Gradroots/ Donor Intelligence
AI Agent ยท 8 insights ready
LL

Lynne Laube

Venture Partner, TTV Capital ยท Independent Director, NerdWallet (NRDS)
Fintech Hall of FameIPO FounderAtlanta, GAUC Cincinnati Alum
2-Minute Brief
Lynne Laube co-founded Cardlytics (CDLX) in 2008, building it from zero to ~$300M revenue and a NASDAQ IPO โ€” during and after the worst financial crisis in decades. Before that, she spent 13 years at Capital One rising to VP/COO. She's raised $1B+ across public and private markets. Now at TTV Capital, she mentors early-stage fintech founders. She's a deeply committed advocate for women in business and underrepresented founders, having launched Women of Cardlytics, invested as an LP in Valor Ventures, and spoken nationally on women's empowerment in entrepreneurship.
Capital Raised
$1B+
Public + Private
Peak Revenue
$300M
Cardlytics (CDLX)
MAUs at Scale
180M+
Bank partner network
FinServ Career
30+ yrs
Since 1992
Strategic GiverAlma Mater LoyaltyTime + Capital DonorMission-First
Estimated Giving CapacityVery High
Alma Mater AffinityVery High
Women & DEI Cause AlignmentVery High
Likelihood of Unrestricted GiftLow
Likelihood of Restricted / Named GiftHigh
Receptivity to Cold OutreachLow
Receptivity via Warm IntroductionVery High
๐Ÿ’ฐ
Wealth Profile & Giving Capacity
NerdWallet board comp alone is ~$212K/yr. Equity from Cardlytics IPO (founded 2008, IPO 2018, CEO through 2022), LP positions in multiple VC funds, and venture partner carry at TTV Capital suggest a net worth comfortably in the multi-million range. She has the capacity for five- to six-figure gifts, potentially larger for naming opportunities aligned with her values.
๐ŸŽ“
Alma Mater Connection Is the Strongest Entry Point
UC Cincinnati BS in Finance & Marketing (1992). She returned to campus to keynote Lindner Women in Business Empowerment Day โ€” speaking to 250+ students. She explicitly told students 'you have to get a college degree to be a successful entrepreneur.' Her alma mater connection is active, emotional, and belief-driven. This is the highest-probability giving vector.
๐Ÿ”‘
She Gives Where She Can See the Mechanism
Her entire career philosophy is operational: she wants to see how things work, how capital deploys, what the output is. LP investments in Valor, Women of Cardlytics, board service at NerdWallet โ€” every commitment she makes has a visible mechanism of impact. She will not write a check to a general fund. She'll fund a program she can watch work.
๐Ÿ‘ฉโ€๐Ÿ’ผ
Women's Programs Are Her North Star
Women of Cardlytics. LP in Valor specifically for underrepresented founders. Keynote speaker on women's empowerment. 'I believe very much in women's groups and empowering women.' This is not a secondary interest โ€” it's core identity. Any ask that puts women's advancement at the center will receive disproportionate attention.
๐Ÿค
She Gives Time Before Money โ€” and Values Both
Board service, mentoring founders, speaking at universities, hosting events at Cardlytics HQ, leading venture partner networks. She invests her time heavily before committing capital. Expect a cultivation period. She'll want to advise, sit on a committee, or mentor students before she writes a check. That's a feature, not a bug.
โš ๏ธ
What Will Kill the Ask
Generic appeals. Mass solicitation. Vague impact language. Asking too early before she's been engaged. Anything that feels like a passive check with no accountability. She literally built her philosophy on 'all money is green but it doesn't spend the same' โ€” if you can't articulate how her money will be different from anyone else's, she won't engage.
Cultivation Strategy Summary
Lynne Laube is not a transactional donor. She's a relationship investor. The path to a meaningful gift runs through engagement first, then involvement, then investment. Lead with her alma mater connection or women's programs. Get her into an advisory or mentoring role. Let her see the mechanism. The ask comes last โ€” and when it does, it should be specific, strategic, and named.
Recommended Cultivation Sequence
1
Warm Introduction via NetworkMonth 1
Cold outreach will not work. Identify a mutual connection โ€” TTV Capital portfolio founders, Valor Ventures contacts, Atlanta fintech community, or UC Cincinnati alumni network. The introduction should reference her mentoring work or women's advocacy, not her wealth. She needs to feel you see her, not her checkbook.
2
Invite to Advise, Not to GiveMonth 1โ€“2
Invite her to serve as a guest speaker, advisory board member, or mentor for a women's entrepreneurship program, scholarship committee, or business school initiative. Frame it as: 'We're building something and need your operational thinking.' She said herself โ€” she responds to women's groups and paying it forward. Let her shape something.
3
Show Her the MechanismMonth 2โ€“4
Once she's advising, give her visibility into how the program works. Student outcomes, retention data, graduation rates, career placement โ€” the operational dashboard. She's a data-minded operator. She'll evaluate the program the same way she'd evaluate a startup: 'Is this working? What's the proof?' Have the proof ready.
4
Deepen with a Campus Visit or EventMonth 3โ€“5
If alma mater (UC Cincinnati) โ€” invite her back for a signature event. If your institution โ€” invite her to a women's leadership summit, a donor recognition dinner where she can speak, or a student showcase. She hosted Valor's first annual meeting at Cardlytics HQ. She likes being a venue and a voice, not just an audience member.
5
The Strategic AskMonth 5โ€“8
By now she's engaged, she's seen the impact, she's invested her time. The ask should be specific and named: 'The Laube Women's Entrepreneurship Fund' or 'The Lynne Laube Scholarship for Women in Fintech.' Attach it to a program she's already advising. Frame the gift as strategic capital โ€” not a donation, but an investment in a mechanism she's helped build. Reference her own language back to her: this money won't just be green, it'll spend differently.
โšก
Critical Insight
Do not skip straight to the ask. Lynne Laube has explicitly said founders should "hire slow." She applies the same logic to her own commitments. She LP'd into Valor only after years of relationship with Lisa Calhoun. She joined TTV after they backed Cardlytics for over a decade. Every major commitment she's made has a long cultivation runway. Respect the timeline and she'll reward you with a deeply loyal, long-term relationship โ€” not just a one-time gift.
Highest-Probability Ask Structures
95%
Named Scholarship
Women in Business / Fintech scholarship at her alma mater or your institution. Ties to her deepest identity.
85%
Advisory Role โ†’ Endowment
Board or committee seat on a women's program that leads to an endowed fund. Mirrors her Valor โ†’ LP pathway.
80%
Speaker Series Sponsorship
Fund a women's entrepreneurship speaker series. She keynoted one herself โ€” she believes in the format.
75%
Mentorship Program Underwrite
Fund the operational cost of a structured mentoring program for underrepresented students. She'll want to mentor in it.
15%
General / Unrestricted Fund
Very unlikely without deep relationship. She needs to see the mechanism. Generic asks will be ignored.
Co-Founder & Former CEO, CardlyticsVenture Partner, TTV CapitalBoard: NerdWallet (NRDS)LP: Valor Ventures Fund 2 & 3
Education: BS Finance & Marketing, University of Cincinnati (1992). Executive Leadership, Darden / UVA.
Board Comp (NerdWallet): ~$212K/yr ($62K cash + $150K equity). Chairs Compensation Committee, joining Audit Committee.
Recognition: TAG Fintech Hall of Fame (2021). Inc. & Entrepreneur 360 Top 10 Female Founders (2016). E&Y Entrepreneur of Year Finalist (2012, 2013).
Key Network: Scott Grimes (co-founder), Lisa Calhoun (Valor), Gardiner Garrard (TTV), Canaan Partners, Polaris Ventures.
1992
Bank One โ€” Operations Analyst
Foundation in banking operations and infrastructure.
1995
Capital One โ€” 13-Year Ascent to VP/COO
Built expertise in product innovation: balance transfers, micro-business lending, decoupled debit. The place that taught her 'how to think.'
2008
Co-Founded Cardlytics
Left Capital One with co-founder Scott Grimes. Raised $2M seed during the global financial crisis. 'Kicked out of every bank we met with' initially.
2011
Cardlytics Breakout Growth
Revenue grew ~6x in one year. Expanded to 170+ bank partners, ~20M households.
2018
NASDAQ IPO (CDLX)
First tech IPO of 2018. Culmination of $200M+ in venture fundraising.
2020
Named CEO of Cardlytics
Scaled to ~$300M revenue, 180M+ MAUs. JPMorgan Chase and Wells Fargo partnerships.
2022
Transition to Venture Capital
Joined Valor Ventures as Operating Partner, mentoring early-stage B2B founders.
2025
Venture Partner, TTV Capital
Rejoined the firm that originally backed Cardlytics. Early-stage fintech portfolio support.
Throughline: Learned how banks work from the inside โ†’ Built a company banks needed โ†’ Now helps others do the same.
Took a company from founding to $300M revenue and a NASDAQ listing
Raised $1B+ across public and private capital markets
Built a platform reaching 180M+ monthly active users through bank partnerships
One of very few women founders to take a VC-backed company through IPO
Inducted into the TAG Fintech Hall of Fame alongside co-founder
Independent Director on a NASDAQ-listed board (NerdWallet)
25+ year track record operating inside or building for financial services
Personal LP commitment to multiple VC funds (Valor Fund 2 & 3)
Expose, Don't Cover
From Capital One's 'eya, not cy' culture. She values radical transparency and actively seeks counter-opinions. Don't sugarcoat โ€” she'll respect directness.
Fire Fast, Hire Slow
Founder capital is precious. Dislikes sloppy hiring after fundraising. Values discipline over speed in team-building.
All Money Is Green, But Doesn't Spend the Same
Strongly prefers strategic capital over passive checks. Values investors who open doors and provide operational guidance.
It's Your Company
Collect opinions widely but own every decision. Skeptical of VC overreach. Respects autonomy and conviction.
This Is a Marathon
Views company-building as a decade-long commitment. Skeptical of get-rich-quick mindsets. Values endurance.
Women Lift Women
Launched Women of Cardlytics, LP'd into Valor for underrepresented founders, mentors actively. Core identity, not performative.
๐Ÿ“‹Meeting Prep โ€” What to Know Going In
What Motivates Her
Building pathways for the next generation โ€” especially women and underrepresented founders. She wants her experience to compound through others. Lead with impact, not flattery.
What Language Resonates
Operational precision. She thinks in frameworks: 'how to think,' not 'what to think.' Use clear, structured reasoning. Reference proof points and outcomes, not aspirations.
What She'll Challenge
Vague plans, sloppy team decisions, passive use of capital. If you're asking for something, have a disciplined plan. She will probe your thinking, not just your pitch.
How to Engage
Be candid. She built her philosophy on exposing hard truths. Share what's working AND what's not. Ask her to pressure-test your approach โ€” she'll respect the invitation.
๐Ÿ’ฌPredicted Questions She'll Ask
โ†’What's the specific program structure and who runs it day-to-day?
โ†’What outcomes have you measured โ€” retention, graduation, career placement?
โ†’How are you specifically supporting women or underrepresented students?
โ†’Where is this program weakest? What's not working yet?
โ†’How would my involvement be different from writing a check?
โ†’Who else is funding this and what's their role beyond capital?
โ†’What's the 5-year vision โ€” is this built to last?
GradRoots AI ยท SIGNAL โ†’ ARC โ†’ CREDENCE โ†’ DOCTRINE โ†’ GIVING PROFILE โ†’ PLAYBOOK โ†’ CANVAS
Mar 5, 2026