Skip to main content

Facebook to buy Whatsapp?

http://techcrunch.com/2012/12/02/whats-up-with-whatsapp-facebook-might-want-to-buy-it-thats-what/

What's Up With Whatsapp? Facebook Might Want To Buy It, That's What

whatsapp screen shot android
Whatsapp, the multiplatform mobile messaging app that has been one of the runaway success stories for ad-free, paid services, has been in talks to be acquired by Facebook, according to sources close to the matter.
We're still digging around on potential price and other details about how advanced the deal is. But as mobile becomes the latest battleground in the Internet's game of thrones, you can see how such a deal could make sense.
For starters, it would be another way for Facebook to continue extending its touchpoints with mobile consumers, an area Mark Zuckerberg asserted, on the occasion of reaching 1 billion monthly active users on Facebook, would be crucial to Facebook reaching the "next billion."
"The big thing is obviously going to be mobile," Zuckerberg toldBusinessWeek. "There are 5 billion people in the world who have phones."
Whatsapp also has a footprint that fits with Facebook's focus on international/emerging markets: The messaging app has users in 250 countries covering 750 mobile networks, on the iOS, Android, BlackBerry, Nokia S40, Symbian and Windows Phone platforms.
The startup also has demonstrable scale. We've heard the company has something like 100 million (!!!) daily active users globally and these users utilize Whatsapp to send messages to family and friends. Every minute a user spends on Whatsapp is likely at the expense of a minute spent on Facebook. :)
At the end of October 2011, the last time Whatsapp updated its usage numbers, it announced that it was serving 1 billion messages per day — "Just how much is 1 billion messages? That is 41,666,667 messages an hour, 694,444 messages a minute, and 11,574 messages a second," the company wrote then. The app, which is built on Erlang, has the potential and ambition to grow more and wants to provide "a great mobile messaging system for a global market, regardless of your handset."
It is currently looking for translators in Arabic, Danish, Dutch, Farsi, Filipino, Finnish, French, German, Hebrew, Hindi, Hungarian, Indonesian, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Malay, Norwegian, Polish, Portuguese (Brazil), Russian, Simplified Chinese, Spanish, Swedish, Thai, Traditional Chinese, Turkish, Urdu, "and many more languages."
And unlike Facebook, Whatsapp is a paid app. And obviously, having a paid, ad-free service is an expansion of Facebook's business model beyond advertising. We've already seen Facebook launch another service that diversifies it — Gifts — and the positive impact that had with investors.
And, as a paid app, Whatsapp is doing well: It's currently the No. 2 paid app in Apple's App Store (U.S. version), where it sells for $0.99. (Although there are often sales on the app where it gets discounted or given away.) On Google's Play Android store, it is free for the first year, and then $0.99 per year thereafter. Google indicates that the Android app has had 7 million downloads to date.
Ironically, Whatsapp's explicit disavowal of advertising as a revenue source could even work in its favor during acquisition talks. Facebook has faced significant backlash over how much its advertising has become more prominent and (some argue) intrusive as it attempts a meaningful revenue steam. Having an ad-free, paid feature as part of its portfolio could be a way for Facebook to answer or mitigate some of Wall Street's criticism. Whatsapp is a global business with many active users, a clear business model, and strong momentum. So there.
And still, today, the business models of the two companies couldn't be more different.
"Advertising isn't just the disruption of aesthetics, the insults to your intelligence and the interruption of your train of thought," Whatsapp co-founder Jan Koum wrote in a blog post earlier this year. "At every company that sells ads, a significant portion of their engineering team spends their day tuning data mining, writing better code to collect all your personal data, upgrading the servers that hold all the data and making sure it's all being logged and collated and sliced and packaged and shipped out… And at the end of the day the result of it all is a slightly different advertising banner in your browser or on your mobile screen. Remember, when advertising is involved you the user are the product." [Koum's emphasis.]
And that is just one reason why a Whatsapp/Facebook acquisition would be a surprise. At other times, Koum has been public about his distaste for startups that sell out quickly. "Totally agree with Vinod Khosla," he wrote in July. "People starting companies for a quick sale are a disgrace to the valley." (He's also, btw, noted that getting on TC shouldn't be a goal in itself. Too true.)
It's unclear whether statements like this translate into deal-breakers with Facebook, or whether any parties would get bought out, were a deal to happen.
But there is some other great detail to this story that gives it an extra layer of interest: The two co-founders, Koum and Brian Acton, first worked together at Yahoo. It's where they developed their dislike of advertising-based business models.
Yahoo happens to be in an acquiring mind, and has shown interest in mobile specifically. (Coincidentally, Yahoo is currently also revamping its messaging services.)
Whatsapp's business development head, Neeraj Arora, came to Whatsapp from Google, where he was a senior member of the corporate development team. According to his LinkedIn profile, he "led acquisitions and strategic investments across products and geographies. Recent transactions at Google include the acquisitions of Zagat, Dailydeal.de, Slide, Picnik, Cleversense, PittPatt and Talkbin."
And Acton himself apparently has pitched to Facebook before — perhaps for a job, perhaps with another product, perhaps with this idea.
"Facebook turned me down. It was a great opportunity to connect with some fantastic people. Looking forward to life's next adventure," he wrote in August 2009, the same year they founded Whatsapp, which is backed by Sequoia.
Acton's most recent tweet was on January 13, 2012 (no, he's not an active tweeter), a day notable for Whatsapp getting pulled from the App Store (restored four days later). The tweet was "Whatsapp."
Note: We have reached out to both Facebook and the Whatsapp founders by email but we have not heard back. We will update with info asap when we do.


Popular posts from this blog

Contoh Checklist saat beli mobil bekas

Diambil dari Majalah AutoBild Edisi 54 100 Checklist Mobil Bekas Berkualitas Kriteria Penilaian : (A) Problem minor. Biasanya karena habis dipakai dan normal terjadi di mobil yang sudah berumur. Tapi hal ini bisa dijadikan bahan negosiasi harga. Dan jika mobilnya masih relatif baru, problem ini juga bisa berarti biaya mahal. (B) Cacat yang bisa menjadi serius, jika membutuhkan investigasi lebih lanjut. (C) Kemungkinan adalah problem serius yang mahal dan sulit diperbaiki hingga normal. (D) JANGAN beli mobil ini!!!!!!!!!! Kesan Pertama 1. Dimana anda mobil tersebut? Jika diperlukan, dapatkah Anda menemukan penjualnya kembali? (D) 2. Apakah alamat penjualnya jelas? (D) 3. Bicara langsung ke penjual; apakah pertanyaan Anda dijawab dengan sigap? (D) 4. Lihat dan perhatikan sisi kendaraan, apakah terlihat lurus dan simetris? (D) 5. Periksa setiap sisi untuk mengenali kerusakan berat. (C) 6. Periksa celah antar panel, seharusnya rata dan konsisten. Jika tidak, ada kemungkinan...

Daftar Alamat Bank Jabar Banten (BJB) Jakarta

Alamat dan telpon Kantor Cabang , Kantor Cabang Pembantu, dan Kantor Kas Bank Jabar dan Banten yang berlokasi di Jakarta meliputi wilayah Jakarta Pusat, Jakarta Timur , Jakarta Barat, Jakarta Utara, Jakarta Selatan Kantor Cabang - Bank Jabar Banten - Jakarta Nama KC Alamat Telpon Fax JAKARTA Bank DEVISA Jl.Jend.Sudirman Kav.2 Gedung Arthaloka Lt.Dasar & Lt.4 Jakarta Pusat 021-2511448, 2511449 021-2511450, 2514415 HASYIM ASHARI Jl. KH. Hasyim Ashari No. 32-34, Jakarta Pusat 021-6330676 021-6324430 MANGGA DUA Gedung Masterina Jl. Mangga Dua Raya Blok F1 No. 1-3 Jakarta Pusat 021-62204094, 62204095, 62204096 021-62204093 KEBAYORAN BARU Graha Iskandarsyah Lt. 2 JL. Iskandarsyah Raya no. 66 C Kebayoran Baru 12160 - Jakarta Selatan 021-7229777, 7207334 021-7206990, 7209941 RAWAMANGUN Jl. Pemuda No. 97 Kec. Pulogadung - Jakarta Timur 021-47861771, 47868072, 47868073 021-47863209 Kantor Cabang Pembantu - Bank Jabar Banten - Jakarta NAMA KCP ALAMAT TELPON ...

Nomor Telepon Marshanda

Selingan. Buat bacaan ringan :D -ivo ---------- Forwarded message ---------- Date: Jul 24, 2005 7:57 PM Subject: Tanya Contact Person Marshanda & Delon Sejak gue makin keranjingan internet, gue memutuskan untuk masang line telepon sendiri di kamar.  Tadinya gue happy banget punya line sendiri, sampe akhirnya gue mulai diganggu telepon-telepon misterius. [kriiing] "Halo..." "Halo... Caca ada?" "Oh salah sambung." [klik] [kriiing] "Halo..." "Halo... Caca ada?" Nah, gue mulai heran nih. Yang nelepon beda, sama2 nyari Caca. "Salah sambung" (nada tegas) [klik] [kriiing] "Halo..." "Halo, dengan 314-xxxx?" "Iya betul." "Cacanya ada?" Wah ini udah masuk kategori ajaib. Telepon baru dipasang sebulan, kok udah ada yang salah nomer sampe lengkap gitu? Gue jadi was-was; jangan2 telepon gue dikloning. Maka bulan berikutnya gue minta perincian tagihan telepon gue. Terny...