By Ingrid Lunden at TechCrunch:
AllThingsD has reported, and we have confirmed, that OMERS Ventures, a Canada-based VC, has taken a $20-million investment in HootSuite, the social media management platform, with the company now valued at $200 million.
The investment is a secondary one, and will be coming in the form of purchases of equity from HootSuite’s existing shareholders. These include employees as well as existing investors. That list includes Blumberg Capital, Hearst Ventures, Geoff Entress and Millennium Technology Value Partners, who collectively have invested $4.9 million into the company: $3 million in debt and a $1.9 million capital investment.
HootSuite’s VP of marketing, Ben Watson, tells me that the company currently has 3.5 million registered accounts, up from the 3 million reported earlier this year, when the company said it was operating at an annual run-rate of $11 million in revenues.
The Vancouver-based company is expected to be making a formal announcement at 5 AM PT today. Update: Link to the official press release as posted on HootSuite’s blog is here.
This deal is one of the largest secondary VC investments to take place in the Canadian market in the last 10 years, and follows reports of another big secondary market investment in the social media space, in Foursquare. OMERS Ventures is the VC arm of the Ontario Municipal Employee Retirement System, a large pension fund in Canada.
Reuters is reporting that Blumberg is not among the VCs that have cashed out in the deal.And we have now confirmed with Watson that, in fact, all investors are staying in. “Everyone is maintaining significant ownership,” he said.
“Ryan Holmes remains committed to building a billion dollar company, and this new investment partnership marks a new milestone in reaching that goal,” the company said in an emailed statement to TechCrunch.
What the deal signifies is that HootSuite will have a lot more breathing space to continue its product development and growth, and less like a lean and mean startup. Part of that growth will be in headcount: HootSuite currently has 140 employees and expects to bring that up to 240 this year.
The investment is also a testament to the ongoing attention in (and increasing value of) companies that are riding the social media wave and creating services to make money out of it.
HootSuite gives users the ability to monitor social media interaction across various networks, such as Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn. It also provides custom analytics and allows clients of its dashboard to do things like give multiple users the ability to collaborate on updating a company’s social profile, schedule campaigns around messages and so on. It also offers mobile apps.
Customers include PepsiCo, Fox and the NBA among others.
And it is a sign of how the “freemium” model is gaining currency with investors. Watson says the “bulk” of HootSuite’s 3.5 million accounts take the company’s free offering, but there is an increasing number opting for the different tiers of paid service, too. Those include a “pro” option aimed at smaller businesses; an enterprise service for larger numbers of users; HootSuite University that involves a training/accreditation element; and one aimed at those reselling the product.
AllThingsD has reported, and we have confirmed, that OMERS Ventures, a Canada-based VC, has taken a $20-million investment in HootSuite, the social media management platform, with the company now valued at $200 million.
The investment is a secondary one, and will be coming in the form of purchases of equity from HootSuite’s existing shareholders. These include employees as well as existing investors. That list includes Blumberg Capital, Hearst Ventures, Geoff Entress and Millennium Technology Value Partners, who collectively have invested $4.9 million into the company: $3 million in debt and a $1.9 million capital investment.
HootSuite’s VP of marketing, Ben Watson, tells me that the company currently has 3.5 million registered accounts, up from the 3 million reported earlier this year, when the company said it was operating at an annual run-rate of $11 million in revenues.
The Vancouver-based company is expected to be making a formal announcement at 5 AM PT today. Update: Link to the official press release as posted on HootSuite’s blog is here.
This deal is one of the largest secondary VC investments to take place in the Canadian market in the last 10 years, and follows reports of another big secondary market investment in the social media space, in Foursquare. OMERS Ventures is the VC arm of the Ontario Municipal Employee Retirement System, a large pension fund in Canada.
Reuters is reporting that Blumberg is not among the VCs that have cashed out in the deal.
“Ryan Holmes remains committed to building a billion dollar company, and this new investment partnership marks a new milestone in reaching that goal,” the company said in an emailed statement to TechCrunch.
What the deal signifies is that HootSuite will have a lot more breathing space to continue its product development and growth, and less like a lean and mean startup. Part of that growth will be in headcount: HootSuite currently has 140 employees and expects to bring that up to 240 this year.
The investment is also a testament to the ongoing attention in (and increasing value of) companies that are riding the social media wave and creating services to make money out of it.
HootSuite gives users the ability to monitor social media interaction across various networks, such as Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn. It also provides custom analytics and allows clients of its dashboard to do things like give multiple users the ability to collaborate on updating a company’s social profile, schedule campaigns around messages and so on. It also offers mobile apps.
Customers include PepsiCo, Fox and the NBA among others.
And it is a sign of how the “freemium” model is gaining currency with investors. Watson says the “bulk” of HootSuite’s 3.5 million accounts take the company’s free offering, but there is an increasing number opting for the different tiers of paid service, too. Those include a “pro” option aimed at smaller businesses; an enterprise service for larger numbers of users; HootSuite University that involves a training/accreditation element; and one aimed at those reselling the product.
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