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Venture capitalists would love to do business with Web entrepreneur Kevin Rose, who has yet to cash in on his first two ventures, the popular Digg news site and the Web video production house, Revision3. But since neither company is accepting any more venture funding, investors angling for a piece of Rose's stardust will have to settle for Pownce.
This third endeavor, which went live on June 26, is a hybrid site that seeks to combine social networking, instant messaging, and file sharing. Users assemble a list of buddies, then swap messages, invitations, photos, music, and other files with one another. Created by Rose merely to distract himself in his spare time—with heftier input from three associates—Pownce is a classic next-generation Internet company: built on the cheap, reliant on users for much of its content, and launched with a low profile. Yet investors are already clamoring for a share.
Eager Investors
"I probably would invest in Pownce if he's going out for funding," says high-tech angel investor Ron Conway, who's invested in Digg and Revision3. "I like to invest in great entrepreneurs, and he's a great entrepreneur." Conway cites the potential size of the social networking market and the "pedigree" of Rose's team as reasons to invest.
Another Silicon Valley investor says he plans to quiz Rose at an upcoming meeting on how Pownce will differ from Twitter, a cell-phone-oriented social network, and other services within the increasingly crowded field. But Rose's history of creating sites that draw "a lot of excited users" could trump those concerns, this investor says, on condition of anonymity. "Kevin has been a source of much joy the last couple of years," he says. "Whatever he decides to do, I'll pay attention."
Launched in 2004, Digg has become one of the Web's most popular sites—recently ranking 95th among the top 100 online destinations, according to audience measurement company Alexa.com—by letting users vote for their favorite online news stories about technology and other topics. The ad-supported site attracts about 20 million unique visitors a month, according to Jay Adelson, chairman and CEO of both Digg and Revision3.
Digg, Revision3: Fully Funded
Digg has raised $11.3 million from Greylock Partners, the Omidyar Network, and angel investors (see BusinessWeek.com, 8/14/06, "Valley Boys "). If Rose and his backers decide to sell Digg, the site could draw interest from major technology companies such as Microsoft (MSFT) and Google (GOOG) as well as from media concerns like Time Warner (TWX) or News Corp. (NWS).
Revision3—think Internet video with better production value—was launched last year and closed an $8 million financing round from Greylock and others on June 25, adding to $1 million in startup financing. Each month, users download 2 million episodes of the site's homemade shows. The most popular, Diggnation, draws 250,000 unique viewers a week to watch Rose and sidekick Alex Albrecht sit on a couch with beers and laptops, riffing on Digg's most popular stories. The company plans to quadruple its advertising sales staff of two in an effort to generate more revenue from its shows, says Adelson.
