Fuze Box
Private | |
Industry | Telecommunications software and services, web conferencing and video conferencing |
Founded | 2009 |
Headquarters | San Francisco, California (United States) |
Key people | David Obrand (Chief Executive Officer); Peter V. Sperling (Chairman and Co-Founder); David F. Hofstatter (Former Chief Executive Officer and co-Founder) |
Products | Fuze Free; Fuze Pro; Fuze Enterprise |
Number of employees | ~150 (April 2014) |
Website | www.fuze.com |
FuzeBox, Inc. (formerly CallWave, Inc. and Fuze Box, Inc.) is a provider of Internet and mobile based unified communications solutions.
Founded in 2009, Fuze is a private company headquartered in San Francisco, California with offices in Santa Barbara, California and Sofia, Bulgaria.
History
In 2006, founders Jeff Cavins and Mike Buday, started the Fuze product project as an investment thesis while Cavins worked at Azure Capital, a Venture Capital firm in San Francisco, and Mike Buday ran a software company called Intelligent Gadgets. In 2007, when Cavins was recruited by CallWave to replace outgoing CEO and founder, David Hofstatter, Cavins proceeded to bolster the company's aging product strategy and made two acquisitions: Web Messenger located in Sofia, Bulgaria and Intelligent Gadgets, which brought Buday to the company full-time. The Fuze product was developed over the next year and a half and shown as a beta product at the 2008 CTIA show in Las Vegas. Press and media reception to the product was outstanding and the company increased its development efforts. In July 2009, CallWave, the parent company to Fuze, changed its name to FuzeBox (renamed Fuze in 2014). Under the leadership of Jeff Cavins, the company acquired mobile instant messaging client Web Messenger .[1] and in November 2008, 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 bought back all public shares in what is known as a take private transaction and delisted itself from NASDAQ.[2][3]
Just after the take private, in July 2009 the company changed its trade name to FuzeBox. The following year, in January 2010, FuzeBox launched movie-editing software Fuze Movie.,[4] and in March 2010 the company launched third party Twitter client, Tweetshare.[5] As of Q4, 2010, the company had over 2.3 [6] million subscribers to their platform. As recently as several years ago, the company launched products and services in effort to support their mission to be the next generation visual collaboration leader. In 2011, FuzeBox was featured in Apple’s Global TV Campaign (“We Will Always”, 2011 iPad commercial).[7]
In 2012, CallWave (parent company to FuzeBox), and its large patent portfolio, were spun out into a newly formed company that retained the name CallWave. Commensurate with the spin-out, a new patent portfolio company was formed and the company recruited Richard Sanders to serve as President and CEO. Sanders had most recently built and led the global IP litigation practice at Cooley, LLP and was recognized as one of the most effective and successful IP attorneys in the world. Also in 2012, FuzeBox raised a Series A financing round of $20M, bringing in new investors, Index Ventures and Khosla Ventures. In 2013, under Cavins' leadership, the company was recognized by Inc. 500 as the 125th fastest growing company in America, the 23rd in California and the 13th in Silicon Valley.[8] in Sept 2013, the company announced that it had raised a Series B financing of $26M and hired new executives from Yammer. In September, David Obrand was announced as CEO and a few months later Cavins left the board to pursue other business ventures. In late 2014 co-founder of Hermes Growth Partners, Bobby Yerramilli-Rao was named CEO and Charlie Newark-French was named President of Fuze.
Products and services
Fuze is an easy to use visual communications solution that brings people together and helps organizations stay better connected across any device, down the hall or around the world. Fuze enables rich interaction, High Definition Voice/Video and content collaboration that leads to deeper engagement and increased productivity. Fuze is compatible with Windows, Mac OS X, iOS, and Android devices.
Fuze Free
(30 day Pro Package trial included)
- 3 Participants
- 3 Video streams
- Cloud Content
- Screen share
- Unlimited VoIP
- Online Support
Fuze Pro
- 25 Participants
- 12 Video streams
- Cloud content
- Screen share with remote control
- Unlimited VoIP
- Unlimited US toll audio
- Phone Support
Fuze Premium
- 250 Participants
- 12 Video streams
- Cloud content
- Screen share with remote control
- Unlimited VoIP
- Unlimited US toll audio
- Webinar
- Recording
Customize Pro and Premium Plan with add-ons
- Fuze for Rooms
- Telepresence Connect
- Admin console
- Single Sign On
- Custom branding
- Analytics
- Premium support
- Toll-free and international audio packages
Corporate governance
Board of Directors:
- Peter Sperling
- Jeff Cavins
- David Obrand
- Jerry Murdock
- Bobby Yerramilli-Rao
Management team:
- David Obrand, Chief Executive Officer
- Ritesh Bansal, Chief Technology Officer
- Michael Buday, Chief Software Designer
References
- ↑ "CallWave Acquires WebMessenter". BNET. 2008-08-06.
- ↑ Kincaid, Jason (July 3, 2009). "CallWave Delists From NASDAQ; Fuze Meeting Rises From The Ashes". TechCrunch. Retrieved 2009-07-05.
- ↑ Hoge, Patrick (August 20, 2009). "CallWave becomes Fuze Box". San Francisco Business Times. Retrieved 2009-09-03.
- ↑ "Fuze Movie Announced". Pro Video Coalition. 2010-01-21.
- ↑ "Tweetshare: Fuze Box’s Take on Branded Twitter Channels". TechCrunch. 2010-03-08.
- ↑ "Thanks to Fuze Box, you can run meetings from your iPad". VentureBeat. 2010-09-21.
- ↑ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qSRPWWSeJww
- ↑ http://www.inc.com/profile/fuzebox