Haley Van Dyck is a tech executive with a passion for founding companies and leading teams to benefit the public good.

At the White House, she co-founded and led the United States Digital Service—an innovative arm of the executive branch that brings the country’s top technology talent into government to fix high-impact services so they work better and cost less for the American people.  

Following government service, she founded and served as the CEO of Alloy, a tech company with a $35M seed to build data and technology for the future of the progressive movement.

She previously served as Director of Digital Strategy and Engagement at USAID where she led award-winning tech and engagement campaigns to fight famine in the Horn of Africa; built a team at the Federal Communications Commission to modernize the agency and bring the archaic rulemaking processes into the internet era; worked on Obama’s 2008 campaign developing strategy for the first Presidential campaign in history to use text messaging and social media to connect with voters; and started her career at CNN.

Van Dyck is a native of San Francisco, a graduate of the University of Wisconsin-Madison, and currently lives in Brooklyn, NY.