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Anne Boden
British entrepreneur (b. 1960) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Anne Elizabeth Boden MBE (born January 1960) is a Welsh tech entrepreneur. She is the founder and former CEO of Starling Bank and the first woman to found a British bank.[1][2] In 2018, she received an MBE for services to financial technology.[3]
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Early life
Boden was born in Bon-y-maen a suburb of Swansea, the daughter of a steelworker and a department store worker.[1] She attended Cefn Hengoed Comprehensive and graduated from Swansea University in 1981[4] with a degree in Chemistry and Computer Sciences.[5] Boden reportedly spent much of her childhood reading.[6] After the financial crisis, Boden sold her house in Swansea where she spent her weekends, in order to raise funds and hire staff at her company.[5]
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Career
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After graduating, Boden had intended pursue a career in information technology, but accepted a job as a graduate trainee with Lloyds Banking Group.[4][5] She went on to work at Standard Chartered, UBS, and as Chief Information Officer at Aon.[7] Boden later joined ABN AMRO and Royal Bank of Scotland Group, serving as Head of EMEA and as head of Global Transaction Banking.[7] At the group, she ran a payments business across 34 countries.[8] Boden earned her MBA from Middlesex University in 1990 while working for Standard Chartered.[9]
In 2011, she served on the Board of Governors of Middlesex University, which awarded her an honorary doctorate degree in July 2018.[10]
She joined Allied Irish Banks in 2012 as Chief Operating Officer to help the bank recover from the 2008 financial crisis.[11][12]
Starling Bank
Boden founded Starling Bank in June 2014, originally named Possible Financial Services, with the tagline "Bank Possible".[13] Her objective was to create an entirely on-line bank that gave easier feedback to customers.[14]
In February 2015, co-founder Tom Blomfield departed Starling to found the bank Monzo.[15] The other four directors left with him.[14]
The company rebranded as Starling Bank in January 2016 and received its banking licence in the UK that year.[13][16] The Telegraph described the company as "the Amazon of banking" after it received multiple investments from Austrian-born billionaire Harald McPike.[17]
Boden lost her position as majority shareholder in the bank in July 2019 after a large investment from McPike during a series C funding round in February.[18] McPike has to date invested £75 million (for a 60% stake) in the company, followed by a £50 million share held by Merian Global Investors.[18] As of July 2019, the company had raised £233 million of investment.[18] Boden is a member of Tech Nation's FinTech Delivery Panel and has spoken at industry events such as Money20/20 and Wealth 2.0.[7]
In June 2023, Boden stepped down as Starling CEO after investor clash but retained her 4.9 per cent ownership of Starling.[19][20]
In July 2024, Boden stepped down from Starling's board to focus on developing a new artificial intelligence business.[21]
In 2020, Boden became a member of the board of the trade association for the UK's banks and financial services companies, UK Finance, and also an advisor to the UK government's Board of Trade.[14] She is also a member of the World Economic Forum.[22]
In 2020, Boden published the book Banking On It: How I Disrupted an Industry.[23]
Boden is the chair of the government's 'Women-led High-Growth Enterprise Taskforce'.[24]
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Awards
Starling's Anne Boden named CEO of the year at the Digital Masters Awards in 2020.[25]
In July 2023, Boden was awarded an honorary doctorate by Swansea University, from which she had earned her bachelor's degree.
References
External links
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