Fuze Box

FuzeBox, Inc.
Type Private
Industry Telecommunications software and services, web conferencing and video conferencing
Founded October 1998
Headquarters San Francisco, California (United States)
Key people Jeffrey M Cavins (Chief Executive Officer); Peter V. Sperling (Chairman and Co-Founder); David F. Hofstatter (Former Chief Executive Officer and co-Founder)
Products Fuze Meeting; Fuze Messenger; Fuze Telepresence Connect
Employees ~80 (November 2010)
Website www.fuzebox.com

FuzeBox, Inc. (formerly CallWave, Inc. and Fuze Box, Inc.) is a provider of Internet and mobile based unified communications solutions.

Founded in 1998, FuzeBox is a private company headquartered in San Francisco, California with offices in Santa Barbara, California and Sofia, Bulgaria.

Contents

History

FuzeBox was founded as CallWave by Robert A. Dolan, Peter Sperling, David Trandel, and David F. Hoffstatter in 1998. The team secured $30 million in venture funding and then led the company to profitability in three years of operations. In 2004, CallWave achieved approximately $40 million in revenues with $12 million in net earnings. Hofstatter took CallWave public in September 2004 under the NASDAQ ticker name CALL.[1]

CallWave launched their first product, FaxWave, one of the early fax-to-email services. In October 1999, CallWave released Internet Answering Machine™ (IAM)[2] – a free service that allowed a user to view caller information and listen to a voicemail without being disconnected from their dial-up connection. Within 4 months, there were 1 million subscribers using the free service.[3] In March 2001, the company became profitable,[2] and in April 2001,[2] CallWave converted IAM from a free to paid service. Due to the profitability of Internet Answering Machine™, CallWave abandoned their original plans to provide broadband voice to desktops in favor of pursuing internet telephony.

Under Hoffstatter, CallWave experienced a steady decline in sales and profits including losses for the years 2006 through 2008. Sales declined to $20 million with a net loss of $5.6 million in 2008.[4] The stock price dropped to under $1 in early 2009, thus failing to meet NASDAQ minimum standards.[5]

In August 2008, CallWave acquired mobile instant messaging client Web Messenger .[6] and in November of that year, relaunched the product as Fuze Messenger. In May 2009, CallWave announced the release of their web conferencing software, Fuze Meeting, for desktop and mobile devices.

On July 3, 2009, CallWave renamed the company FuzeBox, bought back all public shares and delisted itself from NASDAQ.[1][7]

In January 2010, FuzeBox launched movie-editing software Fuze Movie.,[8] and in March 2010 the company launched third party Twitter client, Tweetshare.[9] As of Q4, 2010, the company had over 2.3 [10] million subscribers to their platform. The company continues to launch products and services in effort to support their mission to be the next generation visual collaboration leader.

Products and services

Fuze Meeting

Fuze Meeting is an online meeting, video conferencing and collaboration software package that enables users to host and attend web based conferences and share their desktop screen with other remote users via the web and mobile devices. Fuze Meeting is browser-based, built on Flash with its own proprietary back-end technologies. It allows meetings on Mac, Windows, iPad, iPhone, BlackBerry, Android phones, and Android tablets.[11][12][13] Standard conference bridge and cloud-based storage is also available.

Fuze Messenger

An IM consolidation tool for iPhone and BlackBerry phones.[14]

Fuze Telepresence Connect

Fuze Telepresence Connect is a telepresence gateway for H.323, SIP and H.264 audio-visual communication systems (Polycom, Tandberg and LifeSize) to connect to personal devices such as iPad, Android tablets, PC’s and Apple computers. Fuze Telepresence Connect also integrates with FuzeBox's cloud-based Fuze Meeting collaboration platform to bring web conferencing features into telepresence environments. [15] Some of its key features include HD multi-party video conferencing, error resilience, resolution and rate matching and support for video standards. [16]

Corporate governance

Board of Directors:

Management team:

References

  1. ^ a b Kincaid, Jason (July 3, 2009). "CallWave Delists From NASDAQ; Fuze Meeting Rises From The Ashes". TechCrunch. http://www.techcrunch.com/2009/07/03/callwave-delists-from-nasdaq-fuze-meeting-rises-from-the-ashes/. Retrieved 2009-07-05. 
  2. ^ a b c Form S-1 Registration Statement-Callwave, Inc., 2004-05-13, http://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1115091/000119312504086508/ds1.htm, retrieved January 17 
  3. ^ "CallWave’s Internet Telephone Services Grow to 1,000,000 Subscribers in Four Months". Business Wire. 2000-02-23. http://www.allbusiness.com/media-telecommunications/6393793-1.html. 
  4. ^ "CallWave financials 2006 - 2008". Hoovers (D&B). 2009-09-10. http://www.hoovers.com/company/CallWave_Inc/hsjyhi-1-1njea5.html. 
  5. ^ Sarah Lacy (2009-08-19). "Fuze Box: Sitting Pretty with No Public Shareholders and 1.1 Million Users". TechCrunch. http://www.techcrunch.com/2009/08/19/fuze-box-sitting-pretty-with-no-public-shareholders-and-11-million-users/. Retrieved 2009-09-09. 
  6. ^ "CallWave Acquires WebMessenter". BNET. 2008-08-06. http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m0EIN/is_2008_August_6/ai_n27982955/?tag=content;col1. 
  7. ^ Hoge, Patrick (August 20, 2009). "CallWave becomes Fuze Box". San Francisco Business Times. http://www.bizjournals.com/sanfrancisco/stories/2009/08/17/daily53.html. Retrieved 2009-09-03. 
  8. ^ "Fuze Movie Announced". Pro Video Coalition. 2010-01-21. http://provideocoalition.com/index.php/freshdv/story/fuze_movie_announced/. 
  9. ^ "Tweetshare: Fuze Box’s Take on Branded Twitter Channels". TechCrunch. 2010-03-08. http://techcrunch.com/2010/03/08/tweetshare-fuze-boxs-take-on-branded-twitter-channels/. 
  10. ^ "Thanks to Fuze Box, you can run meetings from your iPad". VentureBeat. 2010-09-21. http://venturebeat.com/2010/09/21/thanks-to-fuze-box-you-can-run-meetings-from-your-ipad/. 
  11. ^ Clint Boulton (2009-09-22). "Fuze Meeting Lets Users Push Meetings to Facebook, Twitter". eWEEK. http://www.eweek.com/c/a/Messaging-and-Collaboration/Fuze-Meeting-Lets-Users-Push-Meetings-to-Facebook-Twitter-615426/. Retrieved 2009-09-22. 
  12. ^ Al Sacco (2008-09-17). "BlackBerry, Smartphone Users Get FUZE Conferencing Service from CallWave". CIO. http://www.cio.com/article/449676/BlackBerry_Smartphone_Users_Get_FUZE_Conferencing_Service_from_CallWave. Retrieved 2009-09-10. 
  13. ^ Rick Brodia (2011-03-30). "The Fuze Meeting App: Best Reason Yet to Buy a Tablet?". BNET. http://www.bnet.com/blog/businesstips/the-fuze-meeting-app-best-reason-yet-to-buy-a-tablet/10922?utm_source=twitterfeed&utm_medium=twitter/. 
  14. ^ Tony Peric (2009-06-24). "Fuze Meeting for iPhone – Online and Mobile Meeting Services". iPhoneCTO. http://iphonecto.com/2009/06/24/fuze-meeting-for-iphone-online-and-mobile-meeting-services/. Retrieved 2009-09-10. 
  15. ^ "Announcing Fuze Telepresence Connect: The First Mobile Telepresence Solution to Seamlessly Integrate with Polycom™, Tandberg™ or LifeSize™ Systems" (in English) (Press release). PRWeb. 2011-06-15. http://www.prweb.com/releases/2011/6/prweb8574637.htm. 
  16. ^ John Paul Titlow (2011-06-15). "Fuze Meeting Now Integrates With High-End Telepresence Systems". ReadWriteWeb. http://www.readwriteweb.com/biz/2011/06/fuze-meeting-integrates-with-high-end-telepresence-systems.php. Retrieved 2011-06-15. 

External links