsequent entrepreneurial endeavors.[16][15]

Legacy

Andrew Mason's career is most closely associated with the rise and fall of the daily deals industry. Groupon, under his leadership, popularized the concept of group buying and daily deals in a way that reshaped local commerce and digital marketing for small businesses in the early 2010s. At its peak, the company operated in hundreds of markets across dozens of countries and employed thousands of people, establishing a new category of e-commerce.[3]

The rejection of Google's $6 billion offer and the subsequent decline in Groupon's stock price after its IPO became a case study in technology company valuations, startup governance, and the challenges of sustaining high-growth business models. Business schools and industry analysts have examined the Groupon story as an illustration of both the opportunities and risks inherent in rapid scaling of Internet-based businesses.[8][10]

Mason's transition from Groupon to subsequent ventures — first the audio walking tour company Detour, then the AI-powered editing platform Descript — demonstrated a pattern of applying technology to media and consumer experiences. His career after Groupon illustrated the capacity of Silicon Valley's startup ecosystem to provide second acts for founders, even after high-profile setbacks.[16][15]

His management of the Groupon page, from the founding through rapid growth, the rejection of Google's offer, the IPO, and eventual termination, remains one of the more dramatic narratives in the history of American Internet companies. The candor of his public response to being fired — unusual in a corporate culture that typically favors carefully managed messaging — contributed to his reputation as an unconventional executive.[10][9]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.6 "On Groupon and Its Founder Andrew Mason".Chicago Magazine.August 2010.http://www.chicagomag.com/Chicago-Magazine/August-2010/On-Groupon-and-its-founder-Andrew-Mason.Retrieved 2026-02-24.
  2. 2.0 2.1 "Andrew Mason".Northwestern University Alumni.http://alumni.northwestern.edu/node/4654.Retrieved 2026-02-24.
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 3.5 "Inside Groupon: The Truth About The World's Most Controversial Company".Business Insider.October 2011.http://www.businessinsider.com/inside-groupon-the-truth-about-the-worlds-most-controversial-company-2011-10/.Retrieved 2026-02-24.
  4. 4.0 4.1 "Groupon 2.0".Time Out Chicago.http://timeoutchicago.com/shopping-style/shopping/95595/groupon-20.Retrieved 2026-02-24.
  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 "Google Offered $6 Billion for Groupon".Mashable.December 7, 2010.http://mashable.com/2010/12/07/groupon-800-million/.Retrieved 2026-02-24.
  6. 6.0 6.1 6.2 "Confirmed: The Groupon/Google Deal Is Off".TechCrunch.December 3, 2010.https://techcrunch.com/2010/12/03/confirmed-the-groupongoogle-deal-is-off/.Retrieved 2026-02-24.
  7. "Bizarre: Groupon CEO Andrew Mason's Salary Is Just $756.72".Business Insider.May 2012.http://www.businessinsider.com/bizarre-groupon-ceo-andrew-masons-salary-is-just-75672-2012-5.Retrieved 2026-02-24.
  8. 8.0 8.1 8.2 "Mason Ouster Leaves Groupon Seeking CEO to Uncover Coupon Profit".Bloomberg News.March 1, 2013.https://www.bloomberg.com/news/2013-03-01/mason-ouster-leaves-groupon-seeking-ceo-to-uncover-coupon-profit.html.Retrieved 2026-02-24.
  9. 9.0 9.1 "Groupon Ousts CEO Andrew Mason".MarketWatch.February 28, 2013.http://www.marketwatch.com/story/groupon-ousts-ceo-andrew-mason-2013-02-28?link=MW_latest_news.Retrieved 2026-02-24.
  10. 10.0 10.1 10.2 10.3 10.4 "Remembering the Long, Strange Trip of Groupon's Now-Fired Chief".The New York Times DealBook.February 28, 2013.https://dealbook.nytimes.com/2013/02/28/remembering-the-long-strange-trip-of-groupons-now-fired-chief.Retrieved 2026-02-24.
  11. 11.0 11.1 "Ex-Groupon CEO Andrew Mason releases motivational business music album".New York Daily News.2013.http://www.nydailynews.com/entertainment/music-arts/ex-groupon-ceo-andrew-mason-releases-motivational-business-music-album-article-1.1389361.Retrieved 2026-02-24.
  12. "Andrew Mason Raises Your Hands Up In the Air".TechCrunch.July 1, 2013.https://techcrunch.com/2013/07/01/andrew-mason-raises-your-hands-up-in-the-air/?ncid=tcdaily.Retrieved 2026-02-24.
  13. "Fired Groupon CEO Releases Rock Album".NBC News.2013.https://www.nbcnews.com/business/fired-groupon-ceo-releases-rock-album-6C10523106.Retrieved 2026-02-24.
  14. 14.0 14.1 14.2 "In Person: Andrew Mason".The Seattle Times.http://seattletimes.com/html/businesstechnology/2025649296_inpersonmasonxml.html.Retrieved 2026-02-24.
  15. 15.0 15.1 15.2 "Bose Acquires Andrew Mason's Walking Tour Startup Detour".TechCrunch.April 24, 2018.https://techcrunch.com/2018/04/24/bose-acquires-andrew-masons-walking-tour-startup-detour/.Retrieved 2026-02-24.
  16. 16.0 16.1 16.2 16.3 16.4 "Groupon Founder Andrew Mason's New Startup Descript".Business Insider.December 2017.https://www.businessinsider.com/groupon-founder-andrew-mason-new-startup-descript-detour-2017-12/.Retrieved 2026-02-24.
  17. "Jenny Gillespie, Also Known as Mrs. Andrew Mason, to Take Stage".Crain's Chicago Business.August 8, 2012.http://www.chicagobusiness.com/article/20120808/BLOGS03/120809830/jenny-gillespie-also-known-as-mrs-andrew-mason-to-take-stage.Retrieved 2026-02-24.