Posts Tagged ‘return-requests’

PostHeaderIcon Facebook Rumored To Be Looking For Funding At $5-6 Billion Valuation

Facebook is reportedly still in the process of talking to several private equity firms about a significant follow-up investment in the company. According to the New York Post, which tends to be a bit sensationalist at times and is owned by News Corporation, the social networking juggernaut has already held informal exploratory meetings with Providence Equity Partners, General Atlantic, Bain Capital, Kohlberg Kravis Roberts and others to date.

The article cites Facebook to be looking for fresh capital at a $5 to $6 billion valuation, with the potential investors only willing to pour more capital in the company in the $2 billion to $3 billion valuation range. We earlier reported that Facebook received a term sheet for an investment at a $2 billion valuation, but the New York Post claims no term sheets have been drawn up to date.

The articles cites unnamed sources with knowledge of the situation, but that none of the companies involved will comment officially or so far failed to return requests for more information. As soon as day breaks in the U.S., we’ll do a bit of poking of our own.

From the mouth of ‘people familiar with the matter’, Facebook’s attempt to raise additional capital is supposedly causing some friction with its existing investors (which include Accel Partners, Greylock Partners, Meritech Capital Partners, Microsoft and Peter Thiel), who are said to be against diluting their shares and urging the company to start squeezing some real revenue out of its now more than 200 million registered users.

As Michael wrote earlier, Facebook may not have a lot of choice:

They’re burning as much as $20 million a month in cash and are dealing with ridiculous growth. They likely have less than two years runway left, and possibly significantly less if they continue to add new users by the tens of millions that are currently flocking there every month.

To be continued, no doubt.

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PostHeaderIcon ChaCha Co-Founder Brad Bostic Steps Down As President

This one slipped through the cracks, but apparently Brad Bostic, who co-founded mobile Q&A answer service ChaCha together with current CEO Scott Jones back in 2006, has stepped down as President of the company and will not be replaced.

In an interview with the Indianapolis Business Journal, Bostic stresses that he will stay involved with the company as an advisor and strategist, saying ChaCha has matured enough for him no longer to be needed for day-to-day operations.

“I’m doing some evangelism for the company at trade shows, at conferences. [To say I] ‘left’ is not the appropriate characterization,” Bostic said.

More interestingly, Bostic openly discussed the fact that ChaCha is struggling to become a profitable company in the current economic climate, despite the fact it fired 1/3 of its workforce and brought on salary cuts for the rest of the employees earlier this year.

ChaCha lets people ask questions from their mobile phones to have humans (so-called Guides, often part-timers working from home) attempt to correctly answer them by text message. ChaCha makes money by embedding advertisements in those answers, and advertisers pay only when users respond by clicking through to the text ad. In the past, we’ve questioned the scalability of its business model, and we’ve also made fun of some of the answers that have been sent to users by Guides.

We pegged the company’s total funding at $58 million, but Bostic in the interview says only $43 million was poured into the company, among others by Amazon founder and CEO Jeff Bezos. He also said the company is not yet cash-flow positive, but that there is a consistent growth in audience and revenue is starting to come in.

Let’s hope for ChaCha that Bostic’s evangelizing at conferences spurs more thereof.

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