Skip to content


Gamifying The Job Search: Identified Hits 10M Users, Nabs $21M In Series B Funding

identified-logo

“People crave feedback on their professional lives,” say Brendan Wallace and Adeyemi Ajao, co-founders and co-CEOs of Identified, a young San Francisco-based startup that has been hard at work at gamifying the job search. Today, while millions of resumes live in the cloud on sites like LinkedIn, job seekers still aren’t providing all the relevant details on their online and social profiles that would help recruiters identify them as standout candidates. To encourage people to do more with their professional profiles, the startup created its so-called “Identified Score” to measure how in-demand a user’s background is to prospective employers in realtime.

This provides incentive for users to remain active on the site, competing against friends and those with similar backgrounds in a gamified environment to boost their scores. But, knowing that users want more direct feedback on how they can improve their career tracks, Identified wants to go further and is setting its sights on becoming a recommendation engine. To do so, the startup is announcing today that it has closed on $21 million in new funding, bringing its total venture capital investment to $26.5 million.

The round was co-led by VantagePoint Capital Partners, a $1 billion fund, and Capricorn Investment Group, Jeff Skoll’s $4 billion fund, which also recently invested in enterprise social network darling, Yammer. A number of Identified’s previous investors also re-upped and participated in the round, including Tim Draper, Bill Draper, Innovation Endeavors, DST’s Alexander Tamas, Social + Capital’s Chamath Palihapitiya, Paige Craig, and Farmville founder Zao Yang — to name a few. As a result of the financing, VantagePoint Managing Director Bill Harding will be joining the company’s board of directors.

Launched in September 2011, Identified has reached 7.5 million active users in the past eight months, alongside a total of 10 million registered users that have connected with Facebook, importing their Facebook information and friend networks. The co-founders tell us that, of those users, 90 percent are under the age of 30, with the average being 23, which is where the founders believe Identified sets itself apart from LinkedIn. In comparison, the average age of LinkedIn users is about 42, Wallace says, with 60 percent of users being over the age of 35.

Yet for apps, as many know, that active user stat is key, but most struggle to find any significant engagement. As Andreessen Horowitz’s Jeff Jordan discusses, most apps people install, view once or twice, then rarely come back. Thus, for Identified, the focus has been developing the game dynamics inherent to (and around) its Identified Score — to incentivize users to fill out detailed profiles and a short-form resume so that they can find out their score.

Wallace tells us that the average user brings 10 additional data points (35 percent of users have added their school, major, company, job titles, years worked, age, and location) to their profiles, which, in turn, boost their scores and presumably make them more desirable to recruiters. On the flip side, Identified also gives scores to schools and companies so that job seekers can gauge their relative desirability.

That being said, Identified is playing in a crowded space, with LinkedIn owning a membership of more than 150 million users and Viadeo at over 40 million. Then there’s the startup’s closest competitor: BranchOut — the professional network that runs on top of Facebook. BranchOut recently raised $25 million in new funding, bringing its total investment to $49 million — from Accel, Norwest, Redpoint, Floodgate, and others. The startup has been growing fast, now standing at over 25 million registered users, over 13.5 million of which are active on the app each month, with much of that growth coming from its mobile app.

Like BranchOut, Identified isn’t entertaining questions about exit strategies, the startup is laser-focused on building a big company with an IPO being part of its aspirations for the future. Identified now has over 50 employees, and the co-founders say that its new round will be used to continue growing its team, with the primary focus being on game designers and data scientists. (Wallace says that it’s already hired a handful of former Zynga employees in an effort to help enhance the ways in which it’s using data and analytics to offer a more gamified and sticky user experience.)

That’s why the startup chose two late-stage investors to lead its series B, as the co-founders believe that, regardless of competition, they’re tapping into a big market, with both near and long-term ambitions centering around leveraging its data set for the enterprise. The startup will be releasing a recruitment search product in July, through which it hopes to begin capitalizing on its professional data to offer its users recommendations on the types of paths mentors or jobs that would be best suited to their careers.

Updating

For more on Identified, check them out at home here.


Read more : Gamifying The Job Search: Identified Hits 10M Users, Nabs $21M In Series B Funding

Posted in Startups, Web.

Tagged with , , , , , , , , , .


0 Responses

Stay in touch with the conversation, subscribe to the RSS feed for comments on this post.



Some HTML is OK

or, reply to this post via trackback.