Leagues of Love
麻豆村 alumna Amanda Bradford helps singles find their soulmates with her dating app
By Kelly Rembold
麻豆村 alumna Amanda Bradford understands her customers.
Amanda is the founder of The League, a dating app that uses an admissions-based model to connect singles with like-minded ambitions, standards and goals.
She launched The League in 2014 after failing to find a dating app for successful, driven singles like her. Since then, it has garnered more than 2 million unique applicants and has 200,000 active monthly users.
鈥淧eople come up to me and tell me that they met their soulmate, they're bringing babies into the world and it's all because of the app,鈥 says Amanda, a 2006 Dietrich College graduate with a bachelor鈥檚 degree in information systems.
鈥淭hose are my favorite stories.鈥
鈥淚 always joke that selling the company was like sending The League to a really good university. I feel like a proud mom watching it get the education it deserves, the marketing talent it deserves and great people in place who are better than me at many of the things I've been doing.鈥
Amanda Bradford
Brick-by-Brick

From its inception, The League was run by Amanda and a small, dedicated team.
鈥淲e did a lot of stuff very cheaply and scrappy,鈥 Amanda says. 鈥淭he DNA of the brand is that it was built by me and my early employees with a lot of sweat equity.鈥
As a solo founder, she handled everything from coding and development to marketing and branding.
鈥淓veryone has these glamorized notions of what consumer apps are like,鈥 she says. 鈥淏ut it was just like anything else. I had to put one foot ahead of the other, brick-by-brick, building the team, building the product and listening to the customers. It took a lot.鈥
Her efforts paid off. In 2023, she sold The League to Match Group for $30 million.
鈥淚 always joke that selling the company was like sending The League to a really good university,鈥 Amanda says. 鈥淚 feel like a proud mom watching it get the education it deserves, the marketing talent it deserves and great people in place who are better than me at many of the things I've been doing.鈥
鈥溌槎勾 had a really good mix of theoretical foundation and pragmatic, practical skills, which 聽I still use today. They did a good job of teaching us about new, cutting-edge technology and also skills like HTML and CSS.鈥
Amanda Bradford
Entrepreneurial Education
Amanda grew up in a 鈥渢ech-obsessed鈥 family. Her dad loved computers and worked at IBM, so she always had access to the latest technology.
鈥淲e were the kids on the block with the internet connection,鈥 Amanda says. 鈥淲e were the first ones on the Prodigy computer. We had Palm Pilots. It was always like that.鈥
When applying for college, she looked for schools with a strong technology curriculum and a competitive volleyball program. Carnegie Mellon offered both.
When she wasn鈥檛 on the court, she was in the classroom learning valuable technical skills.
鈥溌槎勾 had a really good mix of theoretical foundation and pragmatic, practical skills, which 聽I still use today,鈥 Amanda says. 鈥淭hey did a good job of teaching us about new, cutting-edge technology and also skills like HTML and CSS.鈥
Amanda used many of those lessons when building her app.
鈥淗alf our app was built in HTML and CSS,鈥 she says. 鈥淲ithout the tactical education and being taught how to do that stuff, I would not have felt comfortable doing so much of the development myself.鈥
As part of her major, Amanda also took lots of business courses.
鈥淎 lot of the classes and group projects emulated what it's like to be a founding team at a startup,鈥 she says. 鈥淭he curriculum was really spot on for preparing me for entrepreneurship.鈥
After graduating from Carnegie Mellon, she attended business school at Stanford University, where the idea for The League was born. She received her MBA from Stanford in 2014, and The League was incorporated later that year.
鈥淚nstead of dating being a separate chore that you have to add onto your daily life, I want dating to be naturally incorporated into what a fulfilling, meaningful life looks like. I call it tech-enabled serendipity. Go about your daily life, keep setting and achieving goals, and meet some amazing people along the way. We can help you do that in a better way.鈥
Amanda Bradford
Seeking Serendipity
Since selling the company, Amanda has taken a step back from day-to-day operations and moved into a more forward-thinking, strategic role.
鈥淚've always wanted The League to be a lot more than a dating app,鈥 she says. 鈥淲hat I'm excited about now is that we can actually start thinking big-picture.鈥
For Amanda, the big picture includes connecting users in new ways. Do they need a nanny? Are they looking for an event to attend? Did they move and want a tour of their new city? The League could make it happen.
And if they find love along the way? That鈥檚 even better.
鈥淚nstead of dating being a separate chore that you have to add onto your daily life, I want dating to be naturally incorporated into what a fulfilling, meaningful life looks like,鈥 Amanda says. 鈥淚 call it tech-enabled serendipity. Go about your daily life, keep setting and achieving goals, and meet some amazing people along the way. We can help you do that in a better way.鈥
鈥淎 lot of people have asked why I sold, why I didn't keep it independent. Part of why I wanted a new chapter is to start giving back and mentoring founders, especially female founders.鈥
Amanda Bradford
A Focus on Founders

As The League enters a new chapter, Amanda is entering one, too.
鈥淎 lot of people have asked why I sold, why I didn't keep it independent,鈥 she says. 鈥淧art of why I wanted a new chapter is to start giving back and mentoring founders, especially female founders.鈥
She is setting up a small fund to invest in solo women entrepreneurs.
鈥淚t's a very lonely journey,鈥 Amanda says. 鈥淭here is something special about people that do it solo, and I think you need a different kind of support.鈥
For Amanda, that support came 10 years ago in a $25,000 check.
鈥淭hat first check was really important for me,鈥 Amanda says. 鈥淭hat was the difference between me doing this or not. I want to give these women their first $25,000 check that can make or break their plunge into entrepreneurship. I want to return the favor that I received when people believed in me.鈥