TickPick
was founded back in 2011, but it never raised any institutional funding
— until now, with the announcement of a $40 million investment from PWP
Growth Equity.
Brett Goldberg and Chris O’Brien (who were college roommates before founding TickPick
together and serving as co-CEOs) said they created the site as a
marketplace where users could bid for tickets. However, O’Brien admitted
that this functionality — while still supported — has “fallen by the
wayside quite a bit,” and that the core of TickPick’s identity is now
the elimination of all hidden fees.
To be clear, the service still
makes its money from fees, but those fees are all incorporated into the
price you see up front, rather than appearing as an unpleasant surprise
right before you make your purchase.
Goldberg said that while
other ticket marketplaces have tried to do something similar, they
inevitably go back to the old model, largely because they’re trying to
compete on price and “everyone’s assuming there will be fees tacked on
at the end.” In his view, TickPick has been able to hold out because
“it’s just so core to our brand and messaging” — and when the company
has strayed from that vision (like when it included a $5 e-delivery
fee), customers were quick to complain.
TickPick started out as a
secondary marketplace for ticket resellers, but it’s started to sell
tickets directly from partners like Firefly Music Festival and Riot
Fest, the Big South and Western Athletic Conferences, Florida
International, Georgia State and Santa Clara Universities, Ric Flair,
Sports Illustrated Saturday Night Lights, Shaq’s Fun House and the Maxim
Pregame Experience.
The company says it’s on-track to facilitate $200 million worth of transactions in 2019, up 60% year-over-year.
Asked
why TickPick didn’t raise outside funding before this, Goldberg said it
didn’t have the traction to win over investors, unless the team was
willing to “sell a large stake in the business for not that much money.”
O’Brien
added, “We always seem to find ourselves in a weird position in the
broader ecosystem of startups, because of our focus on profitability —
it’s not the same story as a lot of other startups.”
Now, however,
Goldberg suggested that “the bootstrap model” might finally be holding
the company back from reaching the next level. The pair plans to use the
new funding to make some key hires like a chief financial officer and a
chief marketing officer, and to build a data team that can help
TickPick use artificial intelligence and machine learning to improve the
customer experience.
“We seek to partner with passionate and
committed management teams with differentiated business models looking
to further unlock their growth potential – and we found that in
abundance in TickPick,” said PWP Managing Partner John McKee in a
statement. “Since its founding, TickPick has been disrupting the
secondary event ticketing industry with its unique value proposition and
established an incredibly loyal, passionate customer base.”
Source. TechCrunch, Anthony Ha, August 6, 2019
Source. TechCrunch, Anthony Ha, August 6, 2019
***
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