— Elizabeth Scallon, a longtime leader in Seattle’s startup ecosystem, has left HP after serving for nearly four years as director of technical and business incubation and strategy.
“At HP, I had the privilege of diving deep into technologies ranging from microfluidics and chip cooling to edge systems, security silicon, collaboration platforms, biometrics, authentication, and computer vision. I loved supporting and building new ventures from idea to prototype to customer hands,” Scallon said on LinkedIn.
Scallon is also an affiliate instructor at the University of Washington and has held leadership roles at Amazon and WeWork. She was director of the UW’s CoMotion Labs for five years and co-founded Find Ventures, an investment firm that emphasized equitable access to capital. Scallon did not say what she’s doing next.

— Chris Blandy retired from his role at Amazon Web Services where he was global leader of strategy and business development for media and entertainment.
Blandy’s position was based in Santa Monica, Calif. Past roles include executive leadership at Walt Disney, Fox and Hulu.
“After a bit more than 4 years at AWS and 35 years in the workforce, I’ve decided to take a step back from full-time employment. I’ll be focused on investments and some advisory work, but most importantly getting more involved in parenting!” Blandy said on LinkedIn.

— Milkana Brace joined SageOx as co-founder and chief product officer. The early stage Seattle startup is building tools for AI-native teams where humans and coding agents work side-by-side.
In April 2025, Brace left Remitly as executive vice president of consumer product to take a sabbatical. She had previously founded and led Jargon and held leadership roles at Expedia and Groupon.
Braced said on LinkedIn that “out of nowhere” Ajit Banerjee reached out and “asked me to build something with him. I cut my sabbatical short. On my first day back, we pivoted the entire company. Thirty days later, we shipped.”

— Edo co-founder and former director of strategy Courtney Blodgett has left the Seattle-based energy software company.
“I’ve had the privilege of helping grow an idea into a company delivering demand flexibility and customer support to utilities and 7,000+ buildings across the country,” Blodgett said on LinkedIn.
The startup launched six years ago to allow commercial buildings to contribute energy to the grid during times of high demand. Blodgett is working as principal and founder of Cordelette Consulting while she explores “the next chapter of building climate solutions that work.”
— Seattle-area health data company Truveta hired a slate of new employees, including multiple senior leadership positions:
- John Seeger, senior vice president of evidence services
- Kia Edwards, senior product marketing manger
- Stef’n Ellis, senior product designer
- Alayna Myrick, senior clinical data scientist
- Upendra Chennadi, senior security engineer
The company in January named Dr. Johnathan Lancaster as it president and chief scientific officer.

— Sustainable tech startup Bayou Energy named Yoon Loon Wong (Andrew) as chief of staff. The Seattle-based business offers technology that pulls customer data from U.S. utilities to provide real-time information on energy use as well as consumption over time.
“Andrew brings a blend of strategy, operations, and startup experience. He was an early employee at a clean energy startup, where he built the sales strategy and operations function from the ground up and helped launch an $8M EPC [engineering, procurement and construction] marketplace,” Bayou leaders said on LinkedIn.
Wong’s past employers include Lumen Energy and Google, where he was a strategy and operations manager for go-to-market.
— Brian Hansford is senior vice president of marketing at the National Cybersecurity Alliance, a Seattle-based nonprofit supporting cybersecurity education and safety for individuals and businesses. He joins from Pontara, a generative engine optimization platform for marketers, where he was founder and chief growth officer. Other past roles include leadership at LiveRamp, Icertis, MediaPRO and others.
— Seattle-based Scott Schliebner is chief operating officer at P1 Trials, a startup that describes itself as “a network of world-class, community-based oncology investigative sites capable of performing complex Phase 1 clinical trials.”
Schliebner has held multiple advisory and consulting roles in recent years, and was senior vice president of scientific affairs and therapeutic expertise for PRA Health Sciences for a decade ending in 2022. He also held leadership roles at Cancer Research and Biostatistics, MedSource and Seattle Genetics.
— After more than four years, Rob Moore left his role as vice president of order-to-cash transformation at Seattle payment tech company Remitly. He is now a financial professional at None, a California-based wellness and fitness services company. Moore’s past employers include Nordstrom and Deloitte.
“What an adventure, and on to the next. It was my honor to fight alongside the ‘good guys’ at Remitly day in and day out, on behalf of our resilient and inspiring customers,” Moore said on LinkedIn.
Remitly co-founder Matt Oppenheimer last month announced that he is stepping down as CEO after nearly 15 years.
— Monod Bio, a Seattle biotech company performing computational protein design, named Robert Bujarski to its board of directors. Bujarski previously served as EVP and chief operating officer at QuidelOrtho Corporation for 20 years.
