MotherDuck has two new hires: Frances Perry (left), engineering manager, and Margaret Lawrence Rosas, head of customer success. (LinkedIn Photos)
Seattle data analytics startup MotherDuck is expanding its nest with two new leadership hires.
Frances Perry has taken the role of engineering manager. She was previously at Google for 16 years, rising to the level of engineering director of Google Compute Engine.
Margaret Lawrence Rosas joins the team as head of customer success. She was formerly vice president of the "Department of Customer Love" at data analytics startup Looker, which Google acquired in 2020. Rosas spent the next three years in director roles at Google and was most recently on a career break.
MotherDuck CEO and cofounder Jordan Tigani, also a former longtime Google employee, called Rosas' decision to join the startup a "huge honor" and said Perry helped him "get oriented and feel part of the team" at Google.
"After working her way up to the rarefied part of the engineering ladder, [Perry] jumped into building systems with people rather than code," Tigani said in a post on LinkedIn. "Looking forward to working with her to help develop the idea of management at MotherDuck as a craft, not a tax."
MotherDuck announced a $52.5 million round in September, bringing total funding to $100 million. The startup launched in April 2022.
Pallavi Sinha, vice president of growth at Humanly. (LinkedIn Photos)
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"Between the ongoing layoff updates and job hunt nightmare stories from extremely skilled colleagues, I was hearing about and feeling more imposter syndrome and job search disillusion than I've ever experienced professionally," Sinha said.
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Madin Akpo-Esambe. (TVF Photo)
— Madin Akpo-Esambe is now part of the investment team at Tacoma Venture Fund. Akpo-Esambe is co-founder of Trava, an AI-powered travel planning tool and marketplace that helps friends and families create travel itineraries.
The Tacoma Venture Fund launched in 2020 and invests in early-stage startups across the Pacific Northwest, with a particular focus on the Tacoma, Wash., area south of Seattle.
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