ClubPenguin: That’s a lot of herring

by Mathew on May 17, 2007 · Comments

snipshot_e4ufvcdnb3u.jpgI didn’t get a chance to write about this yesterday when it broke, but I think it’s pretty amazing (if true) that ClubPenguin is talking with Sony about getting acquired for somewhere in the neighbourhood of $500-million or so (TechCrunch says $500-million, but PaidContent says that the price is closer to $450-million). Om Malik has some details here. Either way, those are pretty amazing sums of money for a company that has only really been around for a year or so. As my Globe and Mail colleague Barrie McKenna wrote in a story last fall, the company was started by a couple of guys in the relatively sleepy (at least when I was there last) resort town of Kelowna, B.C.

Parents with kids, the founders deliberately chose not to include advertising on the site, and in fact haven’t advertised the site either — growth has been entirely through word-of-mouth. Judging by the speed with which it spread through my family, from eight-year-old daughter to friends and cousins, it is the childhood equivalent of Facebook (as is its cousin Webkinz, also a Canadian success story aimed at kids, which Om says Disney has looked at).

Two big questions remain: Can ClubPenguin keep growing at a rate fast enough that it makes $500-million look like a good deal? And can the company find a partner that has the same philosophy about marketing to kids?

Share:
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • E-mail this story to a friend!
  • Ma.gnolia
  • NewsVine
  • SphereIt
  • StumbleUpon
  • What i find most interesting in the whole process is the lack of VC cash. By reading the stories it seems its been self financed (maybe a rich uncle?). Outsourced the tech backend. Also i wonder how long they had the site running before they started to charge the membership fee? If everything falls into place it'll be interesting to discuss when someone starts moaning about the fact that they have to move to Cali to get their idea appreciated/funded/running. If Kelowna can do it, cmon.
blog comments powered by Disqus

Older post: Can Amazon take a bite out of Apple?

Newer post: Applegate: Much ado about nothing