Bumble, Timeleft, Sweatpals: A Market Map for Paid Community 2.0
Let's talk about the rise of paid community platforms. What's the cultural shift fueling connection commerce?
Investor-backed players are scaling in this area. TimeLeft is the poster child for this category. They've raised around $7M in investor dollars, and their app connects 60,000 strangers every month. Users pay $16 to be matched by an algorithm with strangers, then meet for dinner at a local restaurant.
Bumble, the app known for one-to-one matching - originally for dating, is heavily focused on friendship building. They recently acquired Geneva, a community-focused app, and now they’re using the acquired tech to relaunch the Bumble BFF app.
Sweatpals is another new platform where users can build community for fitness meetups.
TimeLeft's mission is to "restore belonging to our cities," and there's certainly a need for more connection. Researchers are calling our current state a "friendship recession." From 2014 to 2019, the average American's weekly social time with friends dropped by 37%, and in 2023, the US Surgeon General declared the loneliness epidemic a public health crisis.
Will these platforms really solve for connection?
Connecting in groups for specific events or exercise could be a great way to meet new people. If you just moved to a new city or country, these apps are a great tool to have in your toolkit.
These platforms are likely a strong business model because they're tech products—as opposed to physical "third spaces" with high overhead costs.
Critics argue these platforms reduce authentic human connection to an economic transaction. Some users describe feeling "sized up for usefulness" at meetups.
A study from Jeffery Hall in 2018 at the University of Kansas found people need to spend 40–60 hours together to move from an acquaintance to a casual friend and 200 hours to become a close friend. This suggests meetup platforms that facilitate a one-time meetup might be ineffective.
When an investor-backed startup is built to scale rapidly, can they be aligned with the slower, authentic act of making friends?
Will these platforms fulfill their missions for connection? And will they become successful businesses along the way?
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