60 Seconds With

“We’re all working towards a much bigger ambition” – 60 Seconds With Matthew Coffey, CEO of SQUID

By Olivia DeWan
14 July 2026

Matthew Coffey, CEO and co-founder of Irish rewards platform SQUID, has helped grow the business from a 2019 startup into a platform with nearly one million registered members. A mechanical engineer by training, he co-founded SQUID to modernise fragmented loyalty systems while helping local communities thrive.


What was your first job?

If we’re talking about a proper career, SQUID was my first real job.

Before that, I did bits and pieces such as maths tutoring and sailing instruction to earn some spending money, but building SQUID straight out of university was my first full-time venture.

What are your main priorities and goals in your current role?

My role is to set the direction of the company. SQUID is an ecosystem with consumers, businesses, partners, investors and employees, so a large part of my job is aligning those different groups around a shared vision.

Beyond that, I spend much of my time focused on fundraising, major commercial partnerships and ensuring the business is moving towards long-term sustainable growth.

What pushed you to pursue a career in this field?

Curiosity more than anything else. I’ve always enjoyed understanding how systems work and thinking about how they could be improved.

I was fascinated by the way incentives influence behaviour and how technology could be used to strengthen local economies.

Building SQUID became a way to explore those interests while creating something tangible.

How do you motivate yourself and your team?

Partly it’s seeing the impact of what we’ve built. There’s something incredibly motivating about seeing people use the product in the real world or watching SQUID climb the app charts.

Beyond that, we’re all working towards a much bigger ambition: building a company that could have a meaningful impact on local economies around the world.

Having a mission that is both commercially ambitious and socially positive keeps people engaged through the difficult periods.

 
In one sentence, how would you define success?

Success will be when the economy rewires so that the majority of marketing is turned into spending power for consumers in their local area. 

How do you relax?

Going for a swim in the sea is my go-to to reset when my mind is racing. It’s practically impossible to think about a product roadmap or fundraising deck in the freezing Irish water.

What is your favourite (non-business) book?

A Short History of Nearly Everything by Bill Bryson. 

What’s the best piece of advice you’ve ever been given?

Most companies don’t fail because the idea was impossible.

They fail because the founder eventually gives up. Building a business inevitably involves setbacks and periods of uncertainty.

Whenever things become difficult, I try to remember that persistence is often the deciding factor.

How do you handle adversity?

Talk it through with my team and the people I trust, then exercise hard.

What are the aspirations for the future of the business?

I want SQUID to create a new sovereign local economy.

We want SQUID to be the first thing people think of when they want to make their everyday spending go further. Simple to use, endless to gain. 

 


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