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Inside Facebook


Facebook’s Year in Acquisitions: Ten and Counting

Posted: 28 Dec 2010 04:56 PM PST

Facebook stepped up acquisitions by tenfold this year, after its first two yielded talent that went on to create the company’s iPhone app and a much more elegant way for third-party developers to interact with the platform.

After turning free cash-flow positive in September of last year, Facebook used its extra spending power to buy 10 companies. They were mostly talent acquisitions — or purchases for engineering talent instead of product or technology — although Facebook did acquire intellectual property in some cases. (If you want to understand how Facebook’s M&A works, Vaughn Smith, the company’s head of corporate development, explained it in this interview from last month.)

Smith told us the company would do “doublish” the number of acquisitions next year, while Mike Brown, who is on his team, said Facebook would do about 15 deals in 2011.

With this year’s batch, a couple trends stood out to us:

East Coast talent: Two of the companies Facebook bought during the last six months hail from New York City. Sam Lessin, a longtime friend of Mark Zuckerberg, left behind his work building private-sharing tools at Drop.io to head to the West Coast. Justin Shaffer, who spent a year building location-based app Hot Potato, also left the East Coast to lead Groups and then Places.

Not all talent acquisitions are created equal: Some of the acquisitions were essentially hires of single founders, product managers or engineers that weren’t seeing widespread traction for their startups. Others were decorated veterans that would have been sought after by multiple companies; the team from Chai Labs helped build and scale Google’s AdSense, for example. The original FriendFeed team had the co-creator of Google Maps and current Facebook CTO Bret Taylor. Pricing for these deals varies considerably and Smith told us that terms are based on how much Facebook thinks the team can impact the company. Nor did Facebook win every acquisition; they lost at least one to Google, which made an offer an order of magnitude higher.

So where are they now?

Octazen Solutions (February): Facebook bought this tiny team in Malaysia known for their expertise in contact importing. Even it sounds boring, contact importing has actually played a very important part in Facebook's growth over the last five years. Contact importers are software tools that allow you to provide login credentials for an email service like Gmail or Hotmail, so you can automatically import names and email addresses of people you've communicated with in the past. Populating Facebook with enough friends so that a new user’s “Day One” experience is smooth is critical to ensuring they stay active on the site.
Where are they now? Octazen’s CEO Kenneth Foo is still working on growth and the team they’ve built still seems to be working mostly from Malaysia. The company introduced an addictive “Find Friends Browser” last month that has infinite scrolling and lets you look for friends based on location, workplace or education history.

Divvyshot (April): The Y Combinator-backed company was focused on making group photo sharing easier. But it only had around 40,000 users, so the acquisition was an opportunity for the team to play with and manage the world’s largest photo-sharing product.
Where are they now? Sam Odio is the product manager for Facebook photos and has helped push out face detection, high resolution photos and a better photo viewer with fellow Divvyshot engineer Paul Carduner and other Facebook talent.

Sharegrove (May): This was essentially a one-man hire of Adam Wolff, who co-founded this seed-funded startup for private conversations.
Where are they now? Wolff is now a software engineer at Facebook.

Nextstop (July): Facebook brought on two seasoned former Google product managers with this purchase. Nextstop was a travel recommendations startup led by Carl Sjogreen, who was the founding product manager for Google Calendar, and Adrian Graham, who oversaw Picasa.
Where are they now? Carl Sjogreen has helped fill Facebook chief technology officer Bret Taylor’s shoes by leading the platform product team. Graham has been working on News Feed and Questions.

Chai Labs (August): Facebook never formally confirmed this acquisition, but it’s certainly the most intriguing one of this year. Gokul Rajaram, considered a “godfather” for Google AdSense, is now a product director for ads at Facebook. He is said to be joining another Google veteran, Rohit Dhawan, who co-led the DoubleClick acquisition and integration and oversaw the search giant’s display advertising network, on the team.
Where are they now? As product director for advertising, Rajaram still leads a technical team that is still relatively small right now and is dealing with an overwhelming amount of in-bound interest. But stay tuned.

Hot Potato (August): Facebook picked up Justin Shaffer from this location-based service, which helped people share moments around events and places. Shaffer had close ties to longtime Facebook employees David Morin and Aaron Sittig, who were beta testers for Hot Potato.
Where are they now? Justin Shaffer took the lead on building and launching Groups this fall, and then shifted to run Places.

Drop.io (October): Sam Lessin, a longtime friend of Zuckerberg from their Harvard days, built a private sharing product Drop.io and raised just under $5 million from investors including RRE Ventures and DFJ Gotham Ventures.
Where are they now? Sam Lessin is out on the West Coast. It’s not clear which team he’s joined yet.

Zenbe (partial acquisition, November): Facebook picked up three employees from this for its newly-launched Messages product. Zenbe had been working on a next-generation communication platform called Shareflow, which was a collaborative sharing service for small teams.
Where are they now? On the Messages team, where they have joined FriendFeed alum Dan Hsiao, who is product manager.

Walletin (November): Former Linden Labs chief technology officer Cory Ondrejka and Bruce Rogers sold their stealth startup and its associated technology to Facebook.
Where are they now? It’s too early to tell. The pair only came on-board at the end of November.

Mystery acquisition(s): At the time we interviewed Smith last month, there was at least one more unannounced acquisition.

Did you miss some of these events when they happened? We present detailed monthly coverage of acquisitions, funding events, and hires and moves affecting the Facebook ecosystem at Inside Facebook Gold, our data and research tracking Facebook’s growth in markets around the world. Learn more about this service at Inside Facebook Gold.

Now Showing: Activity Story for Friendship After Users Attend the Same Event

Posted: 28 Dec 2010 10:24 AM PST

Facebook is testing a new type of activity feed story which describes how two users became friends after attending the same Event. Automatically posted to the Recent Activity section of both users’ walls, the story says “[User X] and [User Y] are now friends after both attending [Event].” The story subtly encourages users to attend Events by implying these gatherings help them make friends.

The “friends after Event” activity stories follow a number of other changes to the activity feed this year. Facebook added Like this Page or Open Graph object and Unlike buttons to feed stories about Likes, and activity stories about comments began showing snippets of the comments themselves.

Facebook implemented a purely aesthetic redesign of Event pages in July, but otherwise hasn’t improved its Events in-house app in a long time. In fact, Facebook reduced discoverability of Events during the recent user profile redesign by removing the Events tab which listed RSVPs. Event discovery or deeper integration between Events and Places check-ins could be in store for the coming year in a similar way to how Page discovery and Places/Pages integration was a focus in 2010. The new activity story will help users become aware of Events, albeit ones which have already taken place.

Friends after Event stories appear instead of the standard friendship activity story when two users who RSVP’d positively to the same Event become friends shortly after the Event. Its currently unclear how long the window of time following the Event lasts. Friends can Like or comment on the story, allowing them to endorse the new friendship . When users see this type of story, they internalize the tie between attending gatherings of people and forging new relationships, inspiring them to go to more Events in search of these connections.

The increase in attendance to real-world happenings is one of Facebook’s great gifts to society. Therefore, an activity story extolling the direct benefits of getting out of one’s home and meeting other people at an Event organized on Facebook reminds users how the site has changed their lives for the better.