Jellyfish.com explained

Jellyfish.com
Industry:Comparison shopping website, reverse auction
Foundation:, Middleton, Wisconsin, United States
Founder:Brian Wiegand and Mark McGuire
Hq Location City:Middleton, Wisconsin
Hq Location Country:United States

Jellyfish.com was a reverse auction online shopping website. The Middleton, Wisconsin-based company was acquired by Microsoft in 2007. On May 22, 2008, Microsoft officially announced the cash back service as part of their Live Search group of tools. The site was shut down at midnight, February 16, 2009.

History

Jellyfish launched the first beta version of service in June 2006, after receiving an initial seed round of investment from its founders, Brian Wiegand and Mark McGuire, and Kegonsa Capital Partners.[1]

In a press release, Kegonsa Capital Partners said that it acquired 25 percent of Jellyfish.com's stock for about $600,000 in February 2006, and made 15 times its seed investment with the deal.[2]

In October 2006, Jellyfish raised an additional 5 million dollars in funding. According to their founders, Jellyfish has 1,000 retailers advertising more than 5 million products, from shoes to electronics to home appliances. It was expected to have 20 employees by the end of October 2006, at the Old Sauk Trails business park, on the Far West Side.

Kegonsa, a Fitchburg, Wisconsin group with 42 Wisconsin investors, led the second round of investment in October 2006,[3] with more than $1 million in October 2006 through the Kegonsa Co-Invest fund, for a total of $5 million.[4] [5] The second round investors more than doubled their investment in less than a year.

In an interview in July 2007, Wiegand said Jellyfish had sold nearly $5 million worth of products, "everything from bicycles to shoes".

McGuire explained that the name Jellyfish was chosen because they wanted to be completely transparent.[6]

Microsoft purchase

In 2007, Microsoft purchased Jellyfish.[7] [8] for an estimated price of $50 million (~$ in). The Jellyfish engine can be used as a part of Microsoft Live Search.[9] When bought by Microsoft, it had 26 employees.

Live Search Cashback

See main article: Live Search Cashback. Live Search Cashback allow users to search for products from multiple vendors and find their prices. It offers money back for purchases made through the site. This service started in June 2006 [10] as part of Jellyfish.com and is integrated with Live Search in May 2008. Users now require to use Windows Live ID to sign into their Cashback accounts instead of the previous Jellyfish.com account. Microsoft plans on using this to catch up to Google in the search market.[11]

See also

Notes and References

  1. http://www.madison.com/archives/read.php?ref=/tct/2006/10/30/0610300162.phpz Wisconsin State Journal, "Jellyfish.com Raises $5 Million In Funding"
  2. http://www.madison.com/archives/read.php?ref=/tct/2007/10/02/0710020399.php Wisconsin State Journal: "Jellyfish goes big time"
  3. http://www.madison.com/archives/read.php?ref=/wsj/2007/10/02/0710020280.php Wisconsin State Journal, "Microsoft Buys Online Shopper Jellyfish.com"
  4. http://www.americanventuremagazine.com/news.php?newsid=1859 American Ventures, "Jellyfish.com Secures $5 Million in Funding"
  5. http://austin.bizjournals.com/milwaukee/stories/2006/10/23/daily44.html Milwaukee Business Journal: "Madison Internet firm secures $5M in funding"
  6. http://www.siliconvalleywatcher.com/mt/archives/2006/08/jellyfish_pione.php SiliconValleyWatcher: "Jellyfish pioneers a new type of online business model"
  7. http://livesearch.spaces.live.com/blog/cns!8560B877FE8E9138!1372.entry Official blog of Live Search team, "Microsoft acquires Jellyfish.com"
  8. http://blogs.zdnet.com/microsoft/?p=772 "Microsoft buys Jellyfish comparison-shopping search engine"
  9. http://blogs.msdn.com/livesearch/archive/2007/10/01/microsoft-acquires-jellyfish-com.aspx "Microsoft acquires Jellyfish.com"
  10. https://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/06/28/AR2007062802053.html Washington Post, "BuzzWorthy: At This Auction Site, Prices (on Chickens, iPods, Etc.) Are Going, Going Down"
  11. http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/technology/7413099.stm BBC News, "Microsoft adds cashback search"