From Founder Dialogues with CarGurus Founder Langley Steinert · · Founder Collective
“The board of directors for CarGurus actually is, I jokingly refer to them as friends and family. I've got Steve Coffer from TripAdvisor. I've got the former co-founder of eBay Motors. These are people that I've known through my life. We still have a very spirited board meeting, but there's no one on my board who's pounding the table to say, I need a 3x return in my five-year time span. We're more focused on the long haul and how to build a big company.”
On , E. Steinert, Founder & Executive Chairman at CARGURUS INC, spoke about corporate governance during Founder Dialogues with CarGurus Founder Langley Steinert on Founder Collective.
Langley Steinert, founder and executive chairman of CarGurus, has described the company as a shopping platform that uses data to rank car listings by price relative to market value, labeling them as "great deal," "good deal," "fair deal," "poor deal," or "overpriced." He has stated that the company had about 20 million unique visitors a month in the United States and more average daily traffic than competitors such as Autotrader, Kelly Blue Book, Edmunds, and Cars.com. Steinert has said that CarGurus had been profitable for eight consecutive years as of 2016 and 2017, and that this profitability allowed the company to control its own destiny without raising large venture capital rounds. He has noted that the company's board consisted of longtime associates rather than investors demanding short-term returns. Steinert has discussed his background as a co-founder of TripAdvisor, which he said raised only $4.5 million in capital before reaching a $9 billion market cap. He has expressed a preference for being in control when starting companies and has described himself as a leader rather than a manager. On the automotive industry, Steinert has stated that mobile traffic had grown from about 40% to 65% of CarGurus' traffic over two years, and he has argued that eliminating dealers entirely would be a mistake because they provide service and a tactile buying experience. He has said CarGurus had no plans to sell and expected to become a public company.