Catherine and David Cook
Founded in March 2005 by Catherine and David Cook, Myyearbook.com has taken the social networking world by storm. In just three years, it has risen to third place in the sector, behind Facebook and MySpace. It's a feat all the more remarkable when you consider its two creators are only 18 and 19 respectively.
Three years ago, Catherine and David were flicking through their school yearbook – the annual compendium of photos and memories that is a feature of most American high schools – when they came across a picture of a girl they both knew. "This looks nothing like her," said David. Catherine agreed. It was clear, as she puts it, that "the picture stank". Wouldn't it, they wondered, be much better to do the yearbook online, and let people post their own photos?
The Cooks' parents thought the idea was crazy, but Geoff was undeterred. He offered $250,000 to get the yearbook project off of the ground, finding a web server to host it and a programming team in Mumbai, India, to turn it into a website for less than $25,000. It came complete with photo-sharing features and a place for students to outline their extra-curricular activities. Then, says Catherine, "it was guerrilla marketing all the way".
In April 2005, the pair began their campaign to get attention by wearing T-shirts to school emblazoned with the slogan, "Are you the prettiest girl in your high school? How about the dumbest? Find out at Myyearbook.com". It's the kind of question that would have your average British student cringing with embarrassment. But not in Montgomery High School, New Jersey. Within a week, 200 classmates had signed up. Users were offered a free T-shirt for every five people they recruited – and within nine months 950,000 teenagers across America had flocked to the website.
This stoked up interest among companies such as Paramount Films, who began paying up to $500,000 to advertise on the website from July 2007. Suddenly Myyearbook.com was bringing in serious revenue. And David and Catherine haven't looked back since. This year, they're looking at $10m in advertising sales, having grown from three million users in November 2007 to ten million by July. But running a successful business while staying in full-time education hasn't always been an easy balancing act. "What ends up happening is that
I just don't do my schoolwork," says Catherine, now at Georgetown University in Washington. "I go to classes but I never do the reading, which means I just cram it all in before the tests." Given the millions she's now making, her classmates are unlikely to feel too sorry for her.
1 comments:
they are intelligent
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