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Votizen
| Field | Value | |
|---|---|---|
| logo | ||
| name | Votizen | |
| type | ||
| foundation | 2009 | |
| defunct | 2013 | |
| key_people | David Binetti | |
| Jason Putorti | ||
| Matt Snider (co-founders) | ||
| industry | Software | |
| location | Mountain View, California | |
| products | Consumer Technology Company | |
| revenue | N/A | |
| num_employees | ||
| fate | Acquired by Causes, then Brigade Media | |
| homepage | http://votizen.com |
logo = | name = Votizen | type = | foundation = 2009| defunct = 2013 | key_people = David Binetti Jason Putorti Matt Snider (co-founders) | industry = Software| location = Mountain View, California| products = Consumer Technology Company| revenue = N/A| num_employees = | fate = Acquired by Causes, then Brigade Media | homepage = http://votizen.com
Votizen was a consumer technology company that developed an online network of voters in the United States. Based in Mountain View, California, the site allowed its members, which it called "Votizens", to learn about issues and elections, and take collective action with other committed voters through social media. Votizen verified that each voice belongs to a real voter in the real world. As of 2012, Votizen had mapped out over a million connections between voters on Votizen. It was acquired by activism platform Causes in 2013, which was then later acquired by Brigade Media in 2014.
History
Votizen was founded by David Binetti, Jason Putorti, and Matt Snider in March 2010. The catalyst for Votizen's growth sprung from the success of a Twitter campaign in 2010 in support of the Startup Visa, where thousands of people tweeted their support of the bill and Votizen delivered the messages to the appropriate people. In September 2010 Votizen announced it had raised $1.5 million in funding led by Peter Thiel and Sean Parker of Founders Fund with participating investors including 500 Startups, David Cowan, Keith Rabois, Ron Conway, Mark Goines, Founder Collective, Felicis Ventures, PivotNorth, Steve Blank, Eric Ries, Shervin Pishevar, and Tom Shields.
On September 14, 2011, Votizen conducted the first "virtual" precinct walk with San Franciscans for Jobs and Good Government, a committee supporting San Francisco mayoral candidate Ed Lee. Votizen was attempting to bring the door-to-door walking in support of candidates to the 21st century by allowing registered voters to express their support for Ed Lee and ask their friends to pledge to vote for Ed Lee. Votizen plans to have their virtual precinct walks boost voter participation and play a big role in the 2012 elections. Randi Zuckerberg, former marketing director at Facebook, spoke about Votizen's virtual precinct walk and believed "The virtual precinct walk has the potential to turn conventional campaigning on its head and inspire more people to vote."
On September 27, 2011, Votizen won every award in the Social Media Disruptathon at the Washington Post Building in Washington DC. Votizen won in the categories of best presentation, uniqueness, design, most disruptive potential, most liked, and best in show. Votizen competed against a field of nineteen other startups.
In February 2012, Votizen announced a $750,000 convertible funding round led by Sean Parker with celebrity investors including Ashton Kutcher, Guy Oseary, and Lady Gaga's manager Troy Carter investing as well. On March 12, 2012, at the South by Southwest Festival in Austin, TX; Al Gore and Votizen investor Sean Parker spoke about the internet's effect on politics and Votizen's potential role in politics with Gore saying "democracy has been hacked" by money and special interests, and tools such as Votizen can provide the fix.
On January 10, 2013, Votizen was acquired by Causes, an online civic engagement platform founded by Sean Parker.
Leveraging Social Media
Sean Parker, co-founder of Napster and Facebook's founding president, was an investor in Votizen and a director on the board of the company. Parker, talking during the 2011 Techonomy conference said, "Politics for me is the most obvious area [to be disrupted by the Web]". Parker, who said he's “not a huge believer in direct democracy,” was exploring ways to leverage social media to influence politics with investments such as Votizen. His prediction was that "taking money out of politics with campaigns is possible through social media." with services like Votizen.
References
References
- Shah, Semil. (20 February 2011). "The Next Mass Consumer Social Wave: Political Expression". TechCrunch.
- Sams, Henry. "Communicating With Elected Officials Simplified With Votizen". Tech Cocktail.
- (10 January 2013). "Causes Acquires Votizen To Democratize Democracy".
- (11 June 2014). "Sean Parker’s Brigade Media Acquires Causes In Its Quest To Revitalize American Democracy".
- Kincaid, Jason. (23 September 2010). "Votizen Raises $1.5 Million To Make Sure Government Representatives Hear Your Voice". TechCrunch.
- Quinn, Michelle. "New tool mines social networks' potential". Politico.
- Perez, Sarah. "Votizen Launches "Virtual Precinct Walk" For San Francisco Mayor Ed Lee's Election". TechCrunch.
- Moran, Marcia. "Clean Sweep for Votizen at Social Media Disruptathon". Modern DC Business.
- Gannes, Liz. "Votizen Gets a Celebrity Round of Funding to Connect Social Media and Politics". All Things D.
- Franzen, Carl. "Al Gore And Sean Parker Promote Voter Website 'Votizen' at SXSW". Talking Points Memo.
- Constine, Josh. (10 January 2013). "Causes Acquires Votizen To Democratize Democracy". TechCrunch.
- Simonite, Tom. "Five Interesting Things Sean Parker Said Yesterday". MIT.
- Burke, Adrienne. (November 19, 2011). "Sean Parker and Jim Breyer Predict the Industries Social Media Will Reinvent Next". Forbes.
This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.
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