Graphiq

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Graphiq, Inc.
Type Private
Headquarters Santa Barbara, California
Area served Worldwide
Founder(s) Kevin O'Connor
Scott Leonard
Brayton Johnson
Website www.graphiq.com
Alexa rank 2382[1]
Available in English
Launched May 2009
Current status Active

Graphiq (formerly FindTheBest) is an engine-styled website that collects, structures, and connects data.[2] Its intent is similar to Wolfram Alpha, because, like Wolfram Alpha, it is designed to provide users with direct information on a variety of subjects rather than going through a search engine. Graphiq.com allows users to look at and compare data on approximately 2,000 topics.[when?] The data from Graphiq is mined from a variety of sources and presents them to users in a visual table with filters and ratings.[3]

Graphiq is based in Santa Barbara, California and has raised approximately $17 million in total funding from venture funding companies by 2013.[3][4][5]

History

The company was founded in 2009 as FindTheBest by Kevin J. O'Connor, former CEO and co-founder of DoubleClick; Scott Leonard and Brayton Johnson.[6] The site was publicly launched in 2010 with nine comparison categories, including health, education, business, and sports.[7][8] The venture was funded with an initial investment of $750,000 each from the founders, followed by $2 million by Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers in December 2010.[8] FindTheBest.com has since expanded to over 700 comparisons in the nine categories.[7]

In 2011, Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers invested an additional $4 million into the company.[1] FindTheBest also added another $11 million in Series B funding from New World Ventures, Montgomery & Co., Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers, and others.[9] In May 2014, FindTheBest had reached 23 million visits per month and employed a team of approximately 110 people.[10]

The company has continually added new services. In 2011, it launched FindTheData.com. The AssistMe option was added in 2012. In January 2013, the company made its first international expansion and launched sites in Spain, South Korea, and New Zealand. In April 2013, the company launched sites in Germany and the United Kingdom.[10] It Homes real estate service FindTheHome launched in 2014.

Product

The company's primary service is Graphiq.com, which lets users research products and services on a desktop or mobile device.[8][11] There are over 700[when?] specific products and services such as cars, colleges, investment advisors, smartphones, computers. Users can filter their options and view Smart Ratings to assist in narrowing down their product selection. They are also able to add or edit product and service listings. Each edit is reviewed by Graphiq’s team before it goes live.[12]

FindTheData.com is a solution for browseing large datasets on subjects like city crime and job salaries. Much of the information from FindTheData is integrated into Graphiq comparisons. For example, the Graphiq colleges comparison contains information on campus safety, faculty salaries, and athletic budgets, each of which is drawn from FindTheData.[13]

The AssistMe feature asks users a few simple questions, prompting them to prioritize the importance of various attributes of a product. The user then receives five recommended products with “Personal Smart Ratings.”[14]

FindTheCompany.com provides visitors with access to information on over 30 million[when?] private and public US companies.[9] Users can search by industry, filter by total employees, search for specific addresses, check annual sales volumes, review company balance sheets, and investigate personal contact information for employees.[2]

FindTheHome is the company's website for provideing real estate comparisons.[15] Unlike competing real estate sites such as Trulia and Zillow, Homes is not affiliated with any real estate agents, so Homes users will have to locate and contact a real estate on their own.[16]

Business model

Kevin O'Connor launched the service in response to poor search results he sometimes received from Google searches. The site attempts to bridge the gap between search engines like Google and review-type services like Yelp. O'Connor describes it as a "research engine", being many services combined into one, but Pando Daily's James Robinson considers it of limited use, since in practice, it often makes the final goal more difficult than using its competitors.[16] For example, while the website can provide travel recommendations, unlike most travel websites, it forces users to third-party sites to actually book the trip. Despite O'Connor's goal of having Graphiq be the first place internet users go for advice, more than half of its traffic comes from Google. Robinson argues that the company will never change users' lives, and considers it a website that will remain overlooked, and is likely doomed.[16]

See also

References

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External links