"24 editors & writers across Europe, Australia, Middle East, Africa, Asia and North & South America. One of the top 10
most influential blogs in the world (sources: Technorati and Techmeme).
3,7 million monthly visitors (June 2011)
5 million monthly page views (June 2011)
Top 5 countries: US, UK,
Canada, The Netherlands and India
92% growth over the last 6 months
12% of traffic from mobile devices
500,000 Twitter followers
100,000 Facebook fans
50,000 RSS subscribers
How it all started: TNW Events - The Next Web goes
back to 2006 when Boris, Arjen and Patrick organized our first conference. It
was planned as a one-off to promote our own little startup named Fleck.com. But
with 300+ attendees and a great line-up of speakers – Kevin Kelly, Kevin Rose
and Michael Arrington among others – it turned out a lot more successful than
we ever imagined. After this first conference we realized we had something that
people were waiting for. So we promptly started organizing The Next Web
Conference 2007 and we have grown ever since. The Next Web Conference aside, we
organize several other events like Bowlr, Kings of Code and the upcoming TNW
Mobile Conference in London.
TNW Blog - In January 2008, The Next Web blog launched
as a spin-off to the conference in 2008. Over the last few years this site has
grown into one of the world’s leading technology blogs. Lead by our Editor in
Chief and partner Zee M Kane, the blog is currently ranked in the top 10 most
influential blogs in the world according to Technorati. Together with you,
another 3.7 million readers visit us every month and read more than 5 million
pages.
We live to bring news and views from an international
perspective. With a brilliant team of editors & writers across Europe,
Australia, Middle East, Africa, Asia and North & South America, you can
rest assured that if it’s worth hearing about: you’ll hear it from us first.
TNW Labs - Now if this is all sounding like the cliché
success story from a little child’s book, don’t you worry. We have had numerous
projects that started little and shrunk exponentially. But at The Next Web we
embrace failure and in that way we ensure that a lot more beautiful stuff keeps
us occupied every day. So these are the ones that made it out of TNW Labs:
Twitter Counter started as a self funded startup in
our head office in Amsterdam,
The Netherlands. Today with 550,000+ monthly visits and 2.1 million page views
it has grown into the number 1 stats site for Twitter users. Twitter Counter
became profitable within the first 6 months after launch and has been growing
phenomenally ever since.
Paydro.com, an online ticketing and payment system,
found its roots when we organized The Next Web Conference in 2008 for the 3rd
time. We kept bumping in to the limited features of existing ticketing
services, so we built our own. After the event we noticed other event
organizers had the same ‘problems’ so we kept on improving to introduce Paydro
a year later.
PressDoc.com is the press release reinvented. Part of
The Next Web family since 2009 is this flexible new platform for the quick and
simple creation of “media enriched” press releases. It makes press releases
open, easy to find, and quick to share.
Wakoopa.com understands what people do in their
digital lives. In a privacy conscious way, the technology tracks what websites
people visit, what ads they see, or what apps they use. Data essential for
making decisions in any digital market.
TNW Games - SquadCoach.com is a online football
management game, currently based on the real Dutch competition. The free game
will appeal to every football fan, as they can challenge their friends to
determine who has the most knowledge of this huge popular sport.
Hi Res print logo - What? Did you read this awesome
story but actually just wanted our logo? Right click and download it below or
download Full Res and AI File here".
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