Tatango

Tatango is a U.S. mobile marketing company that specializes in text message marketing (SMS/MMS) services for enterprise type clients.[2][3][4][5]

Tatango
dot-com company
IndustryShort Messaging Service
FoundedOctober 2007 (2007-10)
Headquarters
Seattle, Washington
,
Key people
CEO Derek Johnson,
Alex Mittelstaedt (Director of Sales)
ServicesShort Messaging Service
Websitewww.tatango.com
Footnotes / references
Alexa Rank: 79,439 (April 2014)[1]

Tatango's software enables enterprise business clients to build campaigns and engage consumers through text message promotions and alerts and this is open to users in the U.S. and Canada. Tatango is a privately held corporation based in Seattle, WA, with investments from the Seattle Alliance of Angels [6][7]

History

Derek Johnson, the CEO, founded the service originally named NetworkText when at the University of Houston's Bauer College of Business. Initially started as a solution for his Fraternity (Delta Upsilon) to communicate with his Fraternity brothers.

Tatango now works with primarily with fortune 500 businesses. Tatango was originally designed to allow groups and organizations to use the service to send text messages to their members, while networkText inserted 30-40 character text ads at the bottom of each text message. The service was free for groups and organizations in collaboration with 4INFO. This was later reviewed in July 26, 2008 and the company started charging a monthly fee to use the service.

Johnson left college and moved to Bellingham where he founded NetworkText with Matt Pelo, who left the company later that year. In 2008, the company was renamed to Tatango, and offices were found. Tatango moved from being a Limited-liability company to a Corporation late in 2008. In October that same year, Tatango launched a voice messaging service,[8] which has since been discontinued.

Tatango acquired HungryThumb in 2012 [9] and Broadtexter [10] the following year. In 2016 Tatango launched the U.S. Short Code Directory.[11][12]

Highlights

  • In 2009 Tantago’s CEO makes Top entrepreneur’s list in Business Week’s 2009 Best Young Entrepreneurs list [13]
  • Also Mention in Forbes as the Killer app of the 2012 election [14]

Press

Tantago has been featured on TechCrunch,[15] Cnet [16] The Seattle Times [17] and LifeHacker.[18]

Tatango CEO, Derek Johnson has also been featured in The Wall Street Journal in the article [19]

gollark: I do not think that is accurate.
gollark: Yes. I'm aware some people didn't, but it would be significantly worse if they did more of them.
gollark: They probably *won't* be if the perception is that they will just do it arbitrarily and repeatedly for ages and it just slows down things at best.
gollark: Anyway, people have seemingly been mostly willing to engage in obeying lockdown when there was a clearish danger and it seemed like a temporary onetime thing.
gollark: Congratulations, you handed power over to the test designers?

References

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