WhatsApp story is
live example of innovation in true terms. This is Jan Koum’s Story “Rising from
Rags to Riches”, the Co-founder and CEO of globally famous mobile messaging
application–WhatsApp.
world without WhatsApp, can we keep our smart mobiles without WhatsApp? Obviously,
answer is great “No”.
by Facebook in February 2014 for a huge US $19.3 Billion.
Story of Struggles, sufferings and
desolations
Jon Koum co-founder
of WhatsApp
was born in Kiev, Ukraine in a Jewish family. He faced a life of true hardship.
He knew the meaning of living in the throes of deprivation. Koum was so poor
that his house did not even have electricity.
him and grandmother to California in 1992, where a social support program
helped the family to get a small two-bedroom apartment, at the age of 16.
intended to join the family later, but he never left Ukraine, and died in 1997.
Koum and his mother remained in touch with his father until his death.
mother worked as a babysitter, while he himself worked as a cleaner at a
grocery store. His mother died in 2000 after a long battle with cancer.
dream did not make its way to Jan’s life as quickly as he hoped. Everything in
the United States was expensive.
wanted to learn to program. He knew this was his destiny. Jan studied by buying
second hand books and stationary and returning them after he was done.
major blow when his mother was diagnosed with cancer in 2000 and Koum was left
to fend for himself in a strange and unknown country.
adversities only made Jan Koum stronger and resilient. By 18, he learnt computer
networking all by himself with the help of manuals from a used book stores.
an illustrious career. Meeting Brian Acton was a turning point in his life.
Security Tester.
After working there
for roughly six months, Jon Koum got the biggest opportunity of his life. He was
selected to work at Yahoo as an Infrastructure Engineer. Now this was when he
was still studying at San Jose State University. Soon he dropped out of
college.
stay on the job for long. In 2007, Koum and Acton bid farewell to Yahoo and
decided to unwind and travel around.
years of his life to Yahoo, Koum and Acton left Yahoo and took a year off. And this is when it all began!
But they weren’t sure what to do next. They took a year off traveling around
South America to refresh their minds.
purchasing an iPhone, Koum had the vision to see that an entire industry was
about to form based around mobile apps.
just a few months old, but Koum saw it starting an entire new industry. He
started thinking about building an app.
living off of his savings from Yahoo!, with little direction as to where his
next career path would take him.
Koum began to explore the possibility of creating an app that would let mobile
users better interact and engage with their friends, family, and business
contacts without ads.
because it sounded like “what’s up”, and a week later on his
birthday, February 24, 2009, he incorporated WhatsApp Inc. in California.
was initially unpopular, but its fortunes began to turn after Apple added push
notification ability to apps in June 2009.
to “ping” users when they received a message, and soon afterwards he
and Fishman’s Russian friends in the area began to use WhatsApp as a messaging
tool, in place of SMS.
large user base, and Koum convinced Acton, who was then still unemployed, to
join the company. Koum granted Acton co-founder status after Acton managed to bring
in $250,000 in seed funding.
was a bit of a rocky start for WhatsApp, though. After numerous crashes and
failures, Koum grew frustrated with the app’s development and reportedly
considered giving it up entirely.
of them, the duo did indeed stick it out and saw the app through to its
eventual success. By February of 2013, WhatsApp boasted 50 staff members and
200 million users.
the app was bought out by Facebook for a staggering $19 billion—a number that
stands as the largest acquisition in the world to date.
aspect is; WhatsApp runs lean with just 32 engineers. One WhatsApp developer
supports 14 million active users, a ratio unheard of in the industry.
aspect of the company is that, “It doesn’t even employ a marketer or PR person.
Yet like the world’s greatest brands, it’s created a strong emotional
connection with consumers.
by Engr Maqbool Akram with help of Wikipedia and other write-ups available on net.
Photos are from sources with thanks.