Close X
Wednesday, September 25, 2024
ADVT 
National

Vancouver-Based Dating Website PlentyOfFish Purchased By Match Group For US$575 Million

The Canadian Press, 14 Jul, 2015 12:21 PM
    TORONTO — The Match Group, the New York-based company that owns Match.com, OkCupid and Tinder, says it has purchased Vancouver-based dating website PlentyOfFish for US$575 million in cash.
     
    In a news release on its website, Match Group CEO Sam Yagan says it was attracted to PlentyOfFish's consistent growth and it plans to integrate the Canadian company's mobile app into its existing family of digital and online dating services.
     
    PlentyOfFish has steadily lured in people seeking everything from no-strings attached hookups to marriage since CEO and founder Markus Frind launched the company from his Vancouver apartment in 2003.
     
    By 2008, Frind had 15 million users, $10 million in revenue and doubled his workforce — to two.
     
    In March of this year, PlentyOfFish surpassed 100 million users and employed more than 70 people at its downtown Vancouver office.
     
     
    The Match Group says the deal is subject to approval from the federal industry minister and is expected to close early in the fourth quarter.
     
    "We are thrilled to be joining forces with Match," Frind said in a statement. "My team and I have grown PlentyOfFish into one of the leaders in our category, and I am confident that Match will help accelerate our growth even further."
     
    The Match Group offers dating products through nearly 50 brands in 40 languages around the world and says it has seven million new users per month.
     
    The Match brands and PlentyOfFish both make revenue through a combination of advertising and paid subscription options.
     
    IAC, the parent company of Match Group, owns a variety of media and Internet properties including the Princeton Review, Investopedia, Vimeo and the Daily Beast.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne Suggests Regional Co-operation On Environment

    QUEBEC — The premiers of Quebec and Ontario are meeting with the governors of eight U.S. states today as part of a three-day conference on the future of the Great Lakes and St. Lawrence region.

    Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne Suggests Regional Co-operation On Environment

    Crews Partly Contain Wildfire South Of Lytton, B.C., On Third Day Of Blaze

    Crews Partly Contain Wildfire South Of Lytton, B.C., On Third Day Of Blaze
    The B.C. Wildfire Management Branch says no significant growth in the fire occurred Saturday morning and the blaze is now about 12.8 square kilometres in size.

    Crews Partly Contain Wildfire South Of Lytton, B.C., On Third Day Of Blaze

    Jane Fonda Boosts Opposition To Kinder Morgan Trans Mountain Pipeline

    Jane Fonda Boosts Opposition To Kinder Morgan Trans Mountain Pipeline
    In 1970, Jane Fonda was arrested while marching with indigenous people. Forty-five years later, the Academy Award-winning actress says she's willing to be placed in handcuffs again while defending British Columbia's coast from oil tankers.

    Jane Fonda Boosts Opposition To Kinder Morgan Trans Mountain Pipeline

    Canadian Researchers Use Tracking Technology To Learn From Ocean Animals

    Canadian Researchers Use Tracking Technology To Learn From Ocean Animals
    HALIFAX — Ocean researcher Nigel Hussey says the hardest part of tagging a giant Greenland shark isn't dealing with the carnivore -- it's keeping his hands in sub-zero Arctic water while he does the work.

    Canadian Researchers Use Tracking Technology To Learn From Ocean Animals

    Surrey Drive-By Shooting Sends Two Men To Hospital, RCMP Investigate

    Surrey Drive-By Shooting Sends Two Men To Hospital, RCMP Investigate
    RCMP say they received several reports of shots fired (near 57 Avenue and 152 Street) at around 10 p.m. Friday.

    Surrey Drive-By Shooting Sends Two Men To Hospital, RCMP Investigate

    Metro Vancouver Mayors Say Yes Side Spent $5.8 Million Promoting Transit-Tax Hike In Plebiscite

    Metro Vancouver Mayors Say Yes Side Spent $5.8 Million Promoting Transit-Tax Hike In Plebiscite
    VANCOUVER — Proponents of a multibillion-dollar plan to upgrade transit services in Metro Vancouver spent just over $5.8 million promoting a Yes vote during a recent plebiscite, although one critic is calling that figure a whitewash.

    Metro Vancouver Mayors Say Yes Side Spent $5.8 Million Promoting Transit-Tax Hike In Plebiscite