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Yik Yak Lays Off 60 Percent of Employees As Growth Collapses (theverge.com) 71

An anonymous reader quotes a report from The Verge: Yik Yak has laid off 60 percent of employees amid a downturn in the app's growth prospects, The Verge has learned. The three-year-old anonymous social network has raised $73.5 million from top-tier investors on the promise that its young, college-age network of users could one day build a company to rival Facebook. But the challenge of growing its community while moving gradually away from anonymity has so far proven to be more than the company could muster. Employees who were affected were informed of the layoffs Thursday morning, sources told The Verge. Yik Yak employed about 50 people, and now only about 20 remain, the company said. The community, marketing, design, and product teams were all deeply affected, one source said. Atlanta-based Yik Yak was founded in 2014 by Furman University students Tyler Droll and Brooks Buffington. The app updated the concept of dorm newsletters for the mobile era, letting anyone post comments about school, their campus, or life in general. The fact that comments were anonymous initially helped the app grow, as it encouraged more candid forms of sharing than students might otherwise post on Facebook or Instagram.
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Yik Yak Lays Off 60 Percent of Employees As Growth Collapses

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  • Last time I used Yik Yak, about a year ago, 3/4 of the posts were variations of either "I'm horny", "yo that blonde/brunette who works at [store] is hot", or "why is this place so slow"?

  • by networkBoy ( 774728 ) on Thursday December 08, 2016 @07:52PM (#53449751) Journal

    They Yakked up 3/5 of their staff.

    Of course this is the first I've heard of them. That they market to college kids is likely why. I dropped out of college in 1999 to go into tech.

    • Looking at the sample content on their website... you didn't miss much.

    • by Motherfucking Shit ( 636021 ) on Thursday December 08, 2016 @10:42PM (#53450341) Journal

      Yik Yak was all the rage for a few months because it was billed as an "anonymous" hyperlocal message board. As soon as the kids figured out that "anonymous" bomb/shooting threats over Yik Yak would still get them arrested, the user base went away. I don't understand how they managed to raise $73.5 million fucking dollars for this; apparently I need an introduction some of these venture capital people...

      • Hyperlocal? Does that mean something other than being a buzzword?

        • by Viol8 ( 599362 )

          Probably means mum and dad 20 foot away downstairs doing little jonnies dinner while he pretends to be a bad ass on this "anonymous" service.

        • by Anonymous Coward

          Hyperlocal? Does that mean something other than being a buzzword?

          For Yik Yak? Actually, yes.

          Something like Craigslist is local: there's different subpages for Atlanta vs. Detroit vs. Portland. But it's only local on the "major city" level: you're in a small town 50 miles outside of Denver? Congratulations, you're part of Denver, as far as Craigslist is concerned. The local pages are also not restricted to people in that location. If you're in Santa Fe, you can easily open up the Miami Craigslist and see who's giving away a free sofa.

          Yik Yak, on the other hand, takes thin

      • Actually from what I understand, they were doing pretty well until they decided to take away the anonymous aspect of their anonymous localized chat rooms. Apparently that was the draw, and when it disappeared, so did their user base.

      • In a sane world, their body would have been cold ages ago; but given how big the hype for "social/mobile" is, and the chatter about "zOMG did Facebook/Google/etc. 'miss mobile???" the VCs probably figured that it was a worthwhile bet just because it had a chance of scaring one of the incumbents enough to get bought out for stupid money(not entirely implausible, given things like instagram and tumblr somehow being 'worth' a billion dollars each).

        It's annoying; but a really stupid investment can be sensibl
      • I don't understand how they managed to raise $73.5 million fucking dollars for this

        Are you kidding? The app that did nothing but say "Yo" conned some VC morons into giving them a million bucks [techcrunch.com]: “We are fascinated by these uses of simple yes/no, on/off communications tools,” Betaworks co-founder John Borthwick wrote on the Betaworks blog. “As the notification layer becomes the primary interface of alert-based information on your phone — as the OS’s allow navigation and controls in those alerts — there will emerge a new class of applications that mediate

      • I don't understand how they managed to raise $73.5 million fucking dollars for this; apparently I need an introduction some of these venture capital people...

        It's impossible to predict who is and isn't going to make it so even losers still sometimes manage to get cash. It's just a wild guess by the VC people that maybe they'll make it. I very vaguely remember back in the internet boom of the 1990s that USA Today profiled a handful of start up companies over a long period. The only company I remember, and I don't remember their name at all, was some company that had this crazy idea of (if I remember correctly) doing something like representing websites by plan

    • by Dr. Evil ( 3501 )

      It distracted kids in schools and got used for bullying etc. It also got picked up by people who wanted to talk to kids in schools, which is not good either. Yik Yak blocked the app at schools in the U.S....

      https://techcrunch.com/2014/03/13/amid-vicious-bullying-threats-of-violence-anonymous-social-app-yik-yak-shuts-off-access-to-u-s-middle-high-school-students/ [techcrunch.com]

      "As for how the blocks will affect Yik Yak’s user growth, the company isn’t concerned, saying that the app is still doing

      • It's funny that the article talks about GPS-based "geo-fences" used to block use in schools. Kids just install a fake GPS app and keep going.
    • by Questy ( 209818 )
      I'm not the only one who'd never heard of them. *whew*
    • I put it on a phone to check it out and the biggest problem I noticed is that any attempt I made to post something would either have an enormous delay before posting or would never post at all. If you're going to offer a communications platform, it's stupid obvious that you have to have functional communications. Contrast with Whisper which generally posts everything within a minute (unless their inexplicable censorship filter decides to temp-ban you for ten minutes because you said something they don't lik
  • by Anonymous Coward

    ... and Halliburton, but mostly the blipverts.

    • ... and Halliburton, but mostly the blipverts.

      Yeah, after the first couple of students exploded - interest in the social network understandably waned.

      Edison Carter's expose probably didn't help either.

  • What is Tik Tak? (Score:3, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward on Thursday December 08, 2016 @08:04PM (#53449797)

    Ohh Sorry Yik Yak, I thought it was talking about a knock off breath mint candy....

    But seriously... I have no clue what the damn app is, even visiting the page... wtf is a 'herd' ?

    *Edit before posting*: So I realized the biggest issue with the damn site... it uses that "web 3.0" nonsense design philosophy where the top of the page is nothing but a picture, and so I had no clue wtf it was talking about... because the page IMHO purposely hides relevant information that ACTUALLY explains what it is...

    Apparently a (and I could be wrong) a super local social media app, that allows you to be a hipster knowing what is going on in the coffee shop 3 blocks down from you... "so you can know about it before it is 'cool' ".... or something...

    Edit 2: captcha is 'readable' ...catcha gods love irony today

    • Ohh Sorry Yik Yak, I thought it was talking about a knock off breath mint candy....

      But seriously... I have no clue what the damn app is, even visiting the page... wtf is a 'herd' ?

      Apparently the founders were fully aware that their only potential market would be actual sheeple...

  • Is that something like a blindfolded vision test?
  • by Z80a ( 971949 ) on Thursday December 08, 2016 @08:26PM (#53449891)

    That sounds a plan as a smart as youtube moving away from videos or sourceforge/github wanting to move away from "that open source thing".

    • by fuzzyfuzzyfungus ( 1223518 ) on Thursday December 08, 2016 @09:26PM (#53450105) Journal
      I suspect that their plan to move away from their core business is totally doomed; but I would also suspect that they came up with that plan because their core business was totally doomed(and they couldn't find some idiot to aquire them for silly amounts of money, maybe Yahoo was busy when the called...).

      The world is pretty full of message boards and chat apps; and the combination of proximity filtering and 'anonymity' produces a really, really, low-value environment. Because of the geographic boundaries, it's useless for any of the 'connecting with other enthusiasts of my weird and potentially embarassing hobby/fetish/etc' applications of anonymity, since you can only interact with people in a fairly small area around you; but since it purports to be anonymous(obviously, an application running on your phone with location data mandatory isn't anonymous at all from the perspective of the company operating the service) it mostly attracted the...high quality comments... that people wanted to make about each other; but weren't willing to say to your face.

      Shockingly, people's appetite for that appears to be limited; and the most enthusiastic users are the people most likely to drive the rest of the users away and generate enough unpleasant stories to spook potential advertisers.
      • by Z80a ( 971949 )

        I bet was the diaper fetishists.

      • by Nethead ( 1563 )

        Because of the geographic boundaries, it's useless for any of the 'connecting with other enthusiasts of my weird and potentially embarassing hobby/fetish/etc' applications of anonymity, since you can only interact with people in a fairly small area around you;..

        So that's why I never heard of it in the ham radio forums.

        Did they try to make an app out of FRS radios?

        • I think that it was more text based(and obviously included vastly more overhead, being a smartphone 'app' and all); but your summary is chillingly accurate. Take the awesome power of an internet connected general purpose computer and carefully emulate a moderately obscure, insecure, and kind of noisy short range communication medium. I can't imagine why it wasn't more popular.
  • by Snotnose ( 212196 ) on Thursday December 08, 2016 @08:38PM (#53449935)
    And I care because?......
    • And I care because?......

      You bring a strong point.

      In light of the point of this entire story, I just came here to say that.

      • How about trying John Doone's cliche? That "No man is an island, blah, blah, blah" horseshit
  • meh (Score:3, Informative)

    by Anonymous Coward on Thursday December 08, 2016 @09:35PM (#53450129)

    As a previously avid user (great shitposting app)

    meh.

    They gimped anonymity a while back anyway and people fled.

    They wanted more data to sell, basically.

  • What is wrong with the world that yet-another-chat-app gets $73M to burn across 50 people but real small businesses doing real work with real things can barely get approved for a credit card?
    • by rsilvergun ( 571051 ) on Thursday December 08, 2016 @09:56PM (#53450203)
      These companies have the potential to make billions with only a handful of employees. That's where the ruling class is putting all their chips. They're trying to find ways to make a ton of money without all those pesky employees getting in the way with their wages and benefits and pensions. When one out of a hundred of these companies takes off it pays for all the rest of the failures (which are tax write offs anyway)
  • by RightwingNutjob ( 1302813 ) on Thursday December 08, 2016 @09:45PM (#53450163)
    Are you serious? Yeah, those are totally legitimate names.
  • I tried YikYak and I still fire it up maybe once a week - to post content from the perspective of a bear, which is kind of fun. I raided some lady's bird feeder last week and told everyone all about it.

    But I live out in a semi-rural area. One of YikYak's problems is that it only has content if you're near other people that post content. I, myself, posting maybe once a week, am about 25% of the content in my area. The other 70% is people looking for marijuana or sex, with the remaining 5% of people talking a

    • by pnutjam ( 523990 )
      When you say "most of America" you mean landwise. Most of America, peoplewise, is actually in more urban areas.
  • A friend of mine used to work there until yesterday. He said they closed the place down, more like 95% layoffs. It's gone.

  • Is it just me or does the founders names sound like characters from a bad 80s frat movie? (Tyler Droll and Brooks Buffington)
  • Just went there after hearing about it for the first time. What a vapid, sad little world. Just post after post of people talking about being hungover, wanting sex or a burger, etc. Is this what our modern society is going to be? All anonymity and no humanity? No wonder everyone is depressed, being social animals with no social interaction outside of 140 characters.
  • " it encouraged more candid forms of sharing than students might otherwise post on Facebook or Instagram"

    That'll make the top-10 list of understatements of the year.

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