Dribbble Explained

Dribbble
Commercial:Yes
Headquarters:Walnut Creek, California, U.S.
Language:English
Num Users:16,000,000+
Owner:Dribbble Holdings Ltd. (direct owner: Tiny)
Revenue:$16,000,000 (2022)
Current Status:Active
Employees:339 (2022)

Dribbble is a self-promotion and social networking platform for digital designers.[1] It serves as a design portfolio platform, jobs and recruiting site, and a platform for designers to share their work online.

While Dribbble is a geographically distributed company with all employees being remote workers, its headquarters is located at Walnut Creek, California.[2]

History

In 2009, Dan Cederholm and Rich Thornett beta-launched Dribbble as an invite-only site where designers shared what they were working on: β€œThe name Dribbble came about from the dual metaphors of bouncing ideas and leaking your work.”[3] The first "Shot" (a small screenshot of a designer's work in progress) was posted by the user "Cederholm" on July 9, 2009. In March 2010, Dribbble was made publicly available with new members requiring invitations.

Over the years, features were added such as API integration, Attachments, Player Stats, and Pro (an elevated, paid profile). It launched the following:

In January 2017, Dribbble was acquired by Tiny (holding company),[5] a family of internet startup companies, and Zack Onisko[6] was appointed CEO.[7] 2017 saw its first in-person designer conference: Hang Time, since hosted in Boston (2017), Seattle (2018), Los Angeles (2018), and New York.

In April 2017, Dribbble acquired the freelancer platform Crew.[8]

In 2018, the site added a video feature. The site also continued to expand its reach with 144 meet-ups in 43 countries, with more than 8,000 designers in attendance.[9] As of 2024, the firm's remote team is composed of 29 employees. The site is used in 195 countries worldwide and the website is visited by more than 4 million people each month. (2017)[10]

Awards

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Fresh from Dribbble . Renee . Fleck . Dribbble . May 28, 2019.
  2. Web site: Working at Dribbble . Dribbble.
  3. Web site: How Dribbble Became Such an Influential Platform for Designers. Summers. Nick. 2013-08-03. The Next Web. en-us. 2019-08-08.
  4. Web site: Dribbble launches Job listings as a part of its Backboard - TNW Design & Dev. Panzarino. Matthew. 2011-09-15. The Next Web. en-us. 2019-08-08.
  5. Web site: Tiny. www.tinycapital.com. 2019-08-08.
  6. Web site: Zack Onisko Story β€” From Designer to Head of Growth to CEO. Salomon. Maxime. 2017-10-09. Medium. en. 2019-08-08.
  7. Web site: 2017 Year In Review Dribbble. dribbble.com. 2019-08-08.
  8. Web site: Crew sold to Dribbble as co-founders turn focus to Unsplash. 6 April 2017 .
  9. Web site: Dribbble 2018 Year in Review . Dribbble.
  10. Web site: Zack Onisko On Getting Dribbble 1M Visitors/Month with Zero Marketing. 2017-06-12. Business & Personal Growth Tips. en-US. 2019-08-08.
  11. Web site: Inc. 5000 Badge. Dribbble. en. 2019-08-08.
  12. Web site: Dribbble -- The Webby Awards. en-US. 2019-08-08.
  13. Web site: Dribbble's 2018 Year In Review designed by Dribbble. www.cssdesignawards.com. 2019-08-08.
  14. Web site: Dribbble. Inc.com. 2019-08-08.