Background
Shih was born in Hong Kong to a father who was a math professor in Hong Kong and later became an electrical engineer in the United States, and a mother who was an art teacher and a special-education teacher. Shih and her family emigrated to the United States when she was 4, and she grew up in Arlington Heights, Illinois.
Education
She attended Illinois Mathematics and Science Academy, where she became captain of the women"s varsity tennis team, concert mistress in the orchestra, editor of the student newspaper, captain of the debate team, and a member of the Mu Alpha Theta Mathematics Honor Society. Shih was named the Presidential Scholar and graduated in 2000. Shih attended Stanford University, and co-founded the Stanford engineering public service center.
Career
In elementary school, she was initially placed in special classes for kids with speech impediments because the school did not have a program in English as a second language. In eighth grade, she scored a 1420 on the SAT out of 1600. She gave English lessons to immigrants.
At 15, she was a computer programmer at Fermilab.
She was the president of the campus chapter of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, officer in the Stanford Society of Women Engineers, and was elected to Tau Beta Pi Engineering Honor Society. In addition to her extracurricular activities, Shih founded Camp Amelia Technology Literacy Group, a nonprofit organization that creates software aimed at improving basic education in underserved communities in the United States and developing countries.
She was named a Microsoft Women"s Scholar and became an intern at Microsoft, where she developed the Royal Statistical Society, UK news aggregator for Outlook. In her spare time, Shih volunteered in East Palo Alto, California and taught low-income elementary students to become interested in math, science and technology.
She was also named a Mayfield Fellow in her senior year, a Merage Foundation for the American Dream Fellow, a Google Anita Borg Scholar, a Microsoft Women"s Scholar, and a Society of Women Engineers Scholar.
In 2002, Shih did field research for her honors thesis while attending Beijing Foreign Studies University. Shih majored in economics and computer science. She graduated with honors with a bachelor"s degree and a master"s degree in computer science from Stanford in 2005.
She was an intern at Microsoft.
In 2005, Shih was awarded the Marshall Scholarship and attended University of Oxford. She received a master"s degree in Internet studies from the University of Oxford Internet Institute.
After graduating from Oxford, Shih stayed in England and worked in corporate strategy at Google. Shih joined Salesforce.com in 2006 as a founding product marketer on the AppExchange.
As a side project, she built a business application on Facebook, known as "Faceforce".
In December 2011, she was also elected to the Starbucks board of directors, replacing Facebook chief operating officer Sheryl Sandberg.