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Graphic.ly

Last updated
Graphicly
Graphicly.png
Type of business Private
Founded2007
Headquarters,
USA
Key people
  • Micah Baldwin
  • (CEO, Co-Founder)
  • Kevin Mann
  • (Founder and Chief Scientist)
[1]
URL Graphicly.com

Graphicly (often stylized as Graphic.ly) was a platform for publishers which offered work flow integration, self-publishing, digital distribution, conversion, and promotion for digital content. [2] [3] [4] Launched by Kevin Mann and Micah Baldwin, the website was initially a platform for digital comic books, but later added support for children's books, art books, and magazines. [5] [6] [7] Graphicly accumulated more than 3,500 publishers and more than 10,000 independent creators. [8] [9] The website hosted an active social community, allowing creators and fans to interact directly. Graphicly shut down in May 2014, and some of its key staff moved on to fellow digital publisher Blurb. [10]

Contents

History

Graphicly was founded in 2007 as "Take Comics" by Kevin Mann. [2] [9] The website was part the 2009 class of TechStars, a startup accelerator. [4] [11] [12] Micah Baldwin had been a mentor at TechStars since 2007, and after mentoring the Graphicly team through the program, joined the company as founder and CEO. [13] [14] [15] [16]

Steve Ballmer gave the first public demo of Graphicly during Microsoft’s keynote presentation at the 2010 Consumer Electronics Show. [17] [18] [19]

The company raised a $1.2 million seed round in January 2010, led by DFJ Mercury, with additional investments from Starz Media, David Cohen, Dave McClure, Paige Craig, Jake Nickell, and Chris Sacca. [3] Over 600,000 copies of Graphicly's mobile applications had been downloaded in the first five months of 2010. [2] In January 2011, Graphicly raised an additional $3.8 million in a Series A round from a group led by DFJ Mercury with additional investments from 500 Startups, Dundee VC, Ludlow Ventures, and Venture51. [2] [4] [7] In addition to the established angel investors, Graphicly's advisors included Tim Ferriss, Jay Adelson, and Gary Vaynerchuk. [8]

In February 2010, Graphicly acquired iFanboy, a comic book community and news platform. [20] This bolstered the interactive elements of their site, which had already pioneered how comic books were read and shared. [4] The purchase did not last and in January 2013, iFanboy split from Graphically in a joint decision between the site and the company. [21] In November 2011, Graphicly acquired Double Feature, a mobile comics reader application. [22]

In 2012, the Graphic.ly comics app was discontinued and the company focused on digital conversion and distribution service: For an upfront fee, the company would convert a comic and distribute it to digital platforms, and then planned to give proceeds (after fees) to the comic owner. [23]

In January 2013, Graphicly raised an additional $1 million in funding, bringing the total venture capital investment to $6 million. [24]

In April 2014, Graphicly officially shut its doors, replacing its website with a notice informing visitors of such. Key employees from the company were hired by Blurb, a self-publishing agency similar in aim to Graphicly. Many publishers who had published their works through Graphicly were offered to move their business to Blurb. [25]

Some of the independent creators were never paid for the proceeds from their published comics. [26]

Description

Baldwin described the initial vision for Graphicly as iTunes for comic books. [27] The company allowed comic book creators to distribute their content digitally through Graphicly's native app, which is available for the iPhone, iPad, and Android devices. [2]

The following year, Graphicly shifted the company's focus to their digital publishing platform, which allows authors and publishers to release their books on platforms like the iBookstore, Amazon's Kindle Store, the Kobo Store, and Barnes & Noble's Nook Store. [4] [28] [29] Baldwin noted that although Graphicly's marketplace strategy had proved successful, the company focused mainly on marketing the highest-selling comics like Spider-Man and X-Men , a departure from their initial goal of helping all publishers, especially independent publishers, gain an audience. [30] In January 2012, the company unveiled an all-in-one self-publishing platform with automated tools that can convert, distribute and promote image-based content. [6] [28] [31] [32] [33] The platform also offers real-time analytics integration, allowing creators to track their content across all the marketplaces. [32]

Business Model

Publishers paid a flat fee to Graphicly and retained full ownership of the revenue stream afterwards. [28] In the first week after the new platform was released, the company signed up over 1,500 authors and publishers at an average of $650. [4] Graphicly's user base doubled in the first 6 months after the launch of the new distribution options. [34] The transition also attracted content creators outside of comic books, and at one time 40% of all books submitted through Graphicly were non-comics. [6] [7] [35]

Together, this led to higher sales for Graphicly's content creators, and sales outpace the old Graphicly app 5 to 1. [7] In 2011, more than one book was being downloaded every minute from Graphicly. [3]

Community

Graphicly hosted an active social community which allowed users to comment within the pages of the digital books on the story, artwork, cover art, and overall experience. [2] [9] The discussion allowed creators and fans to connect directly, and greatly increased Graphicly's reader engagement. [2] [3] [36] The website featured a social stream, where users could see activity including recent purchases, comments, and share recent favorites with other users. [3] [37] Baldwin called the community the biggest driver of growth for Graphicly. [38]

Related Research Articles

Webcomics are comics published on a website or mobile app. While many are published exclusively on the web, others are also published in magazines, newspapers, or comic books.

Chitrakatha are comics or graphic novels originating from India published in a number of Indian languages.

Digital comics are comics released digitally, as opposed to in print. Digital comics commonly take the form of mobile comics. Webcomics may also fall under the "digital comics" umbrella.

A mobile comic is a digital comic or cartoon strip that can be purchased, downloaded, read and sometimes edited or shared with friends via mobile phones.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Platinum Studios</span> US media company

Platinum Studios, Inc. is a media company based in the United States. It controls a library of thousands of comic-book characters, which it seeks to adapt, produce, and license for all forms of media. The company has released films and/or television programming with Universal Studios, Paramount Pictures, DreamWorks, MGM, Showtime, and Lions Gate. Platinum has developed film or television with others, including Disney's 20th Century Studios, WarnerMedia's New Line Cinema and Sony Pictures Entertainment.

Scribd Inc. is an American e-book and audiobook subscription service that includes one million titles. Scribd hosts 60 million documents on its open publishing platform.

Techstars is a global investment business that provides access to capital, one-on-one mentorship, a worldwide network and customized programming for early-stage entrepreneurs. It was founded in 2006 in Boulder, Colorado. As of May 2022, the company had accepted over 2,900 companies into its accelerator programs with a combined market capitalization of $71bn USD.

HubSpot is an American developer and marketer of software products for inbound marketing, sales, and customer service. HubSpot was founded by Brian Halligan and Dharmesh Shah in 2006.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Trip Adler</span> American entrepreneur

John R. "Trip" Adler III is an American entrepreneur. He is the CEO and co-founder of Scribd, a digital library and document-sharing platform, which has 80 million users.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">ComiXology</span> Online comic distribution platform

Iconology Inc., d/b/a ComiXology, is a cloud-based digital distribution platform for comics owned by Amazon, with over 200 million comic downloads as of September 2013. It offers a selection of more than 100,000 comic books, graphic novels, and manga across Android, iOS, Kindle Fire, Windows 10, and the Internet.

The Conduit toolbar was an online platform that allowed web publishers to create custom toolbars, web apps, and mobile apps at no cost. It was developed by Conduit Inc. but demerged to Perion Network. Conduit had approximately 260,000 registered publishers who have collectively created content downloaded by more than 250 million end users. Web apps and pieces of content developed through Conduit's platform can be distributed and exchanged online via the Conduit App Marketplace. Currently, 60 million users consume apps from the marketplace on a daily basis.

WOWIO is a deregistered company based in the United States. WOWIO, Inc. has, historically, operated a digital media and technology development company with a patented process and a proprietary mobile ad-delivery platform that planned to disrupt the eBook distribution landscape by exploiting a previously untapped marketplace: ad-supported eBooks. A new management team announced in 2017 that Wowio will be a holding company supporting a number of investments in entertainment, restaurants, tourism, hospitality and other businesses including homebuilding in Northern California and the real estate development in Arizona.

Rakuten DX is a software company specialising in no-code development platforms to build mobile apps for smartphones, tablets and web designed for enterprises and digital publishers. Headquartered in Montpellier, France, Rakuten DX is a major subsidiary of Rakuten.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">JFH: Justice For Hire</span>

JFH: Justice For Hire is a mixed martial arts themed entertainment property that encompasses a series of comic books, films, videos, music, and animations. The JFH story follows two sons of a duo of vigilante fathers who get their family's hero-for-hire business legalized, spawning a worldwide industry of heroes, villains, and mercenaries for hire dubbed the Retribution Industry. Produced and published by Creative Impulse Entertainment, JFH remains one of the first examples of transmedia storytelling in the comic book industry.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Oyster (company)</span> Commercial streaming service for digital e-books

Oyster was a commercial streaming service for digital e-books, available for Android, iOS, Kindle Fire, and NOOK HD/HD+ devices. It was also available on any web browser on a desktop or laptop computer. Oyster held over 1 million books in its library, and as of September 2015, the service was only available in the United States.

Jared Friedman is an American entrepreneur and angel investor. He is a partner at Y Combinator in San Francisco, where he invests in and helps startups. Previously, Jared was the co-founder and CTO at Scribd, a digital library and document-sharing platform, which has 80 million users.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Tapas (website)</span> Webcomics hosting website

Tapas, formerly known as Tapastic and originally known as Comic Panda, is a South Korean webtoon and prose publishing website and app owned by Tapas Media, a Kakao Entertainment company. It was created by entrepreneur Chang Kim in 2012, who is currently Tapas Media's CEO.

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