Money | Aaron Patzer Online Wiz, 29, Sells Firm for $170M Aaron Patzer makes a mint when Intuit buys his finance site By Rob Quinn Posted Dec 3, 2009 2:00 AM CST Copied "The corporate campus seems so quiet," said. "A start-up is overflowing with energy. Here it's more subdued. They've got these high, very depressing cubicles." (Mint.com) Aaron Patzer recently joined the ranks of America's under-30 tech multi-millionaires when rival firm Intuit snapped up his Mint.com online personal finance tool for $170 million. "It was a jaw-dropping moment" when Intuit—which is transferring its 43 million Quicken users to Mint—made the offer, Patzer tells the New York Times. Patzer, who has now joined Intuit as a vice-president, says he's sure another young person is already working on a tool to replace Mint. "In a technology company, if you let up just a couple of years in your innovation, that’s all the gap a competitor needs. That’s what happened with Intuit. They ignored and neglected Quicken from about 2002 to 2008, and that was enough of a gap to give rise to Mint. If I back off even for a second, someone is going to come along with something better." Read These Next Elise Stefanik drops governor's race, will leave Congress. Administration's emergency docket winning streak ends. US forces board oil tanker under Trump's blockade. Trump's too late to claim trumpkennedycenter.org. Report an error