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General Information

Websitefacebook.com
Blogblog.facebook.com
CategoryWeb
Employees700
Founded2/04

Offices

Palo Alto, USA
156 University Avenue
Palo Alto, CA, 94301
USA
Europe HQ
New York
551 Fifth Avenue
6th Floor
New York, NY, 10017
USA

People

Founder and CEO, Board Of Directors
Co-founder
VP of Product Marketing
CFO
COO
Senior Platform Manager
Director of Business Development
Chief Privacy Officer
VP of Technical Operations
Product Lead for Facebook Platform
Board Of Directors
VP of Communications and Public Policy
Board Of Directors
Observer to Board of Directors
Board of directors
Platform Program Manager
Director of Monetization
Product Marketing Manager
Director, Engineering
Head of Security
General Counsel
Vice President Business Development
Angel Investor
Product Designer
Board Of Directors

Acquisitions

Parakey, 7/07

Investments

LuckyCal 7/08

Funding

Total$516M
Angel, 9/04
Peter Thiel
$500k
Series A, 5/05
Accel Partners
$12.7M
Series B, 4/06
Greylock
Meritech Capital Partners
The Founders Fund
$27.5M
Series C, 1/08
European Founders Fund
$15M
Series C, 3/08
Li Ka-shing
$120M
Series C, 10/07
Microsoft
$240M
Debt, 5/08
TriplePoint Capital
$100M

Competitors

Service Providers

Tags

Facebook

On February 4th, 2004 Mark Zuckerberg launched The Facebook, a social network that was at the time exclusively for Harvard students. It was a huge hit: in 2 weeks, half of the student body at Harvard had signed up. Other schools in the Boston area began demanding a Facebook network. Zuckerberg immediately recruited his friends Dustin Moskowitz and Chris Hughes to help build Facebook, and within four months, Facebook added 30 more college networks.

The original idea for the term Facebook came from Zuckerberg’s high school (Phillips Exeter Academy). The Exeter Face Book was passed around to every student as a way for students to get to know their classmates for the following year. It was a physical paper book until Zuckerberg brought it to the internet.

With this success, Zuckerberg, Moskowitz and Hughes moved out to Palo Alto for the summer and rented a sublet. A few weeks later, Zuckerberg ran into the former cofounder of Napster, Sean Parker. Parker soon moved in to Zuckerberg’s apartment and they began working together. Parker provided the introduction to their first investor, Peter Thiel, cofounder of PayPal and managing partner of The Founders Fund. Thiel invested $500,000 into Facebook.

With millions more users, Friendster attempted to acquire the company for $10 million in mid 2004. Facebook turned down the offer and subsequently received $12.7 million in funding from Accel Partners, at a valuation of around $100 million. Facebook continued to grow, opening up to high school students in September 2005 and adding an immensely popular photo sharing feature the next month. The next spring, Facebook received $25 million in funding from Greylock Partners and Meritech Capital, as well as previous investors Accel Partners and Peter Thiel. The pre-money valuation for this deal was about $525 million. Facebook subsequently opened up to work networks, eventually amassing over 20,000 work networks. Finally in September 2006, Facebook opened to anyone with an email address.

In the summer of 2006, Yahoo attempted to acquire the company for $1 billion dollars. Reports actually indicated that Zuckerberg made a verbal agreement to sell Facebook to Yahoo. A few days later when Yahoo’s stock price took a dive, the offer was lowered to $800 million and Zuckerberg walked away from the deal. Yahoo later offered $1 billion again, this time Zuckerberg turned Yahoo down and earned instant notoriety as the “kid” who turned down a billion. This was not the first time Zuckerberg turned down an acquisition offer; Viacom had previously unsuccessfully attempted to acquire the company for $750 million in March, 2006.

One sour note for Facebook has been the controversy with social network ConnectU. The founders of ConnectU, former classmates of Mark Zuckerberg at Harvard, allege that Zuckerberg stole their original source code for Facebook. The ordeal has gone to court, and has now been resolved.

Notwithstanding this lingering controversy, Facebook’s growth in the fall of 2007 was staggering. Over 1 million new users signed up every week, 200,000 daily, totaling over 50 million active users. Facebook received 40 billion page views a month. Long gone were the days of Facebook as a social network for college students. 11% of users are over the age of 35, and the fastest growing demographic is users over 30. Facebook has also seen huge growth internationally; 15% of the user base is in Canada. Facebook users’ passion, or addiction, to the site is unparalleled: more than half use the product every single day and users spend an average of 19 minutes a day on Facebook. Facebook is 6th most trafficked site in the US and top photo sharing site with 4.1 billion photos uploaded.

Based on these types of numbers, Microsoft invested $240 million into Facebook for 1.6 percent of the company in October 2007. This meant a valuation of over $15 billion, making Facebook the 5th most valuable US Internet company, yet with only $150 million in annual revenue. Many explained Microsoft’s decision as being solely driven by the desire to outbid Google.

Facebook’s competitors include MySpace, Bebo, Friendster, LinkedIn, Tagged, Hi5, Piczo, and Open Social.

Facebook Traffic

Milestones

  • 10/15/08 — fbFund for Developers awards its grants.
  • 8/7/08 — Round 1 of the fbFund Developer Competition starts
  • 6/25/08 — Facebook adds comments to Mini-Feed

Videos

Above:

Robert Scoble’s video from www.podtech.net/scobleshow:

Added: 8/5/08
Above:

This video was originally published on Beet.TV

Added: 8/5/08

Products

Facebook Chat
Facebook Connect
Facebook News Feed
Facebook Platform
Facebook iPhone App

Traffic Analytics

Quantcast

Livegraph

Compete

Facebook

Comments

roy doe - October 4, 2008 at 4:31pm
Facebook creates new social dilemmas. Last thing the world needs.
charandeep - October 4, 2008 at 10:00am
I think the new facebook is actually better than the old one now that I've got use to it. I'm not sure about the boxes on the left column of your profile because you cant really see them but exept for that you've done a good job facebook...keep it up!
jemma - October 3, 2008 at 11:16am
i cant get used to the new facebook. its very confusing. i keep on trying but still no joy. wish we could have the old one back. it was much easier to use.
Colin Patterson - October 1, 2008 at 8:29am
I just wanted to add to the debate. The Old Facebook has its merits, just as the New Facebook does. At least with the Old facebook you could see everything in one place. Some people found this overwhelming.....I for one am in this demographic. The New Facebook has allowed me to tweak my experience on the site to suit my needs. As I am online every day for an extended period of time I want my user experience to be as suitable as possible. To all of you who are going on about 'how bad the New Facebook is and how good the Old Facebook was' I would ask you to take a moment to think about what you are saying. You have already accepted that the Old Facebook is finished by using the word WAS, which means that you are already in the position to move forward with the New Facebook. You are just not confident with it yet......however with time you will become more used to the look and feel of the program. Step back from the irrational outbursts and really look at what you are trying to achieve. Do you really think you are going to achieve anything through irrational tirades?
Sarah Louise Plant - September 25, 2008 at 11:02pm
The new facebook aint that bad guys. I hated it at first, we all hate change, and when its something we can do with our eyes closed, yes, it makes it even more infuriating, but its here now, and everyday Im getting more keyed up as to what is where, its getting easier to navigate my way round. I think it is a lot more professional than the old Facebook (never thought I would say that). You then have to think of all the new people who have signed up to Facebook after the switchover, they only know the new Facebook, so if the owners switch it back now, they are going to have backlash off people for that, so they are in a no win situation. I think we should stick with it.
Quentin Coleman - September 25, 2008 at 3:09pm
Did you know that Facebook limits the # of friends you can add per day? If you go over this undisclosed limits they threaten to delete your account! Meanwhile, they put a block on your account to add friends anywhere from 3 hr -3 days, thus punishing the ones that have the greatest desire to connect via their social utility! This is stupid! This is counter-intuitive to promoting a social network site! If Ronald Reagan were still alive today he would tell Mark Zuckerburg & the Facebook executives & investors (policy makers) to "tear down the wall of limitations, let free communication reign!" Facebook's rules/regulations & new facebook design is currently its greatest limitation to becoming the #1 trafficked internet sites in the world within the next 3 years. So, I hope Mark Zuckerburg & Sean Parker get it right and amiably make adjustments to appease the current as well as future potential members of Facebook.
colette brewer - September 25, 2008 at 2:16pm
so if this mark says he is going to change us all back to our old face book don't you think it is time he did it we are all sick and tried of waiting for him to change us back to our old face book why would he say something like that and not do it this new face book is crap so be a man and change us all back to our old face book you guys have UN TILL OCT 6 2008 SO DON'T PUT IT OFF ANY MORE
Brenda Kattler - September 18, 2008 at 4:16pm
Well I’m going to be the odd person out here. When I first joined Facebook I had no idea whatsoever where anything was or what I was doing. I’m sure everyone who joined Facebook went through the same experience. But, with the hunting, pecking and poking process I found my way around and fell in love with the program. When the new Facebook was launched I totally hated it. I tried it for a day and ended up going back to the old version. Out of fairness to Facebook I decided to give it another try but for a period longer than my original one day experience. Well once again I was back to the hunting, pecking and poking process trying to find where my things had been moved to. Now I have no problem in locating what I want at the snap of my fingers.
PHILIP GICHUHI GITHINJI - September 15, 2008 at 12:26am
Facebook is magical changing lives around Africa. In my city Nairobi it's the in thing am proud to be a facebook user keep up the good work. When branches open up in Africa give me a hollaaa.......Great work
anthony - July 26, 2008 at 2:27am
good for Zuckerberg for knowing his worth. What do you think about popular video clips and tv show sites like hulu with valuations of $1 billion pre-launch. They seem to be on the right track. my favorite premium video portals to watch for are: http://hulu.com, http://zoogatv.com and http://tidaltv.com
blitzinbluesky - July 23, 2008 at 10:51pm
well great work ... great idea ... but i am more interested in the name Peter Thiel ... the angel investor ...... a lot of credit goes to him for looking into the potential in Mark's idea and what a big Investment it would turn out to be ......
dennis - July 22, 2008 at 5:19am
this is simply amazing how fast this grew. 5th most valuable internet company in only 4 years, wow.

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Sources

  1. Citation Needed [add]
  2. fbFund (facebook.com) [edit]
  3. Citation Needed [add]
  4. Jim Breyer: Extra $500 Million Round For Facebook A “Total Fiction” (techcrunch.com) [edit]
  5. Facebook Funding (facebook.com) [edit]
  6. techcrunch.com [edit]
  7. paidcontent.org [edit]
  8. Liveblogging Press Conference (techcrunch.com) [edit]
  9. businessweek.com [edit]
  10. The fbFund Gives Out Cash To 25 Facebook Developers (techcrunch.com) [edit]
  11. Citation Needed [add]
  12. Facebook adds comments to the Mini-Feed. It’s like FriendFeed is looking in the mirror (venturebeat.com) [edit]
Edit This Page (Revision History)
Last Edited 12/25/08

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