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posted by n1 on Wednesday October 07 2015, @06:50PM   Printer-friendly
from the a-billion-dollars-to-whoever-reinvents-the-wheel dept.

Evernote, makers of the note-taking web app of the same name, is going through a rough patch. As the company's pre-IPO valuation hit $1 billion in 2012, Phil Libin, its CEO, became accustomed to giving interviews dispensing advice on how to create a cool company with a freemium business model and a great corporate culture.

Then came some serious problems, as recounted in a story in BusinessInsider. Recent releases of Evernote's flagship product have been buggy, with new features that were apparently shipped before they were ready. "Complementary" products and services acquired by the company haven't panned out, and critics have suggested that management took its eye off the core business. Meanwhile, revenue from the company's freemium business model hasn't been keeping pace with its growing costs; although some 150 million people use Evernote today, product revenues (as of last year) were estimated by TechCrunch to be just $36 million. This year has brought layoffs, office closings, elimination of some audacious employee perks, and cancellation of the company's developer confererence. Libin resigned as CEO in July, replaced by ex-Googler Chris O'Neill.

So is freemium still a viable business model for a Silicon Valley "unicorn" ($1 billion-plus valuation) pushing a SaaS (as opposed to, let's say, a relational database, or programming language compiler plus IDE)? Or are too many of its target users just too cheap to make it viable?


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  • (Score: 4, Interesting) by Bodger on Wednesday October 07 2015, @11:48PM

    by Bodger (5390) on Wednesday October 07 2015, @11:48PM (#246662)

    Recently my startup needed a way to organize and keep company documents and allow remote access because we are all in different cities.

    The brochure said we could do that. I spent weeks trying to figure out how to do it. I am a programmer and I followed what various online sources said to do and it did not do it or allow for it. I should have been able to figure it out, but could not.

    In the meantime one of us created a shared folder in Google Drive and we were able to do it in minutes and have been using since.

    Evernote failed.

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