Woopra /ˈwprə/ is a customer analytics service intended to assist organizations with developing marketing techniques.[1]

Woopra, Inc.
Company typeWeb Services
IndustryTechnology
Founded1 March 2008 Edit this on Wikidata
FounderElie Khoury, Jad Younan, John Pozadzides
Headquarters,
United States
Key people
Elie Khoury, CEO
Jad Younan, CTO
ProductsWoopra Web Analytics
Websitewoopra.com

History

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Woopra was initially conceived by Eli Khoury and Jad Younan while in college. The pair, from Lebanon, wanted to introduce real time web analytics, at a time when this technology didn't exist. After development of an initial platform they approached US-based entrepreneur, blogger and CMO of managed infrastructure company Layered Tech, John Pozadzides.[2] The three formed a partnership.

Pozadzides initially served as CEO[3] and set up the company's legal framework. Khoury focused on UI and front end development, and Younan focused on infrastructure and back end development. While the service was in stealth development mode, the 2007–2008 financial crisis occurred and Pozadzides provided the seed funding to keep the company going while also facilitating Khoury and Younan's immigration to the United States and raising additional funding from close contacts. Pozadzides' hosting company Layered Technologies also provided 100 VMs to help Woopra initially scale it's service. [4]

In March of 2008 Pozadzides launched Woopra at WordCamp Dallas [5] which kickstarted the growth of the service when the 200 bloggers in attendance were each given accounts and began a viral campaign that drove exponential growth.

The company was originally incorporated in Texas as iFusion Labs, LLC. but later moved to California with the relocation of Khoury and Younan to Silicon Valley in order to have access to a more targeted talent pool of developers.

Subsequently Pozadzides exited the company and Khoury assumed the CEO position. Woopra has since gone on to focus on enterprise clients.

Press

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In 2009, Daniel Brusilovski from TechCrunch called Woopra an "impressive live tracking and analytics service".[6] ReadWriteWeb named Woopra a top web product of 2010 and gave it an honorable mention in 2011. ReadWriteWeb's Founder, Richard MacManus, says Woopra is "without a doubt the most addictive business tool I use."[7] In 2012, eWeek listed Woopra as a "hot web analytics" company[8] and American Express OPEN Forum listed it as one of the "smartest web analytics tools".[9] Business 2 Community, in 2012, cites Woopra's real time analytics as a useful adjunct to Google Analytics.[10]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "Customer Journey & Product Analytics Software Tool". Woopra. 2018-05-23. Retrieved 2022-05-26.
  2. ^ https://onemansblog.com/about/
  3. ^ https://mashable.com/archive/ceo-founder-web-video
  4. ^ https://www.datacenterknowledge.com/networking/layered-tech-connections-help-woopra-scale
  5. ^ https://www.ecommercetimes.com/story/whooping-it-up-woopra-crashes-the-web-analytics-party-64731.html
  6. ^ Brusilovski, Daniel (2009-10-12). "Woopra Opens Its Doors For Live Web Analytics". TechCrunch. Archived from the original on 2009-10-15.
  7. ^ MacManus, Richard. "Richard MacManus' Top 10 Web Products of 2010". ReadWriteWeb. Retrieved 2012-02-25.
  8. ^ Preimesberger, Chris. "Enterprise Applications: 10 Hot Data, Web Analytics Companies That You Should Know".
  9. ^ Jantsch, John. "The 10 Smartest Web Analytics Tools".
  10. ^ Jones, Shane (June 19, 2012). "Woopra: A Great Alternative to Google Analytics". business2community.com. Retrieved June 27, 2012.
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