Krisztina Holly, known by her colleagues as 'Z' is a Hungarian American innovator, entrepreneur, and adventurer. She is the host of The Art of Manufacturing podcast and the Founder and Chief Instigator of MAKE IT IN LA, which was launched from her term as Entrepreneur-in-Residence for LA Mayor Garcetti. She is best known as the creator of the first TEDx, the founding executive director of the Deshpande Center for Technological Innovation at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the Vice Provost for Innovation and founding executive director of the Stevens Center for Innovation at the University of Southern California. She was founder or key team member of various technology startups including Stylus Innovation, Direct Hit Technologies, and Jeeves Solutions and was a prominent mountain bike advocate in New England for a decade. She is a founding donor and board member of the River LA, serves on the board of TTI/Vanguard, and has been an advisor to nearly two dozen other companies and organizations, including the Obama Administration as an inaugural member of the National Advisory Council on Innovation and Entrepreneurship, and a global agenda council member of the World Economic Forum advising in the areas of entrepreneurship and manufacturing. She is married and resides in Los Angeles.
Holly created TEDxUSC, the first ever TEDx event in 2009, which so far inspired over 15,000 similar events globally. In her role as curator and host for TEDxUSC over four years, she discovered and coached more than 60 presenters whose videos have garnered 12 million views online. From 2006-2012 she was the vice provost for innovation at USC and founding executive director the USC Stevens Center for Innovation. From 2002-2006 she was the founding executive director of the MIT Deshpande Center. While at MIT and USC, she helped expand the innovation ecosystems in Boston and LA and the centers helped spin out 39 startups based on university research. Early on Holly was co-founder of computer telephony pioneer, Stylus Innovation and subsequently joined other tech and media startups including Direct Hit Technologies and Jeeves Solutions. Between startups Holly spent nearly three years in documentary production. Holly started her career as an undergraduate researcher at the MIT Media Lab, working on the team that created the world's first full-color computer generated reflection hologram. Later, she developed a robotic weld-seam-tracking program for the space shuttle main engine and built a head-eye robot for the MIT AI Lab. Holly was named Champion of Free Enterprise by Forbes in 2009. She has been a contributor to Forbes, The Economist, Businessweek, Huffington Post, CNN.com, NASA ASK, Strategy+Business, World Economic Forum, Science Progress, Innovation Management, and Mountain Bike Magazine. She has also served as a board member or advisor for numerous organizations.
Hobbies
Holly is a licensed skydiver and SCUBA instructor, and an avid backcountry/telemark skier, adventure traveler, mountain biker, shark diver, and authentic food aficionado.