The examples and perspective in this article may not include all significant viewpoints .(July 2022) |
Company type | Division |
---|---|
Industry | |
Founded | 2010 |
Founder | Tomer Bar-Zeev |
Fate | Acquired by Unity |
Headquarters | , Israel |
Number of locations | 12 |
Key people | Tomer Bar-Zeev (CEO & chairman) [1] : 79 |
Revenue | US$553 million (2021) |
US$82.4 million (2021) | |
US$59.8 million (2021) | |
Total assets | US$1.45 billion (2021) |
Total equity | US$1.10 billion (2021) |
Number of employees | 1,121 (December 2021) |
Parent | Unity |
Subsidiaries |
|
Website | www |
Footnotes /references [1] |
ironSource Ltd. is an Israeli software company that focuses on developing technologies for app monetization and distribution, with its core products focused on the app economy. [2] [3]
Among others, ironSource was chosen as one of the '20 hottest startups' in 2013 and was listed in the Wall Street Journal "Billion Dollar Startup Club". [4] [5] In September 2015, ironSource was named by the World Economic Forum as a Global Growth Company. [6] ironSource has also been named one of the hottest pre-IPO tech companies by Business Insider, and one of Israel's most innovative companies by Fast Company. [7] [8] [9]
ironSource has over 1000 employees, with more than half dedicated to research and development. Headquartered in Tel Aviv, ironSource also has offices in New York, San Francisco, London, Beijing, Shenzhen, Tokyo, and Seoul.
Founded in 2010 in Tel Aviv, ironSource provides platforms and tools for application developers including analytics, user monetization, conversion, acquisition and optimization for all devices. [10] [11]
In the first quarter of 2013, ironSource acquired Israeli advertising technology and network company AfterDownload Ltd. for $28 million to expand its integrated distribution, installation and value-building tools for software developers, publishers and advertisers. [12]
In August 2013, Ironsource announced merger talks with advertising company Babylon, [13] [14] [15] but the deal was called off after Babylon lost high-value contracts with Google and Yahoo due to violations. [16] [9]
Also in August 2013, ironSource opened an office in San Francisco. [17] In May 2014, they opened an office in Beijing, China. [18] In April 2015, ironSource opened an office in the United Kingdom. [19]
In Fall 2014, ironSource raised approximately $85 million from a group of international investors and acquired the mobile game studio Upopa. [20] [21] At this time, IronSource was considered a key company in Israel's 'Download Valley'. [22] [23]
In September 2015, ironSource merged Supersonic into its mobile operation for a price estimated to be $200 million. The new organization rebranded itself as ironSource. [24] [25] [26] [27]
In June 2016, ironSource announced the acquisition of Sequoia-backed video technology company StreamRail. [28]
In August 2017, ironSource was reported to be "in advanced talks" to be bought for $1.8 billion by a consortium of investment funds. [29] [30] [9]
In October 2019, CVC Capital Partners acquired a minority stake in ironSource for over $400 million. [31]
In February 2020, ironSource announced the launch of its new mobile game studio, Supersonic Studios. Within a couple of months, Supersonic Studios "scored three games in the top 10 mobile charts", with their games amassing more than 35 million downloads. [32] [33] [34]
In January 2021, ironSource acquired mobile advertisement quality measurement company Soomla. [13]
In February 2021, ironSource acquired Luna Labs, the creative management platform and creator of mobile advertisement creation tools like Luna Playable and Luna Replay. [35]
On June 29, 2021, ironSource went public via a merger with an SPAC backed by private equity firm Thoma Bravo Advantage. [36]
In July 2022, Unity Technologies agreed to buy ironSource in an all-stock deal worth US$4.4 billion. [37] On completion of the deal, Unity shareholders will own about 73.5% of the combined company, and current IronSource shareholders will keep about 26.5%. [38] The deal was met with criticism from game developers due to ironSource's affiliation with malware. [39] Unity completed the buyout in November 2022. [40]
In February 2011, the company released its first product, InstallCore, as an open-source SDK [41] [42] [43] for a cross-platform installer creation tool and advertisement-delivery platform. InstallCore was observed to use stealth techniques to avoid observation by anti-virus and other security software, and to bypass validation checks by signing programs with illegitimate security certificates. [44] This was classified as a Potentially Unwanted Application by Sophos in 2014 [45] and by Microsoft Essential in 2015, [46] with Malwarebytes identifying the program as "a family of bundlers that installs more than one application on the user's computer". [47] The product was discontinued in 2020 and is no longer supported by the company. [48]
In September 2014, ironSource acquired gaming company Upopa. [49] [50]
ironSource is one of the first mobile SDK providers to support augmented reality advertisements for game developers. [51] [52]
On October 3, 2018, ironSource released an advertisement revenue measurement tool that allows developers to measure the effectiveness of advertisement campaigns aligned with other similar tools used amongst developers as means of evaluating return on advertisement spend (ROAS). [53] [54]
Microsoft Advertising is an online advertising platform developed by Microsoft, where advertisers bid to display brief ads, service offers, product listings and videos to web users. Provides pay per click advertising on search engines Bing, Yahoo! and DuckDuckGo, as well as on other websites, mobile apps, and videos.
Massive Incorporated was an American advertising company that provided software and services to dynamically host advertisements within video games. Massive Incorporated was purchased by Microsoft in May 2006 for approximately $200 million to $400 million.
Viola Ventures, , established in 2000, is an Israeli venture capital fund with over $1.3 billion under management.
Wix.com Ltd. or simply “Wix” is an Israeli software company, publicly listed in the US, that provides cloud-based web development services. It offers tools for creating HTML5 websites and mobile sites using online drag-and-drop editing. Along with its headquarters and other offices in Israel, Wix also has offices in Brazil, Canada, Germany, India, Ireland, Japan, Lithuania, Poland, the Netherlands, the United States, Ukraine, and Singapore.
Perion Network Ltd. is a global technology company that provides digital advertising products and services. It is headquartered in Holon, Israel, with offices in Tel Aviv, New York, Los Angeles, London, Chicago, Boston, Atlanta, Toronto, and Kyiv.
Unity Software Inc. is an American video game software development company based in San Francisco. It was founded in Denmark in 2004 as Over the Edge Entertainment and changed its name in 2007. Unity Technologies is best known for the development of Unity, a licensed game engine used to create video games and other applications.
InMobi is an Indian multinational technology company, based in Bangalore. Its mobile-first platform allows brands, developers and publishers to engage consumers through contextual mobile advertising. The company was founded in 2007 under the name mKhoj by Naveen Tewari, Mohit Saxena, Amit Gupta and Abhay Singhal.
Mindspark Interactive Network, Inc. was an operating business unit of IAC known for the development and marketing of entertainment and personal computing software, as well as mobile application development. Mindspark's mobile division acquired iOS application developer Apalon in 2014, which was known for popular entertainment applications such as Weather Live, Emoji Keypad, and Calculator Pro.
Corona Labs Inc., formerly Ansca Mobile, was a software company based in Palo Alto, California, best known for building a 2D game and app development platform. Its most popular product was the Corona SDK, a cross-platform mobile development framework that builds native apps for iOS, Android, Amazon Kindle, Windows Phone, tvOS, Android TV, and Mac and Windows desktops from a single code base. Corona products use the programming language Lua. The company changed hands several times before closing on May 1, 2020.
InstallCore was an installation and content distribution platform created by ironSource, including a software development kit (SDK) for Windows and Mac OS X. The program allowed those using it for distribution to include monetization by advertisements or charging for installation, and made its installations invisible to the user and its anti-virus software.
Google Play Services is a proprietary software package produced by Google for installation on Android devices. It consists of background services and libraries for use by mobile apps running on the device. When it was introduced in 2012, it provided access to the Google+ APIs and OAuth 2.0. It expanded to cover a variety of Google services, allowing applications to communicate with the services through common means.
Namo Media was a technology startup providing in-stream advertisements for mobile applications. It was acquired by Twitter in June 2014 for between $50M and $100M.
Chartboost is a San Francisco-based mobile game in-app programmatic advertising and monetization platform. Chartboost SDK enables developers to monetize on their mobile apps and connect advertisers to global in-app inventory. Chartboost's platform allows video game developers to create customized interstitial and video ads to promote new games. Developers have direct access to game data derived from Chartboost-enabled games. As of 2016, Chartboost had been integrated into more than 300,000 games with 40 billion game sessions per month.
Deeplink is the developer of deeplink.me, a deep linking platform that directs URLs to content within mobile apps.
Download Valley is a cluster of software companies in Israel, producing and delivering adware to be installed alongside downloads of other software. The primary purpose is to monetize shareware and downloads. These software items are commonly browser toolbars, adware, browser hijackers, spyware, and malware. Another group of products are download managers, possibly designed to induce or trick the user to install adware, when downloading a piece of desired software or mobile app from a certain source.
Crashlytics was a Boston, Massachusetts-based software company founded in May 2011 by entrepreneurs Wayne Chang and Jeff Seibert. Crashlytics helps collecting, analyzing and organizing app crash reports.
AppLovin Corporation is an American mobile technology company headquartered in Palo Alto, California. Founded in 2012, it operated in stealth mode until 2014. AppLovin enables developers of all sizes to market, monetize, analyze and publish their apps through its mobile advertising, marketing, and analytics platforms MAX, AppDiscovery, and SparkLabs. AppLovin operates Lion Studios, which works with game developers to promote and publish their mobile games. AppLovin also has large investments in various mobile game publishers. In 2020, 49% of AppLovin's revenue came from businesses using its software and 51% from consumers making in-app purchases.
Saar Wilf is an Israeli entrepreneur, businessman, angel investor and poker player who provides capital for start-up businesses.