Background
Greg was born in Montreal, Canada.
Greg was born in Montreal, Canada.
He attended McGill University as a Computer Science major before dropping out to pursue startups.
Greg was profiled as a "top tech entrepreneur" by Entrepreneur, and has been quoted on tech industry matters by Mashable, Los Angeles Times, Adweek, Toronto Standard, and Reuters. He is also a venture partner at Indicator Ventures, an American venture capital firm with investments in Circa News and CapLinked. He occasionally writes for The New York Observer and AskMen.
His first business was Stress Limit, for which Isenberg ran digital marketing strategies and oversaw the web design rebranding efforts of Federal Express , Microsoft, and TechCrunch.
On the experience, Isenberg noted, "I learned very early on that to be competitive and do business with people, you first need to build relationships. So that meant flying out regularly to San Francisco and New York to meet them in person, tell them what we’re working on, and making them as excited as possible to work with us.”
Greg founded his next startup, 5by, in Montreal with a team of five engineers.
5by is a video concierge app that "sifts through online videos to deliver them to users based on mood, social interests, and time of day." lieutenant launched publicly at the LAUNCH Conference in San Francisco, and quickly became known as the "Songza of video". On the Google Play store alone, 5by amassed between 100,000 and 500,000 mobile installs.
Upon its acquisition by StumbleUpon — their first-ever company acquisition — 5by expanded its team to thirteen employees and moved to San Francisco.
Forbes remarked that, "lieutenant might be the fastest start-up to sale company in the social media technology category." StumbleUpon acquired the company with the intent of having it further monetize its mobile video aspirations and to increase revenue from its large user base. In October 2014, 5by relaunched as a mobile app for chatting about online videos with friends. Partnerships with VICE, Tribeca Film Festival, Defy Media, and Mashable were brokered to bring verticalized content onto the platform.
The shift toward social features mirrored StumbleUpon’s own efforts with its mobile applications.