MobileStorm

mobileStorm is a SaaS based product for multi-channel communications. Businesses use mobileStorm to build a database of customers and gives them the ability to reach people on smart phones via email, text-message, push notification, secure messages to mobile apps and sites, as well as voice and fax broadcast. The communications firm started by Jared Reitzin is based in Los Angeles, California.[1] To date, the company has sent billions of messages and launched more than a million marketing campaigns.[2] Some of their clients include Overstock.com, NASCAR, American Idol and Kaiser Permanente.[3]

mobileStorm
Private
IndustryWeb marketing
Founded1999
HeadquartersLos Angeles, California
Key people
Jared Reitzin, Dave Carlson, Jonathan Schreiber
Number of employees
50+
WebsitemobileStorm.com

Company history

In 1998, at the age of 19, Reitzin dropped out of college to start a record label called Katalyst Music Group.[4][5] Within Katalyst, Reitzin started a technology division where they built websites for larger labels.[4] Early in the company’s founding, Jonathan Schreiber, an advisor, inspired Reitzin's interest in mobile technology.[6]

mobileStorm officially launched in 1999 and incorporated in August 2000.[7] They raised $40,000 initially from friends and family and were entirely self-funded.[5]

In 2007, mobileStorm announced an angel round of funding with eonBusiness and opened additional offices in San Francisco and Orange County.[2][8][9] The San Francisco branch will focus on new accounts, sales, and customer service.[2][10] In 2008, mobileStorm was named the email service provider of FreemantleEnterprises, which manages shows like American Idol and The Price Is Right.[11] mobileStorm’s former products include Stun!, which allowed small to medium-sized businesses to build a database of customers and market to them via text messaging, email, voice and fax, and Bolt, a hosted service designed for large enterprises that deployed marketing, customer service, and transactional messaging programs.[4][7] The two platforms are currently integrated into "mobileStorm for Marketing."

gollark: Flashy features like higher-res screens (and higher refresh rate) are pretty much useless to me and drain more battery.
gollark: I agree.
gollark: Personally, I'm pretty dissatisfied with the state of the phone market, since user control is being taken away constantly because "sEcUriTy", the lack of standardization on ARM and monolithic design of Android makes actually getting updates after a while unlikely, and I don't like the "entire front is screen except there's randomly a bit missing for a camera" aesthetic which is a thing now, or the fact that battery life is somehow stagnant despite increasingly good battery tech.
gollark: Oh, the magisk app or whatever it is too, right.
gollark: F.lux, Termux, ... I think that's it?

References

  1. The Entrepreneur’s Sales Guide. Entrepreneur. August 5, 2010.
  2. Bell, Lauren. MobileStorm receives funding from eonBusiness. Direct Marketing News. October 30, 2007.
  3. mobileStorm Launches Mobile Marketing Offer. PRWeb. June 8, 2010.
  4. Pick, Tom. WMC Interviews: Jared Reitzin. The Web Market Central. November 5, 2007.
  5. Interview: Jared Reitzin, CEO of mobileStorm. Social Tech. February 17, 2004.
  6. Jared Reitzin Interview. Young Entrepreneur. July 5, 2008.
  7. Interview with Jared Rietzin from mobileStorm, a Web-based marketing company. Entrepreneurship Interviews. August 9, 2007.
  8. mobileStorm Gets Backing from eonBusiness. Goliath: Business Knowledge on Demand. October 30, 2007.
  9. mobileStorm Announces Funding. Daily Motion.
  10. mobileStorm Expands in Bay Area. Social Tech. January 28, 2008.
  11. mobileStorm to Provide Digital Marketing Tools and Strategy to FreeMantle Enterprise. Reuters. January 7, 2008.
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