Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

10 years ago, Groupon turned down Google’s $6 billion offer

Here’s what’s happened since

- By Mary Ellen Podmolik

It was the “WHAT?” heard around Chicago’s tech and business community 10 years ago: On Dec. 3, 2010, e-commerce deals platform Groupon spurned a $6 billion buyout offer fromGoogle­andchose togo it alone.

The rejection came during heady times for Groupon, which launched in the fall of 2008 with a two-for-one pizza deal at a Chicago bar and quickly became Chicago’s tech darling. By late 2010 it had grown to some 1,500 Chicago-area employees and moved into internatio­nal markets. Forbes, in a cover story, proclaimed it the fastest-growing company in history.

Consumers waited for the daily email blast with the deal of the day from a local business, communicat­ed by a team of writers who favored cheekiness. “I’ve got a Groupon” became the rallying cry for waxings, restaurant outings and cleaning services, and was welcomed by merchants trying to climb back from the Great Recession.

But much has changed since then. Here’s a quick catch-up.

The Google offer

Groupon reached out to Google while the Chicago companywas being courted by Yahoo, according to cofounder Andrew Mason. Yahoo “was kind of this graveyard for cool companies,” Mason toldNewYor­k Magazine in 2018.

But despite initiating the conversati­on, Groupon passed on Google. “We looked at our numbers, and we were just growing faster than ever,” Mason told the magazine. “We looked at the offer we were getting from Google, and Google seemed like it could have been a great home. But we felt like it was fun to do an independen­t company, and we thought we could make more money doing it that way.”

Going public

Ayear afterwalki­ng away fromGoogle, Grouponwen­t public, pricing its initial public offering at $20 a share and raising $700 million inwhat at the timewas the largest initial public offering by a U.S. tech since Google in 2004. Its valuation at the end of its first trading day was $16.6 billion.

It came back down to earth pretty quickly. Less than two weeks after its debut, shares tumbled and it’s been a bumpy ride ever since.

In June, the company had a reverse stock split, where every 20 shareswere converted into one share. The move came after the stock was trading as less than $1 inMarch, asumthat could have led to a stock delisting byNasdaq.

On Wednesday, shares closed at $31.40, giving it a market cap of $905 million.

Changes at top

Competitor­s were soon nipping at its heels, results started to falter, and the buck stopped at CEO Mason’s door. He was fired in February 2013 and moved to theWest Coast.

Co-founder Eric Lefkofsky took over as CEO. In November 2015, Chief Operating Officer Rich Williams replaced Lefkofsky and said he’d emphasize Groupon’s marketplac­e and Goods products rather than daily deals.

Williams was ousted in March.

Running the company now is Aaron Cooper, who joined Groupon in 2010 and had most recently served as North American president.

Restructur­ings

There have been several over the past decade, with the company cutting employees and changing its focus back and forth between daily deals and merchandis­e sold through Groupon Goods.

This year, in April, Groupon said itwould lay off or furlough about 2,800 employees, representi­ng 44% of its workforce. Its board adopted a shareholde­r rights plan, commonly called a “poison pill,” to defend Groupon against any bids to take control of the company.

InMay, the company put up for sublease 150,000 square feet of space at its headquarte­rs at600W. Chicago Ave.

For the first nine months of 2020, Groupon lost more than $300 million, compared with $91 million in the year-ago period.

Pandemic purchases

Interim CEO Cooper has been upbeat in recent earnings calls with analysts and investor presentati­ons. The pathforwar­dincludes offering deals with few restrictio­ns and lower discount offers.

The trend toward selfcare during the pandemic has helped Groupon. Just in the three months that ended in September, customers in North America spent almost $20 million on massages, and more than $ 15 million on Botox, Cooper said.

“I will say that even though COVID certainly make things harder, we have clear momentum on the merchant side,” Cooper said during a third-quarter earnings call last month. “The merchants are engaged. They’re saying yes to bringing the customers back and back repeatedly and … we know that more inventory is what our customers want, so that we know that we’re on the critical path to growth.”

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