Los Angeles Times

Amazon acquires start-up for Alexa

Santa Barbara firm Graphiq’s tech will be used to help improve the virtual assistant.

- By Paresh Dave

Amazon.com Inc. acquired a Santa Barbara data analysis and search engine start-up in May to help improve its Alexa virtual assistant and other services, according to two sources familiar with the deal but unauthoriz­ed to discuss it.

The previously unreported acquisitio­n of Graphiq Inc. and its more than 100 employees has given Amazon a new Southern California outpost. It recently began looking to hire additional software developers and data associates in Santa Barbara to work on Alexa.

Investors in Graphiq made out with more than they put in, according to a source, suggesting the deal was worth at least tens of millions of dollars. Amazon and Graphiq declined to comment.

Founded in 2009 as FindTheBes­t, the company sought to collect and organize details about products, places and people to simplify online research.

Graphiq Chief Executive Kevin O’Connor has said he came to the idea after struggling to find a reliable way to compare ski resorts while he planned a vacation and colleges as his son eyed further education. He wanted to see key informatio­n such as prices, hours and ratings in one online spreadshee­t. Data came from public sources, employees and users. The company started generating revenue by selling ads alongside its tables.

The company later introduced features to tailor comparison­s around individual preference­s. And it launched websites and apps focused on specific topics such as technology, genealogy, real estate and government data. They draw millions of monthly readers.

Graphiq not only created a large, internal content developmen­t team, but also developed graph and chart tools so that news partners such as the Los Angeles Times, Reuters and the Associated Press could provide interactiv­e visualizat­ions in their articles.

Last month, Graphiq announced that features for news publishers would no longer be available after Friday. A company spokespers­on last month declined to comment beyond a statement about that decision.

The statement said, “We greatly enjoyed working with publishers over the last few years to help them tell the news and look forward to continuing to use our technology in other exciting areas.”

The technology Graphiq has developed to connect the dots between billions of pieces of informatio­n could be valuable to Amazon as it tries to make Alexa smarter. Akin to Siri on the iPhone, Alexa answers queries about the weather, sports and other topics on devices such as Amazon's Echo speaker.

Last year, Graphiq produced a now-unavilable Alexa app that aimed to answer questions such as “What is the fastest 2016 sedan?” according to app aggregatio­n website ChatBottle. Amazon also gave Graphiq access to a database about books to put its technology to the test, according to a source.

Amazon faces competitio­n from most of the world’s largest tech companies, including Alphabet, Apple, Microsoft and Baidu, in delivering answers to consumer questions faster and more convenient­ly.

O’Connor told Inc. magazine last fall that “people are going to realize” that Graphiq’s technology is “extraordin­arily strategic.”

“You can see it happening with the Amazon Echo, Siri, Google Now,” he said. “Rather than making people think like computers, we're making computers think like people.”

The deal marks the second significan­t purchase of a company co-founded by O’Connor. He founded and led ad tech firm DoubleClic­k through 2005, when it was sold to private equity firms for $1.1 billion. Two years later, in its biggest acquisitio­n ever at the time, Google spent $3.1 billion in cash on DoubleClic­k to vastly expand its ability to place ads across the Internet.

Graphiq had raised about $32 million in private financing, according to Crunchbase. Its biggest venture backers included Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers and Pritzker Group Venture Capital. Montgomery & Co. and Silicon Valley Bank also provided some funding. The firms’ representa­tives declined to comment or didn’t respond to requests to comment.

It’s unclear whether Graphiq has laid off any employees as part of the transactio­n, but LinkedIn data show a slight drop in headcount to 131 employees from 145 in March. Departures have included the company’s head of people operations.

 ?? Elaine Thompson Associated Press ?? AMAZON faces competitio­n from tech firms — including Alphabet, Apple and Microsoft — in delivering answers to user questions faster and more convenient­ly.
Elaine Thompson Associated Press AMAZON faces competitio­n from tech firms — including Alphabet, Apple and Microsoft — in delivering answers to user questions faster and more convenient­ly.

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