A league of tech pioneers at Intuit are shaping the future of data, innovation, and purpose-driven success
If data is the new oil, technologists and engineers are the new architects shaping the structures of the digital age. These are the boots-on-the-ground people, who are extracting valuable insights from vast digital reservoirs and getting to build exciting new innovations for the world. If you're a technologist, engineer, data scientist, project manager, or engaged in work that is data and AI adjacent, there's never been a better time to be you, and you know it.
The Goldilocks zone, where you can innovate, learn, make great connections, have a work-life balance, grow at a pace, and find purpose in what you do is the ideal place to be. Do these companies and workplaces exist? Definitely, and these are the companies that have employed ample foresight, disruptive practices and a design thinking approach.
Some companies have had that magic from the very beginning. Take Intuit for example. 40 years ago, Intuit’s founder Scott Cook sat at his kitchen table watching his wife struggle to balance the family checkbook – and he just knew that there had to be a better way. Scott created Quicken, a revolutionary new way to use technology to manage personal finances, and Intuit was born.
This was a game changer, in a sea of complex products. It was an easy to use personal finance tool that actually saved people time! It delivered a superior experience. It made people better at personal finance. Customers who used it loved it.
It set the tone for Intuit's approach to innovation. Intuit has never stopped asking that same basic question: how can technology be used to solve their customers’ most important problems?