Grouper was an online, invite-only social club that uses data gathered from Facebook profiles to organize group outings (called Groupers). Matches for the outings were gathered and analyzed first by a computer and then by a human to ensure strong matches.[1][2][3][4][5][6][7][8] The excursions were planned in venues throughout 25 cities for six people. Groupers consisted of two groups of three friends and can consist of three males and three females, six males, six females, or any other possible combination.[1][2][9][10][11]
Founded | 2011 |
---|---|
Founder | Michael Waxman, Tom Brown |
Defunct | October 1, 2016 |
Headquarters | |
Services | Offline social club |
Number of employees | 25 |
Michael Waxman founded the New York-based startup in 2011.[12][13][4][14][15][16] The company was run by a staff of 25 people.[17] Time Inc. listed Grouper in its 10 NYC startups to watch for 2013.[8][4] Three years later, in October 2016, the company shut down.
How it works
editGrouper was an invite-only service that matched two individuals according to data found – with the permission of the user – on the user's Facebook profile, including age, career, education, etc.[14][5][1][12][18][19] The company determined a match between two individuals using both algorithms and its member experience team. A time was then set for the "Grouper".[12][18][19][20][21][22] The two parties were asked to each bring two friends.[3][1][4][23] No names, photos, or information were disclosed before the actual meet.[12][24][25] Upon arrival at the determined location, the group received a complimentary first round of drinks, including tax and tip, at a reserved table (the cost was included in Grouper's service fee).[18][14][26][10]
The company offered arrangements for both opposite- and same-sex Groupers.[27][28]
Communication with users
editGrouper featured real-time customer relationship management (CRM).[29] The service also granted users direct contact with the director of membership experience, who engaged users with personalized reminder texts and bits of advice for success on Groupers.[6]
The member experience team communicated with users throughout the Grouper. Users received a customized message from the member experience team on the morning after their grouper inquiring as to how the night out went. This feedback was analyzed and stored for future matching.[30]
Active cities and expansion
editFor more than a year after its initial launch, Grouper was only available in New York City.[12][15] By June 2012, the service had grown to San Francisco and Washington D.C.[12][5][31][20]
By September 2012, Grouper had expanded its services to 10 additional cities, Atlanta, Austin, Brooklyn, Boston, Chicago, Los Angeles, Seattle, Miami, Philadelphia, and Dallas.[24][32][33][34][21][35][36][25][37][28] By December 2012, Grouper became available to users in Toronto.[38]
By 2013, the company reported its services were officially available in 25 cities in the US and Toronto, including new additions Nashville, Denver, London, and others. [39][40][17][30]
Technological developments
editIn April 2013, the meet-up service released its Grouper iPhone app.[40][17] The company has reported that the app, which features push notifications and alerts, allowed users to set up a Grouper in as little as an hour, avoiding the long questionnaires other services require their users to fill out.[17][30]
Partnerships and acquisitions
editY Combinator, a company that funds startups, was the primary backing for Grouper.[41][42][27][4]
In October 2012, Grouper announced its Hackaton program.[42][43] The concept involved flying select designers and software developers to New York City for a week-long, expenses-paid trip.[43] The company invited the designers into their headquarters to work on new Grouper product development and brainstorm with the team.[42]
Grouper arranged the trip after establishing partnerships with Airbnb and Hipmunk.[43][4]
Grouper announced a partnership with Uber in January 2013.[27][4] The alliance was made to encourage users to utilize Uber for transportation on Grouper dates.[27][44]
References
edit- ^ a b c d Sam H. Sanders, Modern Dating Is A Group Sport For The Hashtag Generation, National Public Radio, retrieved November 4, 2013
- ^ a b Jenna Wortham (August 21, 2012), "The New High-Tech Dating Technology? Meet in a Bar", The New York Times, retrieved November 4, 2013
- ^ a b Lisa Butterworth, "Atypical dating sites", Time Out, retrieved November 4, 2013
- ^ a b c d e f g Jordan Crook, Grouper Talks Competition, Partnerships, And Why Group Dates Offer Built-In Credibility, TechCrunch, retrieved November 4, 2013
- ^ a b c Zavh Davis, Group Dating Site...errr...social Club, Grouper, Matches 3 Guys With 3 Girls Over Drinks, Tech.co, retrieved November 4, 2013
- ^ a b Rob Fishman, "Why Everyone Loves the Online-Dating Service Grouper's Challe", Slate, retrieved November 4, 2013
- ^ Alex Williams (January 11, 2013), "The End of Courtship?", The New York Times, retrieved November 4, 2013
- ^ a b Amy Lombard (April 25, 2013), "Time Inc.'s 10 NYC Startups to Watch for 2013", Time, retrieved November 4, 2013
- ^ Melissa Melms, "Blind Dating for a Modern Gal: Bring Your Friends!", Glamour, retrieved November 4, 2013
- ^ a b Group Dating: The Next Big Thing?, CNBC, retrieved November 4, 2013
- ^ New Dating Site Includes Your Group of Friends, New England Cable News, retrieved November 4, 2013
- ^ a b c d e f Hindman, Nate C. (June 13, 2012), "Michael Waxman, CEO Of Dating Startup Grouper, Found Love On His Own Site", Huffington Post, retrieved November 4, 2013
- ^ Liz Gannes, New Web Start-Ups Want to Help Your Offline Social Life, All Things Digital, retrieved November 4, 2013
- ^ a b c Startup Lowdown: Grouper, Sulodown.com, retrieved November 4, 2013
- ^ a b Online Dating Trend! Grouper Makes Group Dating Fun & Fashionable, Yahoo! Shine Blog, retrieved November 4, 2013
- ^ Lydia Dishman, "How Squarespace, Grouper, and East Coast Companies Worked Through Sandy", Fast Company, retrieved November 4, 2013
- ^ a b c d Matthew Lynley, "Group Dating Comes to Your Phone", Digits Tech News & Analysis, The Wall Street Journal, retrieved November 4, 2013
- ^ a b c Grouper Sexy-Comfortable Dates With Friends, DailyCandy, retrieved November 4, 2013
- ^ a b Matt Lynley, "New Startup Grouper Sounds Like One Of The Best Ways To Meet New People To Date", Business Insider, retrieved November 4, 2013
- ^ a b "Grouper: Not necessarily for the thirtysomething single", Examiner
- ^ a b Janelle Nanos, "Grouper: A Spin on Blind Dating", Boston, retrieved November 4, 2013
- ^ "Online club sets up group dates between friend", Today, retrieved November 4, 2013
- ^ "What's Courtship?", Huffington Post, retrieved November 4, 2013
- ^ a b Kathleen Miles (September 12, 2012), "Grouper Expands To 10 More Cities, Offering Meetups Without Dating Pressure", Huffington Post, retrieved November 4, 2013
- ^ a b Jonathan Rienstra, Wingmen required: Grouper sets up three-on-three blind dates at local bars – and it works, Dallas Culture Map, retrieved November 4, 2013
- ^ Date less awkwardly, Thrillist Media Group, retrieved November 4, 2013
- ^ a b c d Sarah Perez, Uber Partners With Grouper So Blind Date Goers Can Ride In Style, TechCrunch, retrieved November 4, 2013
- ^ a b Wendy Settle, Group dating service Grouper launches in Dallas, Pegasus News, archived from the original on September 24, 2012, retrieved November 4, 2013
- ^ Ximena, Grouper, The Evolution of Online Dating, ChicagoNow, retrieved November 4, 2013
- ^ a b c "Not Dating Dating Site Grouper", Westword, retrieved November 4, 2013
- ^ Grouper Online Dating Launches in SF, DailyCandy, retrieved November 4, 2013
- ^ Rip Empson, YC Alum Grouper Launches In 10 Cities To Bring You A Better Way To Meet New People, TechCrunch, retrieved November 4, 2013
- ^ Grouper hits Miami, In The Scene Miami, retrieved November 4, 2013
- ^ Grouper Expands, Safe Online Dating
- ^ Join a 3v3 pickup game, Thrillist Media Group, retrieved November 4, 2013
- ^ Meredith Hoffman, Group Matchmaker Brings Technological Prowess to Brooklyn, DNAinfo New York, archived from the original on June 10, 2013, retrieved November 4, 2013
- ^ Megan Rose Dickey, "New York's Next Big Startups", Business Insider, retrieved November 4, 2013
- ^ Sharon Jayson (December 2, 2012), "Dating sites – for all ages – focus on keeping it real", USA Today, retrieved November 4, 2013
- ^ Rip Empson, Now In 20 Cities, Grouper Brings On-Demand Group Dates To The iPhone, TechCrunch, retrieved November 4, 2013
- ^ a b Grouper releases an iPhone app, adds on-demand scheduling for its 3-on-3 blind dates, The Next Web, retrieved November 4, 2013
- ^ Eliza Kern, 20-somethings looking to date? Try getting off your phone and meeting IRL, Gigaom, retrieved November 4, 2013
- ^ a b c Rip Empson, Grouper Teams Up With Airbnb & Hipmunk To Offer Engineers & Designers A Free "Hackation" In New York, TechCrunch, retrieved November 4, 2013
- ^ a b c Grouper Teams Up With Airbnb & Hipmunk To Offer Engineers & Designers A Free ?Hackation? In New York, Neharunbegum2, retrieved November 4, 2013
- ^ Uber + Grouper = A Winning Combo, singleinatl, retrieved November 4, 2013