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Sasan Goodarzi

Chief Executive Officer

Sasan Goodarzi is chief executive officer (CEO) of Intuit, where he leads the company towards delivering on its mission of powering prosperity around the world. He assumed the role on Jan. 1, 2019.

During his 14 years with the company, Goodarzi has successfully led each of Intuit’s largest businesses. Most recently, Goodarzi served as executive vice president and general manager of Intuit’s Small Business and Self-Employed Group. Previously, he served as executive vice president and general manager of Intuit’s Consumer Tax Group, as Intuit’s chief information officer, as the general manager of Intuit’s ProTax organization, and as the general manager of Intuit’s Financial Services Division.

Before coming to Intuit, Goodarzi worked for Invensys, a global provider of industrial automation, transportation and controls technology, serving as global president of the products group. He also held a number of senior leadership roles in the automation control division at Honeywell and served as the CEO and co-founder of a technology startup, Lazer Cables Inc. 

Born in Tehran, Iran, Goodarzi came to United States as a child and grew up in Orlando, Florida. He currently lives in the San Francisco Bay Area with his wife and two children. He earned his bachelor’s degree in electrical engineering at the University of Central Florida and a master’s in business administration from the Kellogg School of Management at Northwestern University. Goodarzi is also a member of the board of directors at Intuit and Atlassian.

Email: [email protected]

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Sasan in the news

Articles featuring Sasan Goodarzi, CEO of Intuit.

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Why Intuit bought Credit Karma in one of the biggest fintech deals of 2020

Credit Karma is in the business of providing free credit score tracking—but apparently it's worth billions to Intuit, which just closed its acquisition of the company in a deal valued at $8.1 billion including cash and stock.

Sasan Goodarzi

Intuit’s CEO on the $7.1 billion Credit Karma acquisition, reorienting toward A.I., and reskilling workers

Credit Karma is in the business of providing free credit score tracking—but apparently it's worth billions to Intuit, which just closed its acquisition of the company in a deal valued at $8.1 billion including cash and stock.

Sasan and Ken Speaking

'Never fear disrupting yourself': How Intuit's CEO learned to love tearing things up

He was 9 years old when he fled to the U.S. during the 1979 Islamic Revolution in his native Iran. He lived through the American hostage crisis, enduring the taunts of bullies who told him to go back where he came from, and feared actually being sent back to Iran.