Aussie alternative social media platform Memories has secured $31 million in Series A funding, off the back of 12 months of growth thatโs seen user numbers increase more than ten-fold.
The business was founded by John Bongiorno back in 2014 as Skymorials, a platform for online memorials only. Bongiorno himself had lost his father, and wanted to create a space online to memorialise him.
At the time, chief executive Tom Ainsworth was actually one of Skymorialsโ first ever users, having set up a memorial page for his own father, who died suddenly in 2014.
Five years later, he was invited to join the startup to lead it through a new phase of growth as it expanded to provide memory banks for stories and experiences, for users to save and share as they see fit.
It was โcompletely serendipitous,โ Ainsworth tells SmartCompany.
In 2020, the business rebranded to become Memories, and in September last year it raised $10 million in capital. In December, it made its first acquisition of online memorial brand HeavenAddress.
โExponentialโ growth
Since Ainsworth took the helm, the business has seen โexponentialโ growth, he says.
The platform has grown from 3,000 users to more than 377,000 across 195 countries.
Itโs home to about 400,000 tribute pages and 1.8 million โmemoryโ pages, marking a 61% growth rate, month-on-month, since August last year.
This funding round will be first and foremost a driver of growth.
The business has proven it has global appeal, Ainsworth says. Now, heโs planning on investing in marketing to continue organic growth in regions such as the US, the UK, Canada, the Philippines and India.
Heโs also gearing up for โinorganicโ growth through merger and acquisition activities.
At the same time, there will be investment in the technology, including the app and web products.
โWe need to continue to ensure our experience is world class,โ he notes.
Some of the cash will also go towards the general operational costs that come with scaling fast โ building out the team, for example.
A new kind of social media
Ainsworth puts Memoriesโ growth rate over the past 12 months or so partly down to the fact that the platform offers an alternative to โtraditionalโ social media.
Itโs also not focused on likes, views or affirmations. A usersโ page could be just for them, or they can invite a select few people to contribute or comment.
Equally, itโs something of a more wholesome offering than the social media weโre used to.
โWeโre ad-free, weโre private, weโre secure, we donโt mine our usersโ data,โ he says.
Instead, it has a freemium model, inviting users to upgrade to a monthly or annual storage plan. Or, for memorial pages, thereโs a one-off cost to upgrade for life.
The business also makes money through enterprise partnerships. It powers the obituaries for The Age and the Sydney Morning Herald, for example, and has more partnerships in the pipeline.
As public sentiment is shifting away from platforms like Facebook and Twitter, which have almost become synonymous with trolls, conflict and toxicity, thereโs demand for more wholesome space online.
โWeโve created the digital legacy category,โ Ainsworth says.
โWeโre the market leaders in that newly created category.โ
The space is not designed for judgement, itโs designed to be a space for people to be their authentic selves, he adds.
Even as the business grows and attracts more people, Ainsworth doesnโt see trolls and negativity becoming a challenge.
Memories is designed for people to have smaller networks of people who they genuinely know, and people have total control over who can view, contribute and comment on their pages.
โBeing more intimate means the likelihood of that is so small.โ
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