Ben Lamm is an American serial entrepreneur and the co-founder and chief executive officer of Colossal Biosciences, a biotechnology company established in 2021 to advance de-extinction technologies for restoring extinct species and ecosystems through genetic engineering.[1][2] Under Lamm's leadership, Colossal has raised substantial funding to pursue projects such as engineering woolly mammoth-elephant hybrids capable of surviving in Arctic environments, aiming to combat biodiversity loss and climate impacts via rewilding.[1][3] Prior to Colossal, Lamm founded multiple technology ventures, including Hypergiant Industries, which develops enterprise artificial intelligence solutions for aerospace and defense applications, and Conversable, a conversational AI platform acquired by LivePerson in 2018.[4][5] His earlier companies, such as Chaotic Moon Studios—a creative technology studio sold to Accenture in 2015—demonstrate a pattern of building and exiting innovative firms across software, AI, and interactive media sectors.[4] Lamm's career emphasizes high-risk innovation in emerging fields, with Colossal representing his pivot to synthetic biology to address global environmental challenges empirically through engineered solutions rather than conventional conservation alone.[5]
Early Life and Education
Family Background and Upbringing
Ben Lamm was raised in Texas in a single-parent household after his parents separated when he was five years old.[6] He was primarily brought up by his mother, Lori Armes, a Spanish teacher, and his grandmother, Marye Nella Armes.[6][7] Lamm has three brothers, and the family faced financial hardships during his childhood, including periods when his parents could not afford holiday gifts for the children.[8]From an early age, Lamm displayed entrepreneurial tendencies amid these circumstances. At around age 12, he began earning an allowance but outsourced the task of mowing his family's lawn to neighbors, paying them half his earnings while retaining the rest as profit, demonstrating an early grasp of leverage and delegation.[9] By his senior year of high school in 1999, he self-taught Macromedia Flash software and sold his first website for $20,000, marking the onset of his involvement in digital ventures.[10]
Academic Background
Ben Lamm received a Bachelor of Business Administration (BBA) in Finance and Accounting from Baylor University in Waco, Texas, graduating in 2004.[11][9] During his undergraduate studies, he demonstrated early entrepreneurial initiative by founding Simply Interactive, an e-learning software company, as a class project in the Baylor Business School.[11][6]Lamm also pursued studies in foreign languages, literatures, and business at the University of Alicante in Spain, complementing his primary degree with international exposure.[4] No advanced degrees or further formal academic pursuits are documented in available records.[9][12]
Early Career and Initial Ventures
Pre-Entrepreneurial Roles
Prior to launching his first formal company, Ben Lamm did not hold traditional salaried positions in established organizations, instead demonstrating early entrepreneurial initiative through self-directed projects and small-scale ventures. As a high school senior in 1999, he taught himself Macromedia Flash software and developed and sold his initial website for $20,000, marking an entry into digital services without institutional affiliation.[10]At age 12, Lamm exhibited nascent business principles by subcontracting lawn mowing to neighbors, retaining half of his allowance as profit to illustrate concepts of leverage and delegation, though this constituted informal activity rather than a structured role.[9]Lamm's academic pursuits in finance and accounting at Baylor University, where he earned a BBA in 2004, further honed skills applicable to business without intermediate employment; these studies directly informed his transition to founding Simply Interactive as a senior-year class project in e-learning software.[13][9][6]
First Entrepreneurial Efforts
Lamm founded his first company, Simply Interactive, an e-learning software solutions firm specializing in interactive marketing and digital learning services, during his senior year at Baylor University around 2004.[6][13] At age 22, he managed client interactions and oversaw the technical team developing custom e-learning platforms, marking his initial foray into software entrepreneurship while still in college.[14] The venture operated for several years before Lamm sold it to Agile Interactive, an Ohio-based firm, in 2010.[15]Following Simply Interactive, Lamm co-founded Team Chaos, a consumer gaming studio focused on developing video games.[16] The company produced titles leveraging emerging digital gaming trends, building on Lamm's prior experience with web technologies from high school, where he had self-taught Macromedia Flash and sold a website for $20,000 in 1999.[10] Team Chaos achieved an exit through acquisition by Zynga, a major social gaming company, though specific dates for the founding and sale remain undisclosed in available records.[17][18]These initial efforts demonstrated Lamm's pattern of targeting nascent technology sectors—e-learning and gaming—with bootstrapped operations leading to successful sales, providing capital and experience for subsequent ventures.[19] Unlike later companies, Simply Interactive and Team Chaos emphasized practical software delivery over large-scale innovation, reflecting Lamm's early emphasis on executable business models in competitive markets.[20]
Core Entrepreneurial Ventures
Chaotic Moon Studios
Chaotic Moon Studios was co-founded in 2010 by Ben Lamm as CEO, alongside William Hurley and Mike Erwin, establishing the firm in Austin, Texas, as a creative technology studio focused on software design, development, and innovative digital experiences for enterprise clients.[19][21] The company specialized in mobile applications, rapid prototyping, and hardware-software integrations, serving major brands such as Microsoft and delivering user-centered solutions that emphasized boundary-pushing interactivity.[6][22]Under Lamm's leadership, Chaotic Moon expanded rapidly, growing to approximately 200 employees and developing industry-defining projects that positioned it as a key player in digital innovation.[23][22] The studio's work included creating immersive experiences and prototypes that enhanced client capabilities in social media, interactive content, and emerging technologies, contributing to its reputation for transforming business through consequential digital products.[24][25]In July 2015, Accenture acquired Chaotic Moon to bolster its interactive division with enhanced rapid prototyping, creative technology expertise, and a strengthened presence in the U.S. Southwest tech ecosystem, including expansions into Dallas.[24][25] The transaction, terms of which were not disclosed, integrated the studio's talents into Accenture Interactive, enabling larger-scale deployments of its innovative approaches while marking Lamm's successful exit from the venture.[26][21]
Conversable
Conversable was founded in 2016 by Ben Lamm as CEO and Andrew Busey as co-founder and chief product officer, with the company headquartered in Austin, Texas.[27][28] The platform specialized in conversational intelligence, enabling enterprises to deploy AI-driven chatbots and messaging automation across channels such as Facebook Messenger, SMS, and other social platforms to enhance customer engagement and service.[29][27]The company's technology focused on natural language processing and machine learning to create scalable, context-aware conversations, allowing businesses to handle high-volume interactions without proportional increases in human agents.[14] Early clients included major brands like Pizza Hut, demonstrating practical applications in sectors requiring rapid, personalized customer responses.[30] Conversable emphasized enterprise-grade security and compliance, differentiating it from consumer-focused chat tools by prioritizing data privacy and integration with existing CRM systems.[31]In October 2018, LivePerson, a provider of conversational commerce solutions, acquired Conversable for an undisclosed amount to bolster its AI capabilities in messaging and voice interactions.[28][27] The acquisition integrated Conversable's platform into LivePerson's offerings, expanding the latter's footprint in automated customer experience management.[29] Post-acquisition, Lamm transitioned from day-to-day operations at Conversable, applying lessons from its rapid consumer adoption to subsequent ventures in AI and biotechnology.[6][14]
Hypergiant Industries
Hypergiant Industries, founded in 2018 by Ben Lamm in Austin, Texas, develops artificial intelligence platforms and products targeting defense, space exploration, enterprise operations, and environmental challenges. The company emphasizes data-agnostic AI systems that deliver real-time actionable intelligence, serving Fortune 500 clients and U.S. government agencies. Lamm, who initially led as CEO, positioned Hypergiant to address large-scale problems through machine intelligence, drawing on his prior entrepreneurial experience in AI and software.[32][33]A flagship product, the Eos Bioreactor, launched on September 17, 2019, integrates AI with algae cultivation to sequester atmospheric carbon dioxide, achieving efficiency equivalent to an acre of mature forest trees in a single growth cycle of approximately one month. The refrigerator-sized prototype optimizes algae growth, nutrient delivery, and biomass harvesting via machine learning algorithms, producing sustainable outputs like biofuels or nutritional supplements alongside carbon capture. In 2020, Eos received recognition including a win at the Shorty Awards for social good innovation and contributed to Hypergiant earning Startup of the Year at the One Planet Awards. The device was featured in the Smithsonian Institution's "Futures" exhibition starting December 2021, highlighting its potential for scalable climate mitigation.[34][35][36]In defense and space sectors, Hypergiant offers the Intelligent Operations Platform, an AI-driven tool for battlefield decision support and situational awareness, which earned a Certificate to Field from the U.S. Department of Defense for secure deployment with NORAD and NORTHCOM commands. The company has also pursued interplanetary internet protocols under initiatives like Project Orion, aiming to enable resilient communication for space missions. Enterprise applications include AI for consumer behavior prediction, such as a system deployed for TGI Fridays that forecasted drink orders and generated $150 million in revenue, and robotic process automation for GE's global data analysis. Additional clients like Wingstop benefited from AI recovering $34.65 million in lost orders through automated customer interactions, while Shell utilized supply chain optimization via the TapUp platform.[37][38][37]Leadership transitioned in May 2021, with Lamm moving to Vice Chairman and enterprise technology executive Mike Betzer assuming CEO duties to scale operations. In August 2023, Trive Capital, a Dallas-based private equity firm, acquired Hypergiant for an undisclosed sum, marking Lamm's exit from day-to-day involvement as he shifted focus to other ventures. Post-acquisition, the company continued emphasizing ethical AI frameworks, including collaborations with Nestlé for enterprise-wide readiness.[39][16][37]
Colossal Biosciences
Founding and Strategic Vision
Colossal Biosciences was founded on September 1, 2021, by serial entrepreneur Ben Lamm as CEO and geneticist George Church in Austin, Texas.[40] Lamm, inspired by Church's prior research on de-extinction, approached him in 2019, leading to the company's launch with an initial $15 million seed funding round.[40] The venture emerged from Lamm's track record in technology startups and Church's expertise in synthetic biology and gene editing, aiming to apply these to reverse extinction events.[40][2]The company's strategic vision positions it as the world's first de-extinction enterprise, focusing on reconstructing the genomes of extinct species using CRISPR-based gene editing and related biotechnologies to create ecological proxies rather than exact clones.[2][41] For instance, initial efforts target editing the Asian elephant genome to incorporate woolly mammoth traits, such as cold-resistant fur and fat layers, to produce mammoth-like hybrids capable of restoring tundra ecosystems by combating permafrost thaw and enhancing biodiversity.[2][40] Lamm has articulated a moral imperative for humanity to pursue this technology, viewing de-extinction not merely as revival but as a tool to address current biodiversity loss, with over 1 million species threatened according to United Nations estimates.[42][2]Beyond core de-extinction projects—including the woolly mammoth, thylacine, dodo, and dire wolf—Colossal's vision encompasses broader species preservation through partnerships with conservation organizations and the development of spin-off technologies for commercial application.[40][41] This includes genomic sequencing tools via Form Bio and plastic degradation innovations through Breaking, alongside philanthropic efforts by the Colossal Foundation to support endangered species restoration.[40] The approach emphasizes ecosystem restoration over spectacle, with technologies intended to generate revenue streams like biodiversity credits and government contracts while advancing synthetic biology for potential human health benefits.[5][40] By 2025, the company had raised over $400 million, reflecting investor confidence in its platform for tackling the extinction crisis affecting approximately 30,000 species annually.[2][40]
Key De-Extinction Initiatives
Colossal Biosciences' primary de-extinction initiatives focus on resurrecting the woolly mammoth, thylacine, dodo bird, and dire wolf through CRISPR-based genome editing, stem cell technologies, and assisted reproduction, with the woolly mammoth serving as the flagship project launched in 2021.[43] These efforts involve editing the genomes of closely related extant species—such as the Asian elephant for the mammoth (sharing 99.6% DNA similarity)—to incorporate extinct traits for cold resistance, disease resilience, and ecological adaptability, followed by surrogate gestation and iterative refinement.[44] The company aims to produce viable hybrid offspring within 4-6 years for initial projects, though full ecological reintroduction timelines remain contingent on scaling artificial wombs and habitat restoration.[45]The woolly mammoth initiative seeks to create cold-adapted hybrids via editing elephant induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) to express mammoth-specific genes for woolly coats, fat layers, and hemoglobin variants enabling Arctic survival, with embryos implanted into elephant surrogates (22-month gestation).[44] Progress includes sequencing well-preserved mammoth DNA from Siberian and Alaskan permafrost specimens and developing EEHV-resistant elephant lines to protect surrogates and wild populations, addressing a leading cause of elephant calf mortality.[43] Colossal targets initial mammoth-like calves by approximately 2028, with reintroduction to Arctic tundra habitats to restore grassland ecosystems via herbivory and trampling.[44]In the thylacine (Tasmanian tiger) project, Colossal has achieved the highest-quality ancient genome assembly to date (>99.9% accuracy, chromosome-level with 45 gaps) from a 110-year-old specimen, including long RNA recovery up to 2,000 bases for gene expression studies, announced progressively from 2022.[46] Key milestones encompass over 300 multiplex edits in fat-tailed dunnart cells to recreate thylacine craniofacial traits, world's-first ovulation induction in dunnarts, halfway-duration embryo culture in artificial uteri, and iPSC lines from quolls with engineered >6,000-fold toxin resistance against cane toads.[46] These advances, building on University of Melbourne collaborations, position the project for marsupial proxy gestation, though no birth timeline is specified beyond ongoing pipeline development.[43]The dodo bird effort leverages Nicobar pigeon relatives, focusing on primordial germ cell (PGC) culturing to transmit edited genomes; a September 2025 breakthrough enabled sustained pigeon PGC growth, overcoming prior viability obstacles, alongside high-quality dodo genome decoding from museum specimens.[47] This supports editing for flightless traits and Mauritius island adaptability, with potential for thousands of birds within a decade per company projections, though avian de-extinction complexities like gamete transmission remain unresolved.[48]Colossal's dire wolf initiative represents an early claimed success, producing pups Romulus and Remus on October 1, 2024, via genetic engineering of gray wolf genomes to replicate dire wolf phenotypes—including larger size, robust jaws, and whitish coats—using ancient DNA insights rather than full cloning.[49] Announced in April 2025 as the "world's first de-extinct animals" extinct for over 10,000 years, this approach emphasizes phenotypic revival for conservation tech validation, aligning with IUCN principles, but has drawn scrutiny for relying on extant wolf editing over pure resurrection.[50][51]
Scientific and Technological Milestones
Colossal Biosciences has advanced de-extinction efforts through innovations in CRISPR-based gene editing, focusing on resurrecting extinct species via engineered proxies derived from closely related living animals. A pivotal achievement came in March 2025 with the development of the "Colossal Woolly Mouse," where researchers multiplex-edited seven genes in laboratory mice to produce cold-resistant, woolly-like fur traits modeled on woolly mammoth adaptations, demonstrating predictive computational design for phenotypic changes.[52][53] This multiplex editing technique, involving simultaneous modifications across multiple loci, represents a scalable step toward editing the Asian elephant genome for mammoth-like traits, including enhanced fat layers and hemoglobin for Arctic survival.[53]In the thylacine project, Colossal reported sequencing and assembling a complete ancient thylacine genome by October 2024, enabling precise identification of extinct-specific genetic variants for potential insertion into the fat-tailed dunnart, the thylacine's closest living relative.[54] This genomic milestone facilitated the synthesis of thylacine cells and early embryonic structures, advancing synthetic embryology techniques for marsupial proxies.[54]The dire wolf initiative marked a functional de-extinction benchmark in April 2025, when Colossal announced the birth of three pups engineered from gray wolf surrogates, incorporating ancient DNA harvested from a 13,000-year-old tooth and a 72,000-year-old bone to restore traits like robust musculature and pack-hunting adaptations via targeted CRISPR edits.[55][56] These animals, described as the first successfully de-extinct species through genetic engineering, utilized advances in ancient DNA extraction and synthetic genome assembly to overcome degradation in fossil samples.[55] Parallel efforts in the woolly mammoth program have yielded collateral benefits, such as gene edits in elephant cells that enhance resistance to elephant endotheliotropic herpesvirus (EEHV), a leading cause of calf mortality, by borrowing antiviral mechanisms inferred from mammoth genomes.[43]These milestones underscore Colossal's integration of AI-driven sequence analysis with high-fidelity editing tools, though independent analyses note that resulting organisms are hybrid proxies rather than identical replicas, prioritizing ecological functionality over exact genetic fidelity.[57] By July 2025, these technologies extended to initiating de-extinction of the 12-foot moa bird, leveraging avian genome engineering from ostrich relatives.[58]
Criticisms and Scientific Debates
Critics have questioned whether Colossal Biosciences' de-extinction efforts, particularly its April 2025 announcement of reviving the dire wolf (Aenocyon dirus), constitute genuine resurrection of extinct species or merely the creation of genetically modified hybrids. The company's process involved editing the genome of gray wolves (Canis lupus) to incorporate approximately 20 distinct dire wolf genetic variants identified from ancient DNA, resulting in animals that exhibit some dire wolf-like traits such as larger size and altered coat patterns but retain the majority of their genome from the living gray wolf.[59][60] Scientists including evolutionary biologists have argued that this approach produces "proxy species" or designer animals rather than true de-extinction, as the resulting organisms are not genetically identical to their extinct predecessors and may not behave or adapt as the originals did in prehistoric ecosystems.[51][61] Ben Lamm, Colossal's CEO, has countered that such critiques overlook the functional revival of lost traits and the broader goal of restoring ecological roles, dismissing arguments over taxonomic purity as "stupid."[62]The dire wolf claim has drawn accusations of scientific overhype and reliance on press releases over peer-reviewed publications, with no formal studies submitted for independent verification as of October 2025.[59][51] Researchers have highlighted potential risks, including unforeseen genetic instabilities in edited embryos and the diversion of resources from conserving endangered species like Asian elephants, which serve as surrogates for mammoth proxies.[63] Broader de-extinction debates question the ecological feasibility of reintroducing engineered species into modern environments altered by climate change and habitat loss, arguing that revived populations could fail to thrive or disrupt existing biodiversity without addressing root causes of past extinctions.[64]In July 2025, several academics critical of Colossal's projects reported being targeted by coordinated online harassment and smear campaigns, including anonymous social media attacks questioning their expertise and funding.[65] While the perpetrators remain unidentified, the timing coincided with heightened scrutiny of Colossal's announcements, prompting concerns over suppression of dissent in biotechnology. Lamm denied any company involvement, stating that Colossal and its investors had not commissioned such actions.[65] This episode underscores tensions between commercial innovation and scientific accountability, with some observers attributing Colossal's defensive posture to its reliance on venture funding and public enthusiasm rather than rigorous validation.[66]
Recent Ventures and Expansions
Astromech AI Initiative
Astromech AI Corp. was founded in 2025 by entrepreneur Ben Lamm and geneticist George Church as an independent biotechnology-focused artificial intelligence company. Incorporated in Delaware, the firm maintains its principal place of business at 1401 Lavaca Street, Unit 155, in Austin, Texas. Lamm serves as co-founder, chief executive officer, and director, while Church acts as co-founder and advisor.[67]On August 12, 2025, Astromech filed a Form D with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, disclosing a total offering amount of $30 million under Regulation D exemptions for private placements, with $29,999,998 raised to date and no sales commissions or finder's fees reported. The funding supports development of proprietary AI technologies targeting genetic research, pharmaceutical development, and broader life sciences applications. Investors' commitments reflect confidence in the AI-biotechnology convergence, positioning Astromech amid a wave of early-stage investments in the sector, where typical raises range from $5-15 million but Astromech secured a notably larger sum.[67][68][69]Operating initially in stealth mode, Astromech aims to build cutting-edge AI tools for genomic inference, synthesis design, ancestral modeling, sequence reconstruction, gene regulation, and protein folding. These efforts seek to accelerate biotechnology research and development, drawing on the founders' prior collaboration at Colossal Biosciences without direct operational ties to that entity, as confirmed by Colossal representatives. The company's focus underscores Lamm's pattern of pursuing ventures at the intersection of advanced computation and biological innovation.[70][71]
Ongoing Public and Industry Engagements
Ben Lamm maintains active public engagement through keynote addresses and panel discussions at international conferences, focusing on de-extinction, synthetic biology, and biotechnology innovation. At SXSW 2025 in Austin, Texas, on March 9, he delivered a keynote titled "Colossal: Technology Company Turning Science Fiction to Reality," joined by actor Joe Manganiello to explore gene editing, cloning, and artificial wombs in restoring extinct species.[72] During the event, Lamm emphasized humanity's moral obligation to advance de-extinction technologies, as reported in a TechCrunch interview where he argued such pursuits address biodiversity loss.[42]Lamm extended these discussions to SXSW London in June 2025, participating in sessions on dire wolf de-extinction, conservation genetics, and planetary challenges, including a conversation with actress Sophie Turner.[73] He also featured as a speaker at the Fast Company Grill during SXSW 2025, addressing Colossal's progress in charting paths from extinction.[74] These appearances align with his broader role as an agenda contributor to the World Economic Forum, where he opines on technology's role in global challenges like species preservation and emerging biotech.[75]In industry circles, Lamm engages through high-level meetings and interviews advancing Colossal's mission. On October 7, 2025, he met with Sheikh Hamdan bin Mohammed of Dubai to discuss biotechnology applications, highlighting Colossal's international collaborations.[76] A Pulse 2.0 interview on October 21, 2025, detailed Colossal's genomic engineering advancements, underscoring Lamm's ongoing advocacy for radical bioscience solutions.[77] Additionally, as a speaker at Aspen Ideas, he contributes to dialogues on entrepreneurship and innovation in biotech.[78] These efforts position Lamm as a key proponent of applying CRISPR and AI to ecological restoration, despite scientific debates on feasibility and ethics.[79]
Board, Advisory, and Broader Influence
Advisory Roles and Investments
Ben Lamm serves as a member of the Scientific Advisory Board for the Planetary Society, a nonprofit organization dedicated to advancing space exploration and science education, with his involvement dating back to at least 2018.[18] He is also a member of the Board of Trustees for The Explorers Club, an international multidisciplinary professional society focused on scientific exploration and field research.[75] Additionally, Lamm sits on the Advisory Board of the Arch Mission Foundation, which preserves human knowledge and history through space-based archives.[80]Lamm previously served on Adweek's advisory board from 2018 to 2021, contributing to discussions on media and marketing innovation.[80] He has been a partner at Capital Factory, a Texas-based startup accelerator and venture fund, since January 2013, supporting early-stage technology companies through mentorship and resources.[4] As co-owner and strategic science advisor for Nautilus Magazine since 2019, Lamm participated in its acquisition by a group of investors including himself, aimed at sustaining the publication's focus on science and culture.[4]In terms of investments, Lamm has acted as an angel investor in various startups, with a portfolio that includes companies such as Airheart (aerial delivery technology), AnthemIQ (healthcare analytics), and Molecula (data infrastructure), spanning sectors like information services and real estate technology.[81] His investment in Nautilus Magazine in 2019 formed part of a broader group effort to acquire and stabilize the science-focused publication amid financial challenges. Through roles as a mentor and investor in programs like TechStars since 2013, Lamm has provided funding and guidance to early-stage ventures in technology and innovation.[82]
Impact on Emerging Technologies
Ben Lamm's influence on emerging technologies stems primarily from his serial entrepreneurship in biotechnology and artificial intelligence, as well as his targeted investments in defense and space-related innovations. Through Colossal Biosciences, co-founded in 2021, Lamm has accelerated advancements in synthetic biology by applying CRISPR-Cas9 gene editing to de-extinction efforts, such as reconstructing woolly mammoth traits in Asian elephant cells, which has refined multiplex editing techniques capable of targeting over 50 genetic loci simultaneously.[2] These methodologies extend to broader applications in conservation genetics and disease-resistant species engineering, demonstrating scalable genomic reprogramming that outperforms traditional breeding.[83]In artificial intelligence, Lamm founded Hypergiant Industries in 2018, developing enterprise AI platforms for autonomous operations in space exploration and critical infrastructure, including predictive maintenance systems that integrate machine learning with sensor data to enhance mission reliability for NASA partners.[84] His subsequent launch of Astromech AI in 2025, backed by $30 million in funding, focuses on generative AI models tailored for scientific discovery, building on prior ventures to bridge AI with biological data analysis.[85]Lamm's advisory and investment activities further amplify his impact, as he engages in angel funding for startups specializing in software-defined emerging technologies, particularly those intersecting defense, aerospace, and synthetic biology, while participating in incubators to mentor founders on scaling disruptive prototypes.[75] [7] This portfolio approach has supported innovations in AI-driven threat detection and bio-compute interfaces, fostering ecosystems where empirical validation prioritizes causal mechanisms over speculative hype.[86]
Recognition and Legacy
Awards and Public Accolades
In 2019, Lamm received the EY Entrepreneur of the Year Technology Innovator award for his leadership at Hypergiant Industries, recognizing his application of artificial intelligence to industrial challenges.[87] The following year, in May 2020, he earned the Gold Stevie Award for Entrepreneur of the Year in the American Business Awards' Computer Software category (up to 500 employees), honoring his serial entrepreneurial achievements including multiple company exits.[17] Also in May 2020, Lamm was named a winner in Corporate Vision Magazine's Technology Innovator Awards, acknowledging his innovations in AI and emerging technologies through ventures like Hypergiant.[17]Lamm's role as co-founder and CEO of Colossal Biosciences has garnered further recognition, including the company's selection as Startup of the Year in D CEO Magazine's Innovation Awards in January 2025, highlighting advancements in de-extinction and genetic engineering under his direction.[88] In 2025, he was named to the TIME100 Next list, which identifies rising leaders driving impact in technology and science.[70] Forbes included Lamm on its Billionaires list that year, attributing his wealth to Colossal's valuation exceeding $10 billion following a Series C funding round.[89]Lamm holds fellow status in The Explorers Club, an organization dedicated to scientific exploration, and serves on its Board of Trustees, reflecting his contributions to frontier technologies like de-extinction.[90]
Broader Contributions to Innovation
Ben Lamm's serial entrepreneurship has advanced innovation by demonstrating scalable models for integrating artificial intelligence and software into diverse applications, including conversational AI and digital experiences. Through founding and exiting five companies—such as Chaotic Moon Studios, acquired by Accenture in 2015 for its boundary-pushing software development, and Conversable, sold to LivePerson in 2018 for AI-driven customer engagement—Lamm has facilitated technology transfers that enabled Fortune 500 firms to adopt breakthrough tools, fostering efficiency in sectors like marketing and defense.[17][91] His approach emphasizes rapid prototyping and risk-tolerant investment, which has influenced startup ecosystems to prioritize disruptive software over incremental improvements.[5]In biotechnology, Lamm's co-founding of Colossal Biosciences in 2021 has broadened the application of CRISPR gene-editing beyond therapeutics to ecological restoration, including de-extinction projects aimed at reintroducing mammoth-like traits into elephants to enhance biodiversity and carbon sequestration in tundra ecosystems. By raising over $225 million and assembling a team of 50 advisors, including geneticists, Colossal has accelerated synthetic biology tools for conservation, positioning de-extinction as a viable strategy for climate mitigation rather than mere spectacle.[7][86] This work challenges traditional conservation paradigms, advocating corporate sponsorship of species revival for environmental credits, thereby incentivizing private sector involvement in planetary-scale innovation.[92]Lamm's investments in genomics, robotics, ocean sciences, and green technologies have seeded parallel advancements, channeling capital into high-risk fields that mainstream venture funding often overlooks. For instance, his backing of AI firms like Hypergiant Industries extends autonomous systems to space and agriculture, promoting resilient infrastructure against climate threats.[6][93] These efforts, combined with public advocacy at forums like the World Economic Forum, underscore a philosophy of technology as a causal driver for solving existential challenges, influencing peers to pursue interdisciplinary ventures over siloed development.