Fortune to be made in world of digital divination
Investors starry-eyed over the ‘mystical services’ industry
Any entity created on this planet comes into the world with a star chart, dominated by a sun sign, reflecting the motion of the spheres above at its moment of birth.
Facebook, for instance, is an Aquarius, while Google, Snap and Netflix are all Virgos. Microsoft and Twitter — both Aries. Amazon? Classic Cancer.
Sanctuary, a digital astrology startup backed by $1.5 million in venture capital, made the considered decision to launch on Wednesday — the dawn of the new astrological year, when Pisces gives way to Aries in the astral cycle.
And with private equity veterans, celebrity astrologers and one of Snapchat’s earliest employees on board, its investors foresee fortunes.
There’s always been money to be made in cosmic guidance. The ancient king Croesus, who’s credited with inventing minted money itself, gave a 500-pound lump of gold to the oracle at Delphi as tribute for good forecasts. Tycho Brahe, the Renaissance scientist whose observations of the stars laid the groundwork for Galileo’s breakthroughs, made his living as a royal astrologer.
More recently, the phone psychic network behind Miss Cleo raked in hundreds of millions of dollars in the ’90s, and was fined by the Federal Trade Commission for unfair business practices. Astrology.com recently told Digiday its revenues are in the “low eight figures” and growing, based mostly on ad revenue.
In 2018, Americans spent $2.2 billion on “mystical services,” according to research firm IBISWorld. And the internet, especially social media, is awash in astrology. Influencers pose with crystals, memes about Mercury in retrograde (a supposedly inauspicious time of tumult) ripple across Instagram, and horoscopes have reemerged as a mainstay of women’s sites like the Cut, Bustle and Broadly.
“Astrology has been around for a very long time, and it really adapts to the vernacular that people are speaking,” said Aliza Kelly, Sanctuary’s astrologerin-residence and a horoscope writer for Cosmopolitan magazine.
The business models adapt too. Kelly leverages her media success and Instagram following to sell 60-minute phone readings for $149 a pop and is booked solid through early May.
Steph Koyfman, an astrologer who runs the website the Daily Hunch as a side job (her main gig is at language-learning startup Babbel), said the demand for an astrologer’s interpretive skills has stayed strong since she launched the site in 2015. In response to the stream of private messages from fol- lowers who had urgent questions to ask, Koyfman said she updated her list of services at the beginning of the year:
“I’m offering a $10 ‘Google can’t help me’ reading, if you just want to get a really short answer.”
The IBISWorld report found that the market was split among more than 88,000 separate businesses, most of which are run by solo practitioners like Kelly and Koyfman (and most of whom are women).
The team behind Sanctuary is betting on the idea that they can become a central platform to unify this fragmented market and cater to those customers willing to pay for instant astrological gratification.
“Investors get really excited about the size of the addressable market, the growth potential, the fact that it’s so fragmented, and that there’s no established or well-known brand,” said Ross Clark, Sanctuary’s chief executive.
The app itself is built around the experience of texting: After users download Sanctuary and enter their exact time and place of birth, they get access to the kind of free astrological content common across the web — a daily horoscope, and some background information on the more esoteric corners of the star chart.