TechCrunch
Voxer Transforms Into A Walkie-Talkie Service For The Business World
Voxer is making its entrance into the business world with a set of new high-end features for its walkie-talkie style, push-to-talk service.
Voxer Pro and Voxer Pro For Business run on Android and iOS devices just as with the standard service. If unfamiliar, the Voxer service is an app for sending voice and text messages. Download the app, import your contacts and then start sending messages. It’s somewhat ideal for this asynchronous world. The messages can be sent without having to make a call in order to talk on the phone. That may seem impersonal but it is a bit like keeping a correspondence with someone.
The standard app is free. Voxer Pro is $2.99 per month or $29.99 per year. New features include an interrupt mode and, the one I love, extreme notifications, which come in as loud repetitive alerts. Voxer Pro Business costs $4.95 per month per user until October 1 when the price will increase to $9.95 per month per user.
Voxer Pro Business also has what the company calls Voxer Pro Manager, a desktop business communications system that provides administration control and visibility into the company’s network with a real-time map with geo-tagged location to help manage employees.
The Voxer service has amassed millions of users since its launch in 2011. It always seemed to me a bit simple and I wondered how much it would last. But how wrong I was. Apparently it has been the intent all along to offer Voxer as a business service. And what a smart move it is proving to be. In combing through all of its data, Voxer has found thousands of people who are using Voxer for their work. As Liz Gannes wrote today, about 21,000 Mary Kay Cosmetics sales people use the service. That shows how deeply voice messaging can spread into society.
It reminds me of my interview yesterday with Carlin Wiegman, the co-founder of Biba, a conferencing and messaging service. Wiegman sold his company, CubeTree, to SuccessFactors in 2010. He explained that the enterprise social networking technology developed by CubeTree, Yammer and the others in the market did very well but they all capped at tens of millions of users. He attributed that to the lack of adoption outside of the young worker set accustomed to using activity streams to message each other. But voice and text messaging has a much deeper market reach. Texting reaches hundreds of millions of people. Messaging systems have that same potential.
Just look at Voxer. In a few years it has amassed tens of millions of users. Social networking services inside the business world have taken years to reach anything near that kind of user base.
And so Voxer surfaces an interesting possibility. Is messaging the killer social enterprise app? If so, then you can expect a swarm of competitors attack this space.
But the big target for Voxer is Nextel, which has amassed a fortune with its walkie-talkie-style service. Nextel represents the old-school heavyweight enterprise systems that integrate proprietary devices for communications. Voxer is replacing the hardware with software, available across any device.
Then there are the Microsoft Lyncs and Skypes of the world, along with Cisco and the tens of thousands of apps from the Twilio ecosystem. There are even the likes of services such as Twello, the Twitter-based voice messaging platform.
It’s a crowded field but Voxer looks like it’s off to a smart start, using messaging for those everyday uses of the modern workday.
Intel Spinoff GainSpan Closes On $19M In Series D Funding For Its WiFi Chip Technology
GainSpan, the semiconductor company that deals in ultra low-power Wi-Fi technology, will announced tomorrow that it has closed on $19 million in a new funding round.
The round, which first started gathering steam in 2012 and appears to have finalized at about $1 million less than the company had initially sought, serves as GainSpan’s Series D and brings its total investment to around $75 million. This investment included the participation of two new investors — Zebra Technologies Corporation and Oplink Communications — and a slate of previous investors including Opus Capital, Intel Capital, New Venture Partners, Sigma Partners, Camp Ventures and Hatteras Funds. GainSpan’s last funding round was an $18 million Series C that closed in December 2011.
I’m told that this new round comes as GainSpan’s growth continues as a nice clip. The company, which has around 90 full-time staff, has been more than doubling revenues and its customer base year-over-year, a spokesperson said today. GainSpan was founded as a standalone company in 2006 when it spun out of semiconductor superpower Intel.
GainSpan’s products are situated at the intersection of several hot areas in the larger tech industry. GainSpan makes ultra-low power embedded wireless chips and related software that enable various devices and objects to be connected to the Internet. This all is part of the much-buzzed-about “Internet of Things” era where nearly every physical object, from smartphones to kitchen gadgets to implanted medical devices, has some kind of web connectivity and a discrete identity in the virtual world.
In a quote provided by GainSpan, CEO Greg Winner said the new cash will be used for general growth purposes — hiring and product development:
“This funding will be used to help [our] products proliferate into a broad range of end products and to expand our sales, marketing and technical resources as we grow our customer base.”
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