Collison brothers earn their stripes with top EY award

Online payments platform Stripe was recently valued at $5 billion

John Collison of Stripe speaks about the trends of shifting from using physical cash to digital money. Video: EY

John and Patrick Collison, the boy wonders of Irish technology, have won this year's EY Entrepreneur of the Year award.

Their online payments platform Stripe, launched only five years ago, was recently valued at $5 billion (€4.6 billion).

Similar to PayPal, it accepts credit and debit cards for merchants who have not taken them previously, charging a small fee per transaction.

Fr Peter McVerry, who won a special award for his work with the homeless at the EY Entrepreneur of the Year Awards. Photograph: Dave Meehan
Fr Peter McVerry, who won a special award for his work with the homeless at the EY Entrepreneur of the Year Awards. Photograph: Dave Meehan
Back row from left: Tom Hayes of Enterprise Ireland; Kevin McLoughlin of EY; Industry winner Jack Dobson of Dunbia; Overall winner John Collison; International winners Pádraig McBride and Donald Fitzmaurice of Brandtone; Seán Duffy of EY; Jeremy Fitch of Invest Northern Ireland; front row: Anne Heraty, chairwoman of the judging panel; Mike McKerr of EY; Arlene Foster Northern Ireland Minister for Finance; Michael Noonan Minister for Finance; and Fr Peter McVerry. Photograph: Dave Meehan
Back row from left: Tom Hayes of Enterprise Ireland; Kevin McLoughlin of EY; Industry winner Jack Dobson of Dunbia; Overall winner John Collison; International winners Pádraig McBride and Donald Fitzmaurice of Brandtone; Seán Duffy of EY; Jeremy Fitch of Invest Northern Ireland; front row: Anne Heraty, chairwoman of the judging panel; Mike McKerr of EY; Arlene Foster Northern Ireland Minister for Finance; Michael Noonan Minister for Finance; and Fr Peter McVerry. Photograph: Dave Meehan

The company was established in 2010 – when Patrick was 25 and John was 23 – with the backing of Peter Thiel and Elon Musk, who co-founded PayPal and sold it to eBay for $1.5 billion in 2002.

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It now processes billions of dollars a year for thousands of businesses such as Kickstarter, Instacart and Salesforce, and recently announced a strategic partnership with credit card giant Visa.

The Tipperary brothers live in San Francisco, where Stripe and its 300-strong workforce are based.

John Collison received the award at a gala event in Dublin last night, attended by 1,500 business leaders.

“Having Stripe recognised by the community that helped us exist in the first place is an honour,” Mr Collison said.

“Even being among the 24 finalists would make you nervous given the calibre of the field.”

Future plans

Asked about the company’s future plans, he said simply it’s about building a long- term, sustainable business while maintaining the energy of a startup.

In addition to being selected as the overall winner of EY Entrepreneur of the Year award for 2015, Stripe also scooped top honours in the Best International Entrepreneur category.

Jack Dobson of Dunbia, one of the largest meat processing firms in the UK and Ireland was named EY Industry Entrepreneur of the Year, while Pádraig McBride and Donald Fitzmaurice of mobile marketing company Brandtone picked up the award for Best Emerging Entrepreneur.

As overall winners, the Collison brothers will go on to represent Ireland at the World Entrepreneur of the Year awards in Monte Carlo next June, where they will compete with more than 60 leading entrepreneurs from across the globe.

"Stripe has disrupted the world of online payments, growing at an unprecedented pace for an Irish company in an industry that had previously been dominated by major players in the market," said Anne Heraty, chairperson of this year's judging panel.

Kevin McLoughlin, partner and head of the EY Entrepreneur of the Year programme, said: “This year in particular was very difficult for the judges to select a winner. Each year, we are seeing more and more entrepreneurs come through the programme that have already scaled their business to an international level and Stripe are a stellar example of this.”

Fr Peter McVerry, founder of the Peter McVerry Trust, the housing and homeless charity, received this year’s Special Award for making “a profound contribution to the island of Ireland through his entrepreneurial vision, innovation and commitment to excellence”.

Accepting the award, Fr McVerry said:"It is to the shame of our nation that we have a rapidly growing homeless problem."

Unlike the many entrepreneurs present, he said, his objective was to go out of business, “to end homelessness”.

Eoin Burke-Kennedy

Eoin Burke-Kennedy

Eoin Burke-Kennedy is Economics Correspondent of The Irish Times