Social network creator Ning raises $60M at $500M valuation
Updated
Make-your-own-social-network company Ning has raised a $60 million fourth round of funding.
Co-founder Marc Andreessen, who also founded Netscape, says the funding came at a whopping $500 million pre-money valuation. That’s almost three times the Palo Alto, Calif. startup’s $170 million valuation back in July, when it raised a $44 million third round. Even back then, Ning was something of a poster child for huge (and, some argued, overinflated) Web 2.0 valuations. With the economic downturn, we thought the days of such valuations were over, but it looks like we were wrong.
It’s not clear what Ning, which allows you to create and customize your own social network, is going to do with all this cash, since social network companies don’t usually need a lot of capital. On the other hand, its traffic has been growing like crazy — between February of 2007 and 2008, traffic increased by 4,803 percent, to 4 million visits. And Randy Befumo, research director at previous Ning investor Legg Mason Opportunity Trust, has said the company needs money to build the infrastructure for growth.
(In the latter article, we argue that Ning’s numbers — particularly the fact that 115,000 social networks were created using its platform — aren’t necessarily as meaningful as the site’s usage.)
You can read Fast Company’s new in-depth profile of Ning here.
Update: Marc Andreessen just emailed us. Here’s what he said:
The valuation was $500M pre-money, about $560M post-money.
The size of the round was the money we have raised minus a fee to Allen & Company. About $60M net.
We raised the money to enable us to keep scaling given our accelerating growth (over 230,000 networks on Ning now, growing at over 1,000 per day) and to make sure we have plenty of firepower to survive the oncoming nuclear winter. At current growth rates, we don’t need it to get to cash flow positive, but having lived through the last crunch, it’s good to be conservative with these things.
Next Story: Product placement comes to web video
Previous Story: Roundup: AMD falls, Sequoia expands, and more
Companies: Legg Mason Opportunity Trust, Ning
About the Author, Anthony Ha
Anthony is VentureBeat's assistant editor, as well as its reporter on enterprise technology, cloud computing, and advertising. Before joining VentureBeat in 2008, Anthony worked at the Hollister Free Lance, where he won awards from the California Newspaper Publishers Association for breaking news coverage and writing. He attended Stanford University and now lives in San Francisco. Reach him at anthony@venturebeat.com. You can also follow Anthony on Twitter.
VB Writers
Conversations on Innovation
Back to the future: Why push technologies and search are about to explode
- I used to really love Pointcast back in the day. Was truly disappointed when they folded. I do think it will take a lot more technology and standardization to reach...
- Please check out www.kikin.com. While we do not do all that you describe above, our caption "my web always with...
- I totally agree with you, our search will be through an close personalized agent/bot trying to match my needs and desires and give the results in a custom and natural...
- Central to all this is preference. Without that, the rest loses context. A virtual best friend is only that if they know what makes you tick, not necessarily your...
The subscription economy is here. Are you ready?
- In working with non-profits and helping them identify better technology solutions - the first roadblock we hit is funders are comfortable in providing a large grant...
- well, i look this site and it is so popular site!
- i think that The subscription economy is here. Are you ready? The subscription economy is here. Are you ready !
- Regarding subscription vs. "free" economy, it's interesting to note that Starbucks, used as an example above, has today gone away from a subscription economy...
