Forget coffee, $1.4 billion tech company chief says he naps instead: ‘I can take them just about anywhere’
“I’m Mormon, so I grew up without coffee,” David Blake, the founder and co-CEO of Degreed says. Take a peek into his life outside of work. · Fortune · Courtesy of Degreed

Being in the C-suite is a high-pressure job with long hours, board responsibilities, and intense scrutiny. But what is it like to be a top executive when you’re off the clock?

Fortune’s series, The Good Life, shows how up-and-coming leaders spend their time and money outside of work.


Today we meet Degreed’s founder and co-CEO, David Blake.

The 41-year-old serial entrepreneur started out as a management consultant for Oliver Wyman in 2007, but his heart wasn’t in it. Blake’s true passion lies in education—and he has since dedicated his career to improve learning for students and employees alike.

Blake leads the $1.4 billion education technology company a long ways away from Degreed’s Silicon Valley roots. He moved to Salt Lake City Utah in 2020, where he's embracing little breaks from the chaos of the tech world

Blake’s lifestyle is working in unison with Degreed’s pace of growth; the business’ career-building programs are used by 30% of the Fortune 500 with over 50 million skills rated to far, and 460,000 learning pathways for the 10 million activated users. For the co-CEO, that means balancing a hectic schedule with frequent naps (taken anywhere) and binge-watching survival TV. He also sneaks in some video games between his other duties as the co-founder of BookClub and advisor for several companies like Sounding Board, Transfr VR, and OnDeck.

Despite a long list of to-do’s, Blake’s passion for education keeps the fire burning. Before starting Degreed in 2012, he was a founding team member at Zinch—a company that helped students find scholarships, acquired by $12 billion learning giant Chegg—and was selected as a top edtech entrepreneur by the Stanford School EdTech Lab. And even when he’s off the clock, education is still a huge part of his life: Blake and his wife run a microschool, where they teach their three children.

“I’ve dedicated my life to the future of education, and I wanted my children to benefit from those principles,” Blake tells Fortune. “I didn’t want my kids to be like the cobbler’s children with no shoes.”


The finances

Fortune: What’s been the best investment you’ve ever bought?

I spent about $15 on the book titled, The Millionaire Next Door. It reframed for me, early in my life, what the definition of success to be, and therefore in which ways and direction I’d strive with my life. This book is still guiding me today. I specifically recall a Buddhist teaching from the book, which was also picked up by Chuck Palahniuk and popularized in Fight Club, that ‘you own your stuff and your stuff owns you.’