Lina Trivedi | |
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Born | Chicago, Illinois, U.S. | June 11, 1973
Education | DePaul University |
Occupations |
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Known for | Beanie Babies web site, Beanie Babies poems |
Notable work | WordBotic |
Lina Trivedi (born June 11, 1973) is an American entrepreneur, author, educator and civil servant.
Her most noted writing credit is for authoring the first 136 poems of Beanie Babies. [1] She is also credited for directing the world's first business to consumer Web site, which she did for Ty Inc., manufacturer of Beanie Babies. [1] She is referred to as the woman who gave birth to the Internet and invented E-commerce. [2] In effect, Beanie Babies evolved to become the world's first Internet sensation [3] and Ty Warner became a billionaire.
Lina Trivedi, is an Indian American who was born to a Gujarati-speaking Brahmin family in Chicago, Illinois. She lived in Addison, Illinois for most of her school-age and young-adult life. She attended DePaul University majoring in Sociology and it was during this time that her career at Ty, Inc. began. [4]
She was raised by entrepreneurial parents who cultivated her skills at computer programming at a very young age. In the early 1980s, Trivedi's family purchased an IBM Personal Computer 5150 and at 7 years old, Trivedi's mother made Lina read the DOS 1.0 manual 3 times. In second grade, Trivedi was writing simple computer programs in BASIC. [5]
In 1992 Trivedi became Ty, Inc.’s 12th employee. [6] In 1995, Beanie Babies were escalating as a pop culture craze throughout the world. In early 1995, Trivedi approached Ty Warner, then president of Ty, Inc., and shared her thoughts that the product hang tags were boring, and that unique birthdays and poems on the inside of the heart-shaped tags would make the items more collectible and interesting. She shared an example poem that she wrote for Stripes the Tiger, which ended up having Trivedi's birthday. Warner assigned her the task of writing all the Beanie Babies poems and designing the inside of more than 100 product tags. [3]
Later in 1995, Trivedi approached Warner to talk about a new development that existed on college campuses called the internet. She indicated that the Internet was primarily a research tool, however college students were starting to make personal websites and she thought creating a website for Beanie Babies could present a unique opportunity to engage the consumer market. [6] She brought her 14.4k modem from DePaul University where she was enrolled as a student and demonstrated how the Internet works. Warner was intrigued and he gave Trivedi free license to create a Web site using her judgment and skills. [3] By the time the first iteration of the Ty website was published in late 1995, only 1.4% of Americans were using the internet. [7]
The Beanie Babies Web site that Trivedi created was the first business to consumer web site designed to bridge the gap between business and consumers. [3] The web site contained innovative features, such as the ability to vote for a Beanie Baby that managed a blog on the official site that contained multiple entries per day. There was also a trading post, featured fan mail and a list of 101 things to do with a Beanie Baby. [8] The Beanie Babies web site was receiving over 1 billion visits per year and Trivedi is credited with cultivating the demand of Beanie Babies through the Internet. [9] In 1996, Trivedi coordinated three private Boeing 747s to bring Beanie Babies to American retail locations in time for Easter. [10]
The snowball effect of the Beanie Babies craze and the rise of the Internet was not foreseen in advance. [11] Although Ty, Inc. was very private about their sales figures related to Beanie Babies, Trivedi was quoted as saying that "sales were overwhelming." [12] Trivedi also played a vital role in the design of Beanie Babies, as well as the new and retiring characters as they were announced. As part of her campaign to engage audiences, she coordinated fans to guide the creation of the 100th Beanie Baby character through the Internet in 1996. [8]
Beanie Babies grew in popularity quicker than any other phenomenon prior to its time due to the instant nature of the Internet. Trivedi produced all the announcements on the official Beanie Babies Website. [3] Many were buying and then trading these toys online on the official Beanie Babies Website, as well as independent sites, for hundreds of dollars and building collections of toys that were exceeding $100,000 in value. [13] At the height of the Beanie Babies craze, 10% of all eBay sales were transactions related to Beanie Babies. [3]
Trivedi has appeared in the following media:
Year | Media Title | Media Details |
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2021 | Dark Side of the 90s | Season 1, Episode 4, "Beanie Babies Go Bust" |
2021 | Beanie Mania | HBO Max (streaming service) |
2022 | Beanie Bubble (Documentary) | Produced by: The Nacelle Company and Whiskey Bear |
2023 | Rewind the 90's | National Geographic / Disney+: Season 1, Episode 5, "Mass Appeal" |
In 2023, Trivedi has also been fictionalized in The Beanie Bubble, directed by Kristin Gore and Damian Kulash as the character "Maya Kumar" played by Geraldine Viswanathan. In the film, Maya lands a temp job working for Ty Warner at Ty, Inc., where she proceeded to take the Beanie Babies craze millions to billions by spawning a multi-million dollar collector's market online through eBay. [14]
She was portrayed as the first person to build a website for commercial purposes, as well as writing all the poems on the inside of Beanie Babies tags. [3] The movie ended with her walking out of her job after being denied a raise that aligned with her contributions to the company. [15] According to the movie, Trivedi's character, Maya Kumar, was referenced as Ty's secret weapon and was offered "20 smackeroos per hour" and she told Ty Warner, "I'm not your secret weapon. I'm not a secret, and I'm not yours. I quit." [16]
Trivedi is the author of the following books:
Year | Title | Note |
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2015 | Lessons Learned as a Special Needs Mom | Blue Lotus Publishing |
2012 | 11 Rules for Efficiency | Blue Lotus Publishing |
2011 | 9 Catastrophic Mistakes in Business | Blue Lotus Publishing |
In 2004, Trivedi worked for the Urban League where she worked on the Workforce and Economic Development Team to help individuals transition from disadvantaged backgrounds into the job market. [6] In this position, she developed a concept of job fulfillment in the private sector called "Alternative Selection" which is an alternative to Affirmative Action that allows employers to develop pools of candidates based on economic disadvantage, rather than race. Madison Gas and Electric was one of the first businesses to adopt such employment methods in 2008. [17]
Trivedi had been appointed to two public service positions in Madison, Wisconsin. She served as the Minority Representative in the Community Services Commission and on the Community Development Block Grant Commission from 2005 to 2008.
In the midst of the Beanie Babies phenomenon, Trivedi worked closely with the Children's Advertising Review Unit to help build standards that relate to children's web sites in an effort to establish voluntary regulations designed to protect the privacy of children on the Internet. After her career at Ty, she promoted these regulations among other companies that promoted products to children on the internet, and spearheaded changes to the web sites of Chicago International Children's Film Festival and the Spice Girls to adhere to these privacy regulations. [18]
Trivedi transcended from her career with Beanie Babies and started her own web design firm in 1997 where she developed the first web sites for many notable entities, including the Sears Tower, Spice Girls and Mötley Crüe. Her innovations included broadcasting snapshots of the Chicago skyline from the top of the Sears Tower through their web site. [18]
Trivedi's design firm was named one of the top design firms in Chicago by Crain's Chicago Business in 1998. [19] Trivedi was also named one of the top 30 local talents in 1999 by the Chicago Sun Times. [20] Then in 2000, the Chicago Sun Times named Trivedi one of the top 30 Chicago area entrepreneurs under the age of 30. [5]
While leading her web design firm, Trivedi also participated on a team of technology and finance professionals that produced the world's first realtime processing credit card application. This technology was first launched on Citigroup credit card products, including the Shell Credit Card, Texaco Credit Card and several student credit card brands that were operated by Citigroup. [19]
In 2013, Trivedi began developing publishing software designed to help people write content used to publish books and web sites. [6] Her most notable technology inventions include a patent pending artificial intelligence that can write. [21] According to NBC, her inventions have been used to enable people to become authors by "taking the mechanics out of publishing so that writers can focus on the messages they are trying to convey". [4] The artificial intelligence she invented was later referenced as the predecessor to ChatGPT. [22]
Today[ when? ], Trivedi is developing artificial intelligence with her new start-up company called Joii.ai. [22]
Trivedi currently lives in Beaver Dam, Wisconsin where she is a single mother to a special needs child. Trivedi's daughter was diagnosed with Goltz Syndrome at birth. Fewer than 25 people in the United States are reported to have Goltz Syndrome. As a result of the syndrome, Trivedi's daughter was born without a leg, missing fingers and lacked muscles on one side of her face. To date, Trivedi's daughter has been through over 25 surgeries before the age of 5. [6] She is also the youngest child in the United States to receive a prosthetic leg at 7 months old. [5]
According to her book, living life as a special needs mother puts the world into perspective and Trivedi has channeled her talents and business acumen to cultivate a sense of business and entrepreneurship within her young daughter, Nikhita. Before entering 3rd grade, Trivedi's daughter has been established as the President of a Wyoming Corporation that designs and sells bows through a business modeled after the enterprise run by Minnie Mouse in the TV series Mickey Mouse Clubhouse . [6]
eBay Inc. is an American multinational e-commerce company based in San Jose, California, that allows users to buy or view items via retail sales through online marketplaces and websites in 190 markets worldwide. Sales occur either via online auctions or "buy it now" instant sales, and the company charges commissions to sellers upon sales. eBay was founded by Pierre Omidyar in September 1995. It has 132 million yearly active buyers worldwide and handled $73 billion in transactions in 2023, 48% of which was in the United States. In 2023, the company had a take rate of 13.81%.
Beanie Babies are a line of stuffed toys created by American businessman Ty Warner, who founded Ty Inc. in 1986. The toys are stuffed with plastic pellets ("beans") rather than conventional soft stuffing. They come in many different forms, mostly animals.
A stuffed toy is a toy doll with an outer fabric sewn from a textile and stuffed with flexible material. They are known by many names, such as plush toys, plushies, lovies, stuffed animals, diane, and stuffies; in Britain and Australia, they may also be called soft toys or cuddly toys. The stuffed toy originated from the Steiff company of Germany in the late 19th century and gained popularity following the creation of the teddy bear in the United States in 1903. At the same time, German toy inventor Richard Steiff designed a similar bear. In 1903, Peter Rabbit was the first fictional character to be made into a patented stuffed toy. In 1921, Christopher Robin's stuffed toy, given to him by his father, A. A. Milne, would inspire the creation of Winnie-the-Pooh. In the 1970s, London-based Hamleys, the world's oldest toy store, bought the rights to Paddington Bear stuffed toys. In the 1990s, Ty Warner created Beanie Babies, a series of animals stuffed with plastic pellets that were popular as collector's items.
St. John's Northwestern Military Academy (SJNMA) was founded in 1884 as St. John's Military Academy (SJMA) in Delafield, Wisconsin, by the Rev. Sidney T. Smythe as a private, college preparatory school. In 1995, Northwestern Military and Naval Academy (NMNA) in Lake Geneva, Wisconsin, merged with St. John's Military Academy to become St. John's Northwestern Military Academy on the Delafield campus. In 2020, a Leadership Academy was added and the combined schools became St. John's Northwestern Academies. SJNA is a coed independent boarding and day school for boys and girls in grades 6–12. St. John's Northwestern Summer Academy offers Little Lancers Day Camp, Summer Academy Plus, and ESL courses.
Ty is an American multinational corporation headquartered in Oak Brook, Illinois, a suburb of Chicago. It was founded by Ty Warner in 1986. It designs, develops and sells products, most notably Beanie Babies, exclusively to specialty markets worldwide.
Martha Stewart Living Omnimedia Inc. (MSLO) is an American diversified media and merchandising company founded by Martha Stewart in 1997 and owned by Marquee Brands LLC since April 2019. It is organized into four business segments: publishing, Internet, broadcasting media platforms, and merchandising product lines. MSLO's business holdings include a variety of print publications, television and radio programming, and e-commerce websites.
H. Ty Warner is an American billionaire toy manufacturer, businessman, and convicted felon. He is the CEO, sole owner, and co-founder of Ty Inc. which manufactures and distributes stuffed toys, notably Beanie Babies. He also owns Four Seasons Hotel New York, which he bought with profits from the 1990s Beanie Babies fad. In 2020, he ranked 359 on the Forbes 400 list of the richest people in the U.S., with a net worth of US$2.3 billion.
The Four Seasons Resort The Biltmore Santa Barbara is a luxury resort hotel located in Santa Barbara, California known for its Spanish Colonial Revival architecture and gardens. It opened in 1927 as the Santa Barbara Biltmore, part of the Bowman-Biltmore Hotels chain. The hotel closed in March 2020, due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
A dot-com company, or simply a dot-com, is a company that conducts most of its businesses on the Internet, usually through a website on the World Wide Web that uses the popular top-level domain ".com". As of 2021, .com is by far the most used TLD, with almost half of all registrations.
Tatyana Borisovna Yumasheva is the younger daughter of former Russian president Boris Yeltsin and Naina Yeltsina. Since 2009, Yumasheva has been a citizen of Austria.
Four Seasons Hotel New York is a luxury hotel in Midtown Manhattan, New York City, that opened in 1993. The hotel is owned by Ty Warner Hotels and Resorts, L.L.C. and operated by Four Seasons Hotels and Resorts. It was closed temporarily in 2020. It reopened on November 15, 2024, with a portion of its rooms available, and all rooms available in 2025.
The retirement of a Beanie Baby or a product from any line of Ty Inc., the manufacturer of Beanie Babies and other lines of collectibles, is its withdrawal from production. This has occurred in varying amounts of time following its introduction, depending on Ty's goals for that particular item. Some Beanie Babies have remained in production for several years following their introduction. Others have been retired just days after being introduced. Occasionally, beanies that have been introduced for a single purpose have been retired on the day they have been distributed. More rarely, some beanies have had their production canceled prior to their shipment to retailers, but following their announcement to the public, thereby never becoming available.
Clubby was a Beanie Baby that was available in 1998 exclusively by mail order to those who joined the Beanie Babies Official Club by purchasing a kit. It was followed up in later years by other bears also named "Clubby" followed by a Roman numeral. In all, a total of ten styles of bears, named Clubby, Clubby II, Clubby III, Clubby IV, Clubby V, Clubby VI, Clubby VII and Clubby VIII. In addition, larger sized Beanie Buddies of Clubby, Clubby II, Clubby III, Clubby IV, Clubby V and Clubby VI were produced. A four pack box set of Jingle Beanies containing Clubby, Clubby II, Clubby III and Clubby IV was also released. Although the Clubby bears were not rare, they often proved elusive for people who weren't enrolled in the club, who were forced to search for them on the secondary market or through the Ty Store.
Ty Girlz were girl dolls manufactured by Ty Inc. Similar to the Ty Beanie Babies, the Ty Girlz are on a limited release pattern with dolls being introduced and older ones retired at various times. Ty Girlz are plush toys that are connected to an online virtual world at TyGirlz.com. Introduced to the global market on April 13, 2007, Ty Girlz was one of only a few virtual worlds geared to girls. The line was discontinued in 2013 and the virtual world shut down on June 7 of that same year.
Holidays were a common theme of Ty Beanie Babies. For some holidays, a special Beanie Baby has been produced every year.
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Charles Petros Kocoras is a senior United States district judge of the United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois.
Igor Olenicoff is an American billionaire and real estate developer. In 2007, he was convicted of tax evasion stemming from his use of off-shore companies and Swiss banks to hide his financial assets.
YooHoo & Friends is an American-Chilean-South Korean line of stuffed toys released by Aurora World around July 2006. A currently subdiarisity of The Cartoon Network, Inc. - from Warner Bros. Discovery Asia-Pacific.
The Beanie Bubble is a 2023 American comedy-drama film directed by Kristin Gore and Damian Kulash Jr. from a screenplay by Gore, based on the 2015 book The Great Beanie Baby Bubble: Mass Delusion and the Dark Side of Cute by Zac Bissonnette about the Beanie Babies bubble. The film stars Zach Galifianakis, Elizabeth Banks, Sarah Snook, and Geraldine Viswanathan.
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