Viagogo

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The correct title of this article is viagogo. The initial letter is shown capitalized due to technical restrictions.
viagogo
viagogo corporate logo
Type Private
Founded London, UK (2005)
Headquarters London, UK
Key people Eric Baker, Founder & CEO
Industry e-commerce
Products online secondary ticketing, online ticket exchange
Slogan The online ticket exchange
Website [1]


viagogo is an online ticket exchange aimed at the European market. It aims to allow people to buy and sell live event tickets in a safe and guaranteed way, and to bring "efficiency and transparency to what has traditionally been a murky market place".[1] It allows live event tickets to be bought and sold at any price, including above and below face value, and allows anyone to use the marketplace as long as they follow the rules. It charges buyers a 10% fee and sellers a 15% fee on each confirmed transaction.

The company was founded by Eric Baker, the co-founder of Stubhub in the United States[2]. Eric wrote the business model for StubHub while in business school at Stanford[citation needed], but left StubHub in 2004 due to a falling out with his co-founder[3]. Eric then decided to take the now-proven business model to Europe and founded viagogo to accomplish this.[2]

viagogo was launched in late summer 2006 with partnerships with Chelsea FC and Manchester United,[2][4][5][6][7] the first such deals of their kind in Europe.[citation needed] These deals let season ticket holders sell tickets to matches they cannot attend to other club members, ensuring that the tickets do not go to waste, that other fans get to go, and that the stadium stays full. In return, the clubs will receive yearly six-figure sums from viagogo.[1] Despite the fact that similar football tickets often sell illegally for a much higher premium, some fans have claimed the fees charged by the site are "disgusting" and "legalised touting".[1]

Under British law, unauthorized re-selling of Premier League and other football tickets is illegal - this restriction was introduced by the Government to prevent hooliganism. By working with the clubs and getting official authorization, viagogo is permitted to re-sell tickets to the clubs it works with, thus giving viagogo a government-sanctioned monopoly by being the only place where tickets to those clubs can be legally re-sold. Critics have suggested that this is legalised exploitation by the Football Clubs.

viagogo is backed by Index Ventures, who backed other ecommerce companies such as Skype, Betfair, and MySQL.

[edit] External links

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b c Bowers, Simon. "Fans condemn 'legalised touting' of season tickets", The Guardian, Guardian Newspapers Limited, 18 August 2006. Retrieved on 2006-08-20.
  2. ^ a b c Auchard, Eric. "European sports ticket reseller Web site unveiled", Reuters, 17 August 2006. Retrieved on 2006-08-20.
  3. ^ Charny, Ben (17 August 2006). Online ticket scalping comes to Europe. Marketwatch from Dow Jones. MarketWatch, Inc. Retrieved on 20 August, 2006.
  4. ^ The Times. "Football ticket resales kick off", The Times, Times Newspapers Ltd, 18 August 2006. Retrieved on 2006-08-20.
  5. ^ Sweney, Mark. "Clubs launch ticket resale site", The Guardian, Guardian Newspapers Limited, 18 August 2006. Retrieved on 2006-08-20.
  6. ^ Tackling the touts. bbc.co.uk. BBC Manchester (18 August 2006). Retrieved on 20 August, 2006.
  7. ^ Ticket exchange: clubs target touts. ITN News (18 August 2006). Retrieved on 20 August, 2006.