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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 History  



1.1  Founding  





1.2  Change of Management  







2 Company Overview  



2.1  Financials  





2.2  Advertising  







3 Reception  



3.1  In the region  





3.2  In the media  





3.3  Concerns  







4 References  





5 External links  














Paktor







 

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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


Paktor
Developer(s)Paktor Pte Ltd
Initial releaseJune 2013 (2013-06)
Operating systemiOS, Android
Websitegopaktor.com

Paktor is a location-based dating and networking mobile application that connects mutually interested users and allows them to chat individually or as a group. Founded in Singapore, the app was launched in June 2013,[1] and has over 5 billion swipes to date (October 2015).[2] In late 2013, Paktor launched a subsidiary called GaiGai, an offline dating service that focuses on match-making and dating events. The word 'Paktor' originates from the Cantonese word for 'dating' (Chinese character 拍拖).[3]

History

[edit]

Founding

[edit]

Paktor was founded by Joseph Phua and Ng Jing Shen.[4]

Paktor was first launched in Singapore in June 2013. Despite the immature market, there was a lot of interest from consumers and according to a Paktor newsletter, there were 250,000 matches in the first 2 weeks of 2014.[5] The company also shared that it had received over 100 million profile ratings at that time.

The app is also available in Taiwan,[6] Malaysia, Indonesia,[7] Vietnam, Thailand, and South Korea.

In February 2017, Paktor acquired dating apps DOWN, Goodnight, and Groopify, folding them into Paktor Labs, a social app accelerator.[8][9]

Change of Management

[edit]

In November 2017, Paktor Group appointed co-founder and chief technology officer Ng Jing Shen as CEO of Paktor Group, taking over from current CEO Joseph Phua. Phua remained in the group CEO of M17 Entertainment which was formed after the merger of Paktor and 17 Media. The company also promoted current head of operations Shn Juay to Chief Operating Officer at Paktor Group.[10]

In 2018, M17 Entertainment sold DOWN, the United States-based dating application, back to its founder Colin Hodge.[11][12]

Company Overview

[edit]

Financials

[edit]

In March 2014, Paktor revealed its first round of funding with a US$500,000 pre-Series-A round that valued the brand at US$6.5 million.[13] At this time, co-founder and CEO Joseph Phua was quoted as saying that the app was “easily 10-20 times ahead of the next player”[14] referring to their main markets; Singapore, Malaysia, Vietnam, Thailand, Taiwan and the Philippines.

Series A was secured in November 2014, bringing the total raised to US$5 million.[15] This round was led by Vertex Ventures Southeast Asia & India. The funds were reported to be used for expansion into different territories and the introduction of new services under the Paktor group. At this time, the size of the network stood at 1.5 million registered users.[15]

The next milestone was the US$7.3 million Series B funding in July 2015. This raised total funding to more than US$12 million and Paktor said its network had five million registered users and 12 million matches a month.[1] There were also 500 million monthly swipes on average across the region.[16]

The startup secured another US$10 million in a venture round with its sights set on expansion in Japan and South Korea. YJ Capital — the corporate venture firm belonging to Yahoo Capital — led the round, which included participation from fellow new investors Global Grand Leisure, Golden Equator Capital and Sebrina Holdings, as well as existing backers Vertex Ventures Southeast Asia & India, MNC Media Group, Majuven and Convergence Ventures.[17]

In November 2016, Paktor announced another round of funding in the amount of $32.5 million to expand its focus into new kinds of mobile entertainment. This new raise, was led by U.S.-Asia-based K2 Global and Indonesia’s MNC Media Group, with participation from other, undisclosed investors.[18]

In December the same year, the company announced that it has agreed to buy a controlling stake in Taiwanese start-up 17 Media. 17 Media owns a photo-sharing and live streaming app that has over 15 million users worldwide. The deal was Paktor's first acquisition and comes as the start-up looks to diversify into the social entertainment space.[19]

Paktor announced its next wave of acquisitions in February 2017 with Down, Kickoff, Goodnight and Groopify joining the group and forming the Paktor Labs Division. Paktor Labs will act as an accelerator for social apps with high potential.[20] The dating app next announced its merger with 17 Media, forming a new company called M17 Entertainment and combining all assets and revenue under the new entity.[21]

Advertising

[edit]

In 2015, the app appointed Taiwanese actress and social media personality, Ouyang Nini,[22] and Indonesian actor, Junior Liem,[23] as the brand’s ambassadors in Taiwan and Indonesia respectively. A series of visual advertisements[24] were launched with the appointment announcement. At a press conference, Ouyang Nini said that her father, former actor and Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) Taipei City Councilor, Ouyang Lung,[25] approves of her endorsement to use the app to meet new friends.[26]

Reception

[edit]

In the region

[edit]

Beyond Singapore, Paktor is available in Taiwan,[6] Malaysia, Indonesia,[7] Vietnam and Thailand.

As of September 2016, an estimated 12 million people in Southeast Asia use the app every month, with an average of 20 million matches per month and over 5 billion swipes to date.[2] There are an estimated 500,000 users in Indonesia alone.[27]

The app has its own localised slogan in Taiwan, "友妳選擇 友你選擇", which means ‘to choose your friend yourself’.[28] In January 2015, Paktor created two telephone booths near the Taipei 101, to encourage passers-by to explore the app and provide assurance that the app is a safe and private way to meet new friends across countries[29]

In 2013, Paktor set a Guinness World record for The World’s Largest Speed Dating Event held in Vietnam.[30] The event drew 600 participants including local celebrities popular among Vietnamese youth. This record was most recently broken by Calgary Speed Dating Inc. (Canada) at Telus Spark Science Centre in Calgary, Canada, on 14 February 2014[31]

In the media

[edit]

Paktor has received widespread news coverage and been featured on TechCrunch,[32][33] Bloomberg,[34] CNBC Asia,[35] CNN[36] and others. The app was positively received in Singapore when it was launched gaining over 25,000 users in the first month.[37] There were also comparisons to established mobile dating apps like Tinder and how it was a similar product and had the same mechanics.[citation needed]

Global Dating Insights (GDI) publication regarded Paktor as one of the dating apps to watch. With relatively little competition in Southeast Asia, GDI assesses that the app to have huge potential, crediting the CEO for having ‘expertly navigated’ the Southeast Asian market with multiple countries each with different cultures, dating habits and languages. In October 2015, Paktor hired two former Meetic senior marketing executives, Jose Ruano and Miguel Mangas, spearheading overseas expansion efforts outside of Asia. The two speak Spanish, which has strategic global importance as 425 million people in the world use Spanish as their first language. Already available in the two most spoken languages, English and Chinese, the hiring acquisitions would allow Paktor to break into European and South American markets.[38]

The conservative nature of Asian cultures has also presented challenges, where regular dating and casual sex is frowned upon.[39]

Concerns

[edit]

In 2015, a Reddit post highlighted the vulnerability of the GaiGai website due to the lack of security encryption[40] GaiGai responded that it has since added SSL/TLS encryption. However, some Reddit users commented that more layers of encryption are necessary in order to provide better security for the clientele database. Paktor and GaiGai have since updated their privacy and data protection policy in August 2015[41][42]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b "Singapore's Paktor gets $7.3M to become more than a dating app". TechInAsia.
  • ^ a b "Local Tinder-like app Paktor draws another SG$10 mil in funding". Marketing Interactive.
  • ^ The jocular Singlish word paktorlogy refers to the "science of going on a date with someone", see p. 106 in Ghil'ad Zuckermann (2003), Language Contact and Lexical Enrichment in Israeli Hebrew, Houndmills: Palgrave Macmillan, (Palgrave Studies in Language History and Language Change, Series editor: Charles Jones). ISBN 1-4039-1723-X.
  • ^ Singh, Pooja (December 11, 2018). "The App That is Helping People in Asia Find Love, One Swipe At A Time". Entrepreneur. Retrieved June 8, 2022.
  • ^ "Dating app Paktor hooks up 250000 singles in two weeks". Vulcan Post.
  • ^ a b "交友app上市 倪安東把妹無國界". Apple Daily.
  • ^ a b "Paktor is Officially Launched in Indonesia". Daily Social.
  • ^ Shazni, M. (February 8, 2017). "Paktor Acquires 3 Other Dating App Startups, Sets Up What Might Be The World's First Dating Lab". Retrieved October 19, 2021.
  • ^ Roof, Katie (January 20, 2017). "Casual dating app Down acquired by Paktor". TechCrunch. Retrieved October 19, 2021.
  • ^ "Dating app Paktor names new CEO and COO". Marketing Interactive.
  • ^ Shu, Catherine (May 22, 2020). "M17 sells its online dating assets to focus on live streaming". TechCrunch. Retrieved October 19, 2021.
  • ^ Brooks, Amber (February 5, 2019). "The DOWN Dating App Gets Down to Business & Grows Organic Traffic by Facilitating Discreet Hookups". DatingNews.com. Retrieved October 19, 2019.
  • ^ "Dating app Paktor raises $500,000, says it's number one in parts of Asia". TechInAsia.
  • ^ "Dating app Paktor raises US$500K with valuation set at US$6.5M". e27.
  • ^ a b "Dating app Paktor raises $3.3m Series A funding". DealStreetAsia.
  • ^ "Dating app Paktor receives S$10 million in latest funding round". Channel NewsAsia. Archived from the original on March 4, 2016. Retrieved February 24, 2016.
  • ^ Russell, Jon (July 11, 2016). "Asian Tinder rival Paktor lands $10M to further global push with launches in Japan and South Korea". TechCrunch. Retrieved October 17, 2016.
  • ^ Russell, Jon (November 2016). "Asia-focused dating app Paktor lands $32.5M to push into 'social entertainment'". TechCrunch.
  • ^ Tang, See Kit. "Dating app Paktor moves into social entertainment with first acquisition". ChannelNewsAsia. Archived from the original on November 16, 2017. Retrieved November 16, 2017.
  • ^ "Paktor Acquires 3 Other Dating App Startups, Sets Up What Might Be The World's First Dating Lab". Vulcanpost.
  • ^ "Paktor, a major rival to Tinder in Asia, moves into live-streaming via merger deal". TechCrunch.
  • ^ "國民甜心歐陽妮妮代言亞洲第一大交友APP–Paktor拍拖". WOW! News.
  • ^ "Ganteng dan Tidak Playboy, Aplikasi Kencan Ini Memilih Junior Liem Jadi Brand Ambassador". Inponsel.
  • ^ "TVC Paktor Indonesia". Paktor ID.
  • ^ "2014 ELECTIONS: Photogenic aides, relatives giving a boost to candidates". Taipei Times.
  • ^ "老爸很開明! 歐陽妮妮可以網交惹". Apple Daily.
  • ^ "Aplikasi Paktor Klaim Miliki 500 Ribu Pengguna di Indonesia". Avatar Nusantara Technologies. Archived from the original on February 20, 2016. Retrieved February 24, 2016.
  • ^ "亞洲交友軟體領導品牌 Paktor全新改版 並首創「優質拍友公約". Sogi.
  • ^ "在101見證下來場愛的連線!浪漫 Paktor 電話亭裝置". Damanwoo.
  • ^ "Paktor & Sagiko Present A Guinness World Records Record Attempt - Paktor Speed Date Night - The World's Largest Speed Dating Event". PR Newswire.
  • ^ "Largest speed dating event". Guinness World Records.
  • ^ "With $5M In Funding, Tinder-Like Paktor Wants To Get Southeast Asia Using Dating Apps". TechCrunch.
  • ^ "Cheating wives dating". Wives Dating.
  • ^ "Finding the Perfect Match on Mobile". Bloomberg.
  • ^ "Singapore entrepreneur turns heartache into cash". CNBC Asia.
  • ^ "4 ways Asian dating apps are anti-Tinder". CNN.
  • ^ "From heartbreak to Paktor, and how the mobile dating app craze is sweeping across Asia". TechInAsia.
  • ^ "Global Dating Insights Power Book 2016". Global Dating Insights.
  • ^ "No hanky panky: Dating apps woo investors with local expertise". The Straits Times.
  • ^ "PSA: Do NOT use GaiGai website (Paktor's offline dating service)". Reddit.
  • ^ "Privacy Policy)". Paktor.
  • ^ "Privacy and Data Protection Policy)". GaiGai.
  • [edit]
    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Paktor&oldid=1227087134"

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