Curtains down for Koo; founders say little yellow bird bids final goodbye
In a post on LinkedIn, co-founders Aprameya Radhakrishna and Mayank Bidawatka announced that the platform will be discontinuing its services to the public
PTI
NEW DELHI, 3 JULY
Social media platform Koo, which
had pitched itself as a rival and viable alternate to Twitter (now X), is
shutting down with co-founders on Wednesday penning a heartfelt note about
tough decisions and little yellow bird bidding "final goodbye". In a
post on LinkedIn, co-founders Aprameya Radhakrishna and Mayank Bidawatka
announced that the platform will be discontinuing its services to the public,
as talks for a partnership with multiple larger internet companies,
conglomerates and media houses did not yield the desired outcomes.
"We explored partnership with
multiple larger internet companies, conglomerates and media houses but these
talks didn't yield the outcome we wanted," the note said. The duo said
that although they would have liked to keep the app running, "the cost of
technology services to keep social media app running is high and we've had to
take this tough decision".
Koo at its peak grossed about 2.1
million daily active users, about 10 million monthly active users, and over
9,000 VIPs that included some of the most prominent personalities from various
fields. "We were just months away from beating Twitter in India in 2022
and could have doubled down on that short term goal with capital behind
us," they said.
A funding winter, however hit the
company at its peak, hurting plans and forcing the platform to "tone
down" its growth trajectory. "Unfortunately for us, the mood of the
market and the funding winter got better of us," the note mentioned as the
founders signed off saying, "the little yellow bird says its final
goodbye" in a reference to Koo's yellow bird logo.
It may be recalled that Koo's
popularity in India peaked around 2021 amid the Indian government's spat with
Twitter (now X) and growing calls for expanding the ecosystem of homegrown
digital platforms. At its peak, Koo experienced heady growth in user metrics as
union ministers and government departments at that time endorsed the homegrown
microblogging platform.
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