Blab is dead…long live Blab.

Shaan Puri
6 min readAug 13, 2016

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OK let’s rip the bandaid off:

Today is the last day of Blab. We’re shutting down the website and app, and focusing 100% on our new project.

OK, now that the hard part is out of the way, let’s have some fun.

The upside of ending Blab is that I can be fully candid about what worked, what didn’t, and what’s next.

What went wrong?

Alas, things started off so well.

We took a hackathon project that we built in 3 weeks, and grew it from 0 users to → 3.9 million users in less than 1 year.

The average daily user spent over 65 minutes per day on Blab — and most importantly — everyday we woke up to tweets like this:

Those aren’t just good signals, they are great for any 1 year old startup. Yet it didn’t work out. Why?

What went wrong #1 —Most live streams suck.

Of the 3.9 million total users, only 10% (~400,000) came back on a regular basis.

Why?

Because most live streams aren’t interesting enough to justify stopping what they are doing to watch your broadcast.

The struggle with Livestreaming — is that we need to show you something awesome, that’s being made right now.

Turns out, that’s really tough. It killed Meerkat, and Periscope & FB Live are feeling the pain right now. Really, only Twitch has gotten it right with live streaming video games.

In live streaming, the churn is real.

We hoped replays would help, but less than 10% of all watch time was on replays. Why? Because the off-the-cuff, unpredictable nature of livestreams make for terrible replays. The better the live stream was, the worse the replay will be.

Reason #2 —Making content vs. Making friends

For the past 6 months, there has been a growing divide between two groups of users:

  1. People who use Blab as a way to broadcast to an audience.

2. People who use Blab as a place to go to hangout with friends

It was exciting to see big names like ESPN, The UFC, Tony Robbins, Cisco, Adobe, IBM, SAP, Product Hunt use Blab to interact with their audience.

But the majority of usage came from everyday people “just hanging out”. They weren’t making content, they were making friends.

The best ‘content creators’ used it ~once a week, for ~2 hours. The people who were hanging out with friends used it 5–6 hours per day, every day.

Why was it so addictive?

It was a place to unwind after school or work. Without any scheduling or planning — you could find your friends hanging out on Blab. The lounge was ‘always on’, and the conversation would rage through the night until the sun comes out the next morning.

Unfortunately, this was a slow growing use. If you’re here to make new friends, you’re not bringing in your real friends.

Basically, the broadcasters brought in people, but it was infrequent.

The hangout crew were very frequent, but didn’t bring in new people.

This left us with a choice. Pivot to a different use case — (eg. gaming, b2b), or keep going with something we knew wouldn’t work.

So we’re kicking down the sandcastle, and re-building it as something new.

It’s not ready yet, but we’ll let you know. (UPDATE: it’s here now. We took the Blab live streaming tech — and specialized it for gamers on twitch)

Top 10 Highlights & Lowlights

#10 — The First Blab— The first Blab ever. Back when we had the 4 column layout and viewers could feel this.

#9 — Global Yoga— Waking up to a “digital yoga” class with people participating from all over the world.

#8 — Crashing & Failing UFC.com embedded us on their homepage for a big announcement, we were stoked. …But -we weren’t ready for the traffic and the stream crashed.

#7 —The Martin Shkreli Era

When Martin Shkreli started using Blab every single night, our community changed.

On one hand, he brought in tons of mainstream attention and 100k+ new users himself.

On the other hand, he was a polarizing figure and we had a month long wave of chaos from internet trolls & DDOS attacks.

#6 —Celebrity Sightings

As much as I try to be a mature adult, I melted every time I saw one of my heroes or mentors using the app.

Whether it was someone from the tech world (eg. Jason Fried Mazzeo Chris Sacca Robert Scoble), the sports world (@espn @UFC) or from the real world (eg. Tony Robbins firewalkScott Harrison)

I loved seeing faces that I grew up watching show up on Blab.

#5 — Traditions

The birth of community traditions.

Celebrating your “100th day” on Blab. Creating the Blabasaurus. 24 hour blabs, then 72 hour blabs. Flash Blabbing. And more.

#4— The shows

Cooking shows. Talk shows. Dating shows. Sports talk shows. Craft shows. & more.

Huge shoutout to everyone who put their talents on display for the rest of the world to see.

#3 —The wall of love

Even when the numbers started off small, we knew it was worth trying because of these tweets.

#2- The dance parties — Good times.

#1- The community

As you know, there ain’t no party like a Blab party.

Seeing hundreds of people fly in from different parts of the world for our meetups was amazing.

You guys rock. Thank you for the good times.

FAQ

Wait, why does Blab have to go? Can’t you just keep the site up? Why not charge users — I’d pay for it! Why didn’t you try THIS?? Are you guys stupid, you have a goldmine on your hands??

My team, from our investors down to our interns — came together to build a generational product.

Something that millions of people use, everyday.

For me growing up, these were things like AIM, Napster, Facebook, Pokemon, N64, Nickolodeon, or TGIF. For today’s teens, this is Snapchat, Instagram, etc.. Products so widely used and loved, they became a part of culture.

Blab could have pivoted into being the best webinar tool ever. Or a niche live streaming tool for Facebook. Or stayed small. But that wasn’t the bargain I struck with my team.

For us, we would rather fail trying to achieve our mission, than succeed at someone else’s mission.

For that reason, we’re taking what worked, and doubling down on it. We’re taking what didn’t work, and learning from it, and making adjustments.

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