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Groupon is an e-commerce platform based in Chicago, Illinois, connecting consumers with local businesses by offering discounted deals and coupons. The company utilizes a "tipping point" model, activating deals only when a minimum number of customers commit, effectively leveraging collective buying power for services like restaurants and spas. By late 2010, Groupon had sold over 6 million deals, generating approximately $800 million in annual revenue, and achieved a valuation exceeding $1 billion within 16 months by April 2010. Google notably offered $6 billion to acquire the company in 2010, which Groupon declined, before its 2011 initial public offering (IPO) valued it at $750 million. Andrew Mason, Eric Lefkofsky, and Brad Keywell are recognized figures associated with the company. Founded in November 2008 by Andrew Mason and Eric Lefkofsky.
Groupon has raised $1.1B across 4 funding rounds.
Key people at Groupon.
Groupon was founded in 2008 by Eric Lefkofsky (Chairman and Co-founder).
Groupon has raised $1.1B in total across 4 funding rounds.
Groupon is an American global e-commerce marketplace that connects millions of subscribers with local merchants by offering discounted deals on activities, travel, goods, and services, primarily through a group-buying model where deals activate only after a minimum number of purchases.[1][4][5] Operating in 13-28 countries and headquartered in Chicago, it serves consumers seeking affordable local experiences and businesses needing customer acquisition, solving the problem of low visibility for small merchants while making daily commerce more accessible via time-sensitive promotions.[1][4][5] Its growth momentum includes rapid early expansion to over 150 cities by 2010, more than 26 million active customers, and over 1.5 billion Groupons sold, though it has evolved from explosive hype to a focus on becoming a "daily habit in local commerce."[3][4][5]
Groupon originated from founder Andrew Mason's frustration in 2006 with canceling a mobile phone contract, inspiring him to leverage collective bargaining power.[4] In 2007, backed by $1 million from Eric Lefkofsky, Mason launched The Point, a platform for social campaigns using a "tipping point" mechanism where actions (like fundraising) activated only after reaching a commitment threshold; it gained modest traction in Chicago but pivoted when users applied it to group discounts.[2][3][4][6] Groupon launched in November 2008 with its first deal—a two-for-one pizza offer at a Chicago restaurant in its building—quickly expanding to Boston, New York, Toronto, and beyond, reaching 150 North American cities and 100 internationally by October 2010, with 35 million users and unicorn status in just 16 months.[1][2][4][8] Key early traction came from manual vendor outreach, email list growth via teaser deals, and a win-win model where merchants gained customers for free if tipping points weren't met.[2]
Groupon rode the early 2010s wave of daily deals and social commerce, capitalizing on post-recession demand for discounts and the rise of mobile/email-driven marketplaces to pioneer group buying at scale.[2][4] Timing was ideal amid smartphone proliferation and social media's sharing economy, enabling viral growth from Chicago to global markets in months, influencing competitors like LivingSocial and inspiring flash-sale models.[3][4] Favorable market forces included underserved local merchants hungry for digital tools and consumers embracing collective savings, while Groupon shaped the ecosystem by proving platforms could drive real-world foot traffic and small business tech adoption, though it faced saturation and shifted toward sustained local commerce habits.[1][5][7]
Groupon's path forward hinges on reigniting growth through brutal transparency, bold innovation, and core values like customer focus, emphasizing quality local experiences amid e-commerce maturation.[5][8] Trends like AI-curated personalization, integrated merchant tech (e.g., POS, payments), and hybrid online-offline commerce will shape it, potentially expanding into seamless "daily habits" for thriving small businesses.[5][7] Its influence may evolve from hype-driven unicorn to a steady ecosystem player, leveraging 1.5+ billion deals sold to deepen community ties—tying back to its founding mission of connecting consumers and merchants for mutual value in local economies.[1][3]
Groupon was founded in 2008 by Eric Lefkofsky (Chairman and Co-founder).
Groupon has raised $1.1B in total across 4 funding rounds.
Groupon's investors include Revolution, Accel, Battery Ventures, HV Capital.
Groupon has raised $1.1B across 4 funding rounds. Most recently, it raised $16.0M Series U in February 2011.
| Date | Company | Round | Lead Investor(s) | Co-Investor(s) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Aug 27, 2015 | SumUp | $11.2M Other Equity | — | American Express, JAY Reinemann |
| Oct 1, 2014 | SERVIZ | $10.7M Other Equity | Groupon | — |
| Aug 15, 2014 | SumUp | $10.0M Other Equity | Life.sreda | BBVA Ventures |
| Date | Round | Lead Investors | Other Investors | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Feb 1, 2011 | $16M Series U | — | Revolution | Announced |
| Jan 1, 2011 | $950M Series D | — | Accel, Battery Ventures | Announced |
| Apr 1, 2010 | $140M Series C | — | Accel, Battery Ventures, HV Capital | Announced |
| Nov 1, 2009 | $30M Series B | — | Accel | Announced |
Key people at Groupon.