Net Perceptions | |
Industry: | software |
Founded: | 1996 |
Founders: | Steven Snyder, John T. Riedl, Joseph A. Konstan, Brad Miller, David Gardiner |
Hq Location: | Edina, Minnesota |
Net Perceptions was a leading seller of personalization technology during the Internet boom of the late 1990s. It was based in Edina, Minnesota. One of their first customers was Amazon.[1] [2] [3]
In the Summer of 1996, David Gardiner, a former Ph.D. student of John Riedl, introduced Riedl to Steven Snyder. Snyder had been an early employee at Microsoft, but had left Microsoft to come to Minnesota to do a Ph.D. in Psychology. He realized the commercial potential of collaborative filtering, and encouraged the team to found a company in April 1996. By June, Gardiner, Snyder, Miller, Riedl, and Konstan incorporated their company, and by July had their first round of funding, from Hummer Winblad Venture Partners.[4] Net Perceptions went on to be one of the leading companies in personalization during the Internet boom of the late 1990s,[5] went public on March 29, 2000 offering 2,000,000 shares of common stock, resulting in net proceeds to the company of $84.8 million, with 26,297,863 outstanding shares,[6] had 400 employees and stock at $60 per share,[7] and acquired marketing services startup KD1 for $126 million.[8] Then over time the stock lost 95 percent of its value, and it laid off most employees.[7] The company was delisted from the NASDAQ September 3, 2004,[9] and returned about $40 million to stockholders that same year.[10]
In 2004, Kanders & Co. bought the company and moved it to Greenwich, Connecticut[11] "to build a diversified, global industrial products group."[12]