THE NEXT WEB – Mar 8 – Monthly revenues for the social networking category on the App Store jumped 87% YOY in January, according to a new study from App Annie. The social networking apps category is now the third highest in terms of monthly revenue, behind games and productivity. In terms of downloads, social networking was sixth overall among categories on the App Store in January. According to App Annie, monthly downloads were up 30% YOY and now account for 5% of total downloads. Globally, the list of top social networking apps with respect to downloads was predictably dominated by Facebook, Apple’s Find My Friends, Twitter and Skype. Dating apps like Zoosk, Badoo, Grindr Xtra and eHarmony also proved capable at monetization.
Category: Badoo
Has Internet Dating Made People More Disposable?
THE ATLANTIC – Jan 3 – Most of the online dating CEO's agree that the rise of online dating will mean an overall decrease in commitment. “The future will see better relationships but more divorce,” predicts Dan Winchester, the founder of a free UK dating site. “Historically,” says Greg Blatt, the CEO of Match.com’s parent company, “relationships have been billed as ‘hard’ because, commitment has been the goal. You could say online dating is simply changing people’s ideas about whether commitment itself is a life value.” “I think divorce rates will increase as life in general becomes more real-time,” says Niccolò Formai, the head of social-media marketing at Badoo. “Societal values always lose out,” says Noel Biderman, the founder of AshleyMadison. “Premarital sex used to be taboo,” explains Biderman. “So women would become miserable in marriages, because they wouldn’t know any better. But today, more people have had failed relationships, recovered, moved on, and found happiness. Even at eHarmony, Gian Gonzaga, the site’s relationship psychologist, acknowledges that commitment is at odds with technology. “You could say online dating allows people to get into relationships, learn things, and ultimately make a better selection,” says Gonzaga. “But you could also easily see a world in which online dating leads to people leaving relationships the moment they’re not working—an overall weakening of commitment.
In 2011, Mark Brooks, a consultant to online-dating companies, published the results of an industry survey titled “How Has Internet Dating Changed Society?” The survey responses, from 39 executives, produced the following conclusions: “Internet dating has made people more disposable, and may be partly responsible for a rise in the divorce rates.” “Low quality, unhappy and unsatisfying marriages are being destroyed as people drift to Internet dating sites.” “Internet dating has helped people of all ages realize that there’s no need to settle for a mediocre relationship.”
Alex Mehr, a co-founder of Zoosk, disagrees. “Online dating only removes a barrier to meeting,” says Mehr. Surely personality will play a role in the way anyone behaves in the realm of online dating, particularly when it comes to commitment and promiscuity.
by Dan Slater
See full article at The Atlantic
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Dubai Blocks iDating, But Lets People Discovery Sites Off The Hook
OPW – Nov 3 – Irena and I
were in Dubai for a few days so we thought we'd see which dating sites
were blocked and which made it past government filtering. Specifically
any 'Internet Content that contradicts the ethics and morals of the UAE
including Nudity and Dating' get blocked. iDating doesn't fit the
religion and culture of UAE. Matrimonials sites, on the other hand, are
ok.
Match, Plentyoffish and OKCupid were blocked. I thought
World Singles Arablounge.com might make the cut, but no. It was
blocked. China dating sites Zhenai, Baihe and Jiayuan were all blocked
as well. We got through to Facebook and thought we'd have more luck
with people discovery services. Badoo was blocked but Tagged and Meetme
were ok. Matrimonials sites made the cut. Shaadi, Bharat Matrimony
and Jeevansathi were all available in Dubai. We were especially pleased
that Online Personals Watch and Social Networking Watch were available
as well. Of course, as soon as I fired up my VPN I could get to
everything. Dubai Internet City also enjoys open access and alternative
ISP Du is more lenient than Etisalat. [Full Disclosure: POF and Meetme
are clients of Courtland Brooks]
Big News! Blendr Merged With Badoo
APPRENEUR-DIARIES.COM – Oct 12 – Blendr (the straight version of Grindr) has just launched on Android. After checking out both Blendr’s and Badoo's description, one can see that they are almost the same. Actually, the screenshots of the app are the same and the app themselves are exactly the same. If you download both apps and sign in both, it actually tells you in one that you have already been signed in the other. Furthermore, the apps look exactly the same and the people around you are the same, too.
The full article was originally published at Appreneur-Diaries.com, but is no longer available.
Mark Brooks: See comments for Joel's confirmation and comment.
Badoo: “It’s Not Just About Sex”
VENTURE BEAT – Sep 6 – Andrey Andreev is probably one of the most successful entrepreneurs, and Badoo is the “sleeper hit” of the social networks. Badoo’s concept is simple. Upload a few cursory details and a choice image, ping on location-awareness and you’ll see who is in your immediate radius and who might be appealing enough to arrange to meet in real life. “Think of it like it’s a nightclub! It’s not just about sex,” says Andreev, slightly ruffled at suggestion that it's like a Grindr for straight hookups. “Some people use the service in this way. But, like in a night club, you bring people together and then it’s up to them to figure out what they want to do.” Badoo has achieved its 150M subscription level by virality alone. Launched in Spain in 2006, Badoo now has 6.4M users there, plus around the same amount in Italy, 8.2M in France, 9M in Mexico and 14.1M in Brazil.
by Linsey Fryatt
See full article at Venture Beat
This post also appears on SocialNetworkingWatch.
Russia Battles Online Foes And Freedoms
DER SPIEGEL – Andrey Andreyev wants to make his Internet startup the next Facebook, he says, “the next $100 billion company.” From his offices in London, Andreyev oversees Badoo, a growing online-dating and social-networking site. Badoo has 157M members globally, with ~100K more joining each day. The site is part social network, similar to Facebook, and part dating service. Market research shows that 16 of the 20 most popular websites in Europe are American, while the remaining four are Russian. Indeed, the IT boom is the Russian economy’s most notable success since the fall of the Iron Curtain. Another major player in the Internet industry is search engine Yandex. Yandex is the only comprehensive, global search index other than Google and Microsoft’s Bing. Yandex has 3,500 employees with 60% market share in Russia, outstripping Google. It has expanded beyond the borders of the former Eastern Bloc. Yandex hopes to win away up to 20% of Google’s market volume in Turkey. The climate, both in Russia and online, has grown harsher since Putin took over the presidency from Dmitry Medvedev in May. As president, Medvedev liked to be photographed with an iPad, he kept a blog and he presented himself in his Sunday speeches as the Internet’s greatest protector. As recently as December, Putin lauded the Internet as “free and enormously democratic.” But that was campaign rhetoric. The new Internet law allows authorities to block websites without a court order.
by Benjamin Bidder
See full article at The Star
This post also appears on SocialNetworkingWatch.
Another Top Googler Jumps To Badoo
TECH CRUNCH – Aug 16 – After losing long-time Googler Benjamin Ling to social network Badoo, Google is seeing another exec head to the UK site. This time, Jeff Hardy, who was Head of Global Partnerships for Google+ Local, is leaving the company to join Badoo as VP of Partnerships and M&A.
by Leena Rao
See full article at Tech Crunch
This post also appears on SocialNetworkingWatch.
Badoo App Comes To Windows Phone Marketplace
WMPOWERUSER – Aug 1 – Badoo has delivered a Windows Phone app to Marketplace. Badoo is popular in Latin America, Spain, Italy and France and operates in 180 countries. On Android the app has ~5M downloads.
See full article at WMPoweruser
This post also appears on SocialNetworkingWatch.
Interview With Jessica Powell, (Former) CMO Of Badoo
OPW INTERVIEW – July 17 – Back in 2004 Friendster had its thunder stolen by MySpace. Then Facebook retired MySpace. Badoo is distinct. Its a leading social discovery site and over 40% of its traffic is mobile now. – Mark Brooks
I can’t see Badoo retiring Facebook, but how is it different?
Facebook is for your existing friends. Badoo was designed for meeting new people.
Is Badoo dating? Or is it something else? Friends-making perhaps?
All of those things. Dating exists on the site but we don’t view ourselves as a strictly dating site.
Now is it more flirting? There’s something fun about flirting. I’ve heard flirting described as making other people feel good by giving them compliments. If I look at the home page now, there’s chat, flirt, but there’s no mention of dating. I think “dating” and “singles” are words which you’ve avoided. Quite rightfully so. Is the active word flirting really what Badoo is?
I have no problem saying that people can date on Badoo. You can equally flirt. The top reasons people go on the site is chat and making friends. That constitutes about 70% of the activity on the site. Badoo is trying to mirror real life by throwing you together with a whole bunch of different people. Some people you may chat with, and it may never be anything more than that. Over 50% of people have added someone they’ve met on Badoo to their Facebook.
Jonathan Abrams started Friendster in 2002. He was on a number of dating sites. He thought internet dating was “cheesy.” So one of the things he endeavored to do was make Friendster a more natural way for people to meet. I see Badoo delivering on that vision. You’ve taken the international route and you’re just coming up on 150 Million members. How many of those members are now non-USA and non-UK?
If you look at how Badoo grew, you would see a spiral out from Spain into the rest of southern Europe, then crossing over into Latin America. There’s obvious linguistic and cultural ties to Spain and Portugal. And then it started to spread north from Latin America. So the bulk of that 150 Million is outside of Anglo markets. And UK and US markets are among our fastest growing as the product has just now started to hit those two countries.
Plentyoffish had a similar growth trajectory. It started off in Canada and then Markus chose UK because he knew he could get his arms around it more easily. It’s a very price sensitive market.
Yes and because we are free, it lends itself to virality. We do have a freemium model and it has reached over $150 Million run rate.
How predominate is the mobile Badoo in those numbers?
In the US, over 50% of our new registrations are happening on mobile. Now we look at mobile first, and then the web.
How has that trajectory changed geographically? Is it the USA that’s 50% and are you seeing other demographics that are even stronger for the mobile adoption?
The US is the strongest in terms of new registrations on mobile. But he primary source of registrations is still going to be web in certain parts of the world such as Latin America where the smartphone penetration is not that high.
You’ve got a really good app that people love. How are you getting word out to these new markets?
Again coming back to “we’re free”, helps. We really aren’t prescriptive in terms of how you interact with the site, what to do on the site and the kind of people you can meet there. I think ultimately our users understand Badoo flexibility and make use of it and that’s why it ends up spreading because it works.
What’s the split between mobile money and online revenue generation?
We wouldn’t break revenues down into different platforms. We don’t do advertising. We make money from subscriptions and micro-payments. You can pay a small amount to place your ad at the top of our site, for example.
What about virtual gifting?
We have it on the site as well.
Has that been popular?
People use it. It’s just another feature that we have, and it contributes to the revenue.
Have you see the behavior of people actually gifting themselves to make themselves seem more popular?
Not so much. But guys do not tend to be the most creative gift givers. You see a lot more diversity if the women are giving gifts.
Can you see a day when mobile usage is going to exceed online usage for Badoo?
Absolutely. We always wanted Badoo to be something very casual and very flexible. I think mobile compliments that very well.
How are conversions different?
You do see a difference. Mobile users, perhaps because of greater activity, are more likely to convert to paying users.
And Android versus iPhone?
I think it’s still early days to be able to compare in great depth, in part because some things aren’t available today on Android, such as subscription billing.
Are there any other unusual behaviors that you’ve seen with the way people behave on the mobile phone versus online. One area would be location based services. How have you incorporated LBS?
We have a feature that shows you people nearby. At the same time, we’ve built in lots of different controls for people. So you can choose to not show your distance or that you’re online. As a woman, those kinds of features would be important to me. Location is important because I’d probably want to date someone who’s near me versus someone who’s off in another country.
So you think women are really warming up to the idea of sharing their location?
If you’d asked that question 10 years ago, the response would have been very, very different. There has been a shift among a lot of people.
Badoo has grown without any marketing budget. But now, advertising is happening for the very first time, from what I hear.
We don’t want to rely on viral growth only. At some point that’s going to stop. We’re still seeing 125,000 sign-ups a day but I think we have to look at using some traditional marketing as well to start explaining to people what Badoo is and how they can use it.
So it’s a seeding strategy then? Basically to prime the pump to get an initial audience.
I think so. I would not compare us to a traditional dating site, where a lot of acquisition comes through TV advertising and other kinds of offline advertising. I wouldn’t see us in the long term going down that route.
Problems Dating Sites Are Facing & Their Solutions
FAST COMPANY – June 28 – Online dating has ballooned to a $4 billion business. Now the industry faces new players and challenges.
oneGoodLove
Problem: Dominated by hookup sites like Grindr and Manhunt, the gay online-dating space underserves relationship-minded folks.
Solution: OneGoodLove, a sort of eHarmony for the gay and lesbian community, is evolving its matching system.
OkCupid
Problem: To improve matching algorithms, sites need to know who goes on dates with whom and how those dates turn out.
Solution: OkCupid Labs wants to advance its mobile platform to gather new kinds of data on real-world dating behavior. Via the app, users will be encouraged to give instant feedback about their dates with other OkCupiders.
Badoo
Problem: As online daters become conditioned to screening potential mates via in-depth profiles, the process of meeting new people online grows further from how offline attraction really works.
Solution: A social discovery app, Badoo facilitates meetings on the fly by encouraging users to find people right around them based on nothing more than a photo, an age, and an interest or two.
HowAboutWe
Problem: A happy customer is a lost user.
Solution: HowAboutWe, a site that connects people based on user-suggested activities, is launching a service for couples.
by Dan Slater
See full article at Fast Company
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