Draft:Jason J. Hogg

Jason J. Hogg (born August 8, 1971) is an American businessman and inventor. He is currently Executive-in-Residence at the private equity firm Great Hill Partners. He serves on the board of New State Capital portfolio company Global Holdings and was a Senior Lecturer and Professor of Innovation and Technology at Cornell University's Johnson School and Cornell Tech in NYC until 2020.

Career
The son of Russel Hogg, a former FBI agent and onetime president and chief executive of Mastercard International, Hogg (pronounced HOGUE) also served as a special agent for the Federal Bureau of Investigation, where he worked in various covert roles, including undercover fieldwork. In 2005 Hogg secured funding from investors including Steve Case and Ted Leonsis to launch Revolution Money, a financial services company that provided offerings such as credit cards, debit cards, and money transfer services.

At Revolution Money, Hogg invented the RevolutionCard, the first credit card in the U.S. that stores no cardholder names or account numbers and requires authentication based on personal identification numbers (PIN) for all credit transactions.

American Express Co. purchased Revolution Money in November 2009 for $300 million.

Hogg has also held executive positions with Aon Cyber Solutions, Tritium Partners, Blackstone Group, American Express, MBNA, and B2R Finance.