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Fortune
Fortune
Emma Hinchliffe, Joseph Abrams

Mette Lykke took 3 major risks to become a CEO

Mette Lykke (Credit: Courtesy of Too Good To Go)

Good morning, Broadsheet readers! Instacart is planning an IPO as soon as September, single women in China are defying gender norms by buying their own property, and a Danish CEO took three major risks on her way to success. Have a great Monday!

- Risk and reward. Mette Lykke got three of her most influential jobs in nontraditional ways.

First, the Danish executive quit her stable McKinsey position with plans to become a founder—but no set startup idea. Leaving her 9-5 behind was the motivation she and her cofounders needed to come up with an idea they thought would work—a GPS-enabled fitness app.

Then, Lykke became that startup's CEO after her cofounder quit and Lykke, then chief marketing officer, realized the company couldn't afford to hire the caliber of CEO it sought.

Mette Lykke, CEO of Too Good To Go.

Today, Lykke is the CEO of Too Good To Go, the food platform that allows customers to pick up grabbags of food products that would otherwise be thrown out at the end of the day. Lykke got that job after learning of the new platform's existence from a fellow passenger on a bus, who was an early angel investor.

My colleague Orianna Rosa Royle dives into Lykke's career trajectory in a new piece for Fortune. Lykke's first startup, the fitness app Endomondo, sold to Under Armour for $85 million in 2015. The company she leads today, Too Good To Go, has 80 million customers, 145,000 participating businesses, and 1,200 employees. Its mission is to stop food waste.

Lykke advocates for others to take leaps of faith the way she has. Quitting a job with plans to become a founder, but without a firm startup idea, might sound extreme. "If it’s going to cost $10,000 or even $100,000 to pursue your dream, I actually think that’s pretty cheap," Lykke argues, although she acknowledges that giving notice in a decent job market with McKinsey on her resume made her risk a bit easier to stomach.

"At least you really had a go at it,” she adds.

Read Orianna's full story here.

Emma Hinchliffe
emma.hinchliffe@fortune.com
@_emmahinchliffe

The Broadsheet is Fortune's newsletter for and about the world's most powerful women. Today's edition was curated by Joseph Abrams. Subscribe here.

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