Jeffrey Brewer
Jeffrey Brewer | |
---|---|
Alma mater | Southern Methodist University |
Known for | Co-founding Citysearch |
Board member of | JDRF International and Kickstart |
Jeffrey Brewer is an American businessman and diabetes advocate. He was a co-founder of Citysearch and Overture Services, and is a past president of the Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation.
Education
Brewer earned a degree in Economics from Southern Methodist University.[1]
Citysearch
Brewer co-founded Citysearch in 1995,[2] serving as the company’s VP of technology.[3] He also worked in the positions of chief technology officer, and vice president of development. The company created the Internet’s first online city guides, including address information, reviews, and venue recommendations.[1]
Overture Services
Upon its founding Brewer was the executive chairman of GoTo.com,[4][5] later known as Overture Services and eventually sold to Yahoo! Through his company, he was the first individual to present a proof of concept for pay-per-click advertising, in February 1998 at the TED8 conference.[6] By mid-1999 they had eight thousand clients, with $10 million in revenue.[7] That year the company went public on the NASDAQ exchange, with Brewer as CEO.[8] In 2001 Brewer left active management in Overture to take a year-long trip through Australia with his family.[9]
Robotic pancreas development
After his son was diagnosed with type 1 diabetes in 2002,[9] Brewer began to advocate for the creation of new software-driven equipment, capable of monitoring glucose levels at a constant rate in children.[2] He decided to help in the development of a robotic pancreas.[10] Brewer worked on developing a connection between this pump and an external glucose monitoring system that could be connected to the pump wirelessly. The first successful tests occurred in 2009 by researchers at Yale University,[9] research that Brewer is pushing for FDA approval.[11] He has also co-authored an article for the peer-reviewed journal “Diabetes”.[12] In 2014, Brewer cofounded Bigfoot Biomedical with Bryan Mazlish and Lane Desborough to market and distribute the artificial pancreases he had helped to develop.[13][14] Bigfoot Biomedical accelerated its push to bring a closed loop robotic pancreas to the marketplace by acquiring the assets of Asante Solutions, maker of the FDA approved SNAP insulin pump, in May 2015.[15]
Boards
In 2011 Brewer was named the president of JDRF International (formerly the Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation), a role in which he has served as a spokesperson for the company and commented on research and regulatory developments regarding the juvenile diabetes.[16] From 2003 to 2010 he also served as the chairman of KickStart, a non-profit focusing on poverty-stricken countries in East-Africa.[17]
References
- 1 2 JDRF NAMES JEFFREY BREWER AS PRESIDENT AND CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER
- 1 2 Advocacy: Championing Ideas and Influencing Others
- ↑ Informix gets object-enabled
- ↑ GoTo.com Deals Go To Investors' Heads
- ↑ IQ News: New Search Engine Allows Sites To Pay Their Way To Top
- ↑ Ultimate Guide to Search Engine Optimization
- ↑ The Search: How Google and Its Rivals Rewrote the Rules of Business
- ↑ OVERTURE SERVICES INC (GOTO) IPO
- 1 2 3 Robotic Pancreas: One Man’s Quest to Put Millions of Diabetics on Autopilot
- ↑ http://www.sciences360.com/index.php/robotic-pancreas-for-diabetes-10269/
- ↑ Major Push for Quicker Approval of Artificial Pancreas
- ↑ Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation: Mission, Strategy, and Priorities
- ↑ Kelly Close and Adam Brown (February 18, 2015). "Bigfoot Biomedical Sets its Sights on Simplifying Type 1 Diabetes Management". Diatribe. Retrieved March 4, 2015.
- ↑ http://www.healthline.com/diabetesmine/diabetes-community-oscar-awards#2
- ↑ http://diatribe.org/bigfoot-biomedical-acquires-asante-snap-pump-technology |publisher=Diatribe
- ↑ FDA Paves Way for Artificial Pancreas Trials
- ↑ Jeffrey Brewer Highlights JDRF’s New Direction, Thoughts on the Cure, and Progress on the Artificial Pancreas Project