Driven
Forbes|May 16, 2017

Brad Cordova had deeply personal reasons to start a company to combat distracted driving and tap into the new market for data-driven insurance.

 

Susan Adams
Driven

In early 2014, Progressive insurance held a contest to choose the best cellphone app to play Big Brother to its policyholders. The nation’s fourth-largest auto insurer wanted to track drivers’ mileage, time of day on the road and whether they were slamming on the brakes. Eleven companies entered. One was TrueMotion, a Boston-based startup cofounded by Brad Cordova, now 27, an MIT graduate school dropout who had taught himself to code at age 7. He had $3 million in seed funding but no paying customers.

Before the contest kicked off, Cordova thought his team had perfected their app—only to realize it was draining too much battery power, which meant they had to reengineer it from scratch. “It was like climbing a mountain with a gun to your head,” he says. They worked 18-hour days feeding data into machine-learning algorithms, then testing multiple versions on thousands of drivers they recruited through Applause, a Boston user-testing outfit. That September, Cordova learned that True- Motion was one of three finalists, but Progressive wanted further refinements, like the ability to track whether users were texting while driving.

Cordova’s ten-person team got little sleep for the next four months as they ground through thousands more data tests. In April 2015, TrueMotion triumphed, signing an eight-figure deal with Progressive that has helped it land eight new customers and another $10 million in venture funding. Forbes estimates TrueMotion’s 2017 revenue will exceed $15 million.

This story is from the May 16, 2017 edition of Forbes.

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This story is from the May 16, 2017 edition of Forbes.

Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 8,500+ magazines and newspapers.