photoroom blur effect

Sources: Photoroom, the AI photo editing app, is raising $50M-$60M at a $500M-$600M valuation

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Image Credits: PhotoRoom (opens in a new window) under a license.

Apps that let users take, manipulate and share images have been some of the biggest hits in the world of mobile over the years. Now, the influx of AI is cracking open the market for a new wave of startups to step into the ring.

Photoroom — a startup out of Paris, France — has built a popular AI-based image editing app and API targeting e-commerce vendors, media specialists, and others. (It’s even been used to power a Barbie personalised poster site.) TechCrunch now understands that the startup is in the process of closing a round of funding.

Multiple sources say that the startup is raising between $50 million and $60 million on a pre-money valuation of between $500 million and $600 million. In a market where AI is hot, but funding overall remains very constrained (and some big-name VCs, such as Coatue, are actually now retreating), Photoroom has been turning heads — and getting people to open checkbooks, it seems.

It is unclear who the full investor list is. One source said that Balderton, which led the startup’s previous round, is leading this round, too. Others said that other previous backers were also participating along with new investors. “They are choosing between different term sheets,” one source said.

In addition to Balderton, existing backers include Adjacent, Kima Ventures, FJ Labs, Meta, Y Combinator (where it was a member of the Summer 2020 cohort, its first remote batch in the wake of Covid-19) and a number of angels such as Yann LeCun, Zehan Wang (formerly of Magic Pony and Twitter), execs from Hugging Face and Disney+, and many more. Photoroom will have raised $70-80 million all told if this round closes at these numbers.

Photoroom, and Matthieu Rouif, the CEO who co-founded Photoroom with CTO Eliot Andres, declined to comment on any funding-related questions. Balderton did not respond to requests for comment for this story. Others asked to remain unattributed.

Paris, where Photoroom is based, has shaped up to be a key city for AI development.

In addition to a wave of other smaller startups, Meta has a large AI lab there headed by Yann LeCun; Hugging Face, now based in NYC, got its start out of Paris; and Mistral AI, ambitiously building foundational Large Language Models that it wants to keep open source, is now valued at $2 billion.

Photoroom’s rise also follows other currents washing over the tech world at the moment, which transcend the current vogue around AI.

Over the years, the camera has become easily the most important feature on smartphones, arguably more significant than basic phone features themselves. Yet most of that trend’s riches have fallen to consumer apps and their ecosystems. Photoroom partly stands out for its primary positioning, at least for now, as a B2B tool.

Early on, Photoroom found traction with a long tail of small businesses, e-commerce vendors and resellers looking for photo editing software that was fast, easy to use and cost-effective, but still produced high quality results on individual images or batches of them: users can clip images out from backgrounds and then apply other effects, some of which can be prompted and generated by word commands. Customers use those images in online sales listings on platforms like Depop, eBay and Poshmark.

And by way of its API, Photoroom has also found an audience among a set of bigger customers. Warner Bros used the API to create a social marketing campaign for the Barbie movie this summer: fans were able to crop their own images and insert them into their own personalized Barbie posters. The tool and resulting posters were shared over 1 million times, Photoroom said.

In addition to Warner Brothers, Netflix and the online food delivery startup Wolt, among others, are using its tools for a wider set of use cases.

It also has built up credibility among its peers in the tech community.

Up to now, Photoroom has been building its platform based on its own vision models, trained on its own data — one way of making sure to have better control over those images and avoid copyright issues down the line. It uses tools like Dust to combine these with LLMs from third parties to build new functionality. Last year, for example, the company used GPT-4 to enhance its “instant backgrounds” feature with suggested scenes that could be generated with word prompts. The company is continuing to build, adding an enhanced shadow feature to its API just last week.

What’s also important (especially right now) is that, in addition to the expanding feature set, Photoroom’s B2B focus has helped it anchor its growth around a revenue-generating business model.

The product has a freemium tier in the form of a limited set of features can be used on a limited number of images for no cost. But there are also different pricing tiers that vary by country (in the U.K., the basic Pro tier on mobile is £3.99/week or £69.99 annually). There are also separate rates for web users, Shopify customers, larger business users, and for its API.

Adding all this together, since its last round in 2022, when it raised $19 million, Photoroom has been blowing up.

In the key market of the U.S., according to Data.ai figures, its iOS app is currently number-three among all graphics and design apps, and it’s been comfortably in the top 10 for the last three months, sometimes at number one. On Android currently it’s the number-one photography app in the U.S.

SimilarWeb pegs the number of monthly web visitors at just over 27 million as of December 2023, with figures rising over the three months prior by over 18%; but that’s just a small part of its base: nearly 90% of the app’s traffic and usage comes via mobile app.

The company told TechCrunch in December that in the three years since launch, it had reached more than 100 million downloads of its apps and was on track for ARR of $50 million.

But it’s not all smooth sailing. Photoroom is certainly not the only photo editing tool out there targeting businesses and growing: the dozens of competitors/alternatives range from Picsart, which has raised nearly $200 million, through to the much more modestly-proportioned Pixelcut, which has raised only $250k, according to PitchBook.

Nonetheless, rising tides lift boats. There has been a huge amount of buzz around generative AI among investors themselves looking for the next big hit.

In September last year, on the heels of the surge of interest in gen AI in the wake of ChatGPT, Andreessen Horowitz consumer partner Olivia Moore published some research running the numbers for popular generative AI apps.

The report ranked Photoroom as the sixth most-popular generative AI product. While ChatGPT was, unsurprisingly, far and away the most popular gen-AI product of all, the main takeaway was that the space was still very young. Most categories of apps, she wrote, are still up for grabs; and within the popular area of AI image-based tools, apps like Photoroom, in her opinion, have a shot at success.

“Products that are purpose-built for specific use cases or workflows are growing alongside more generalist tools, and showing signs that they can also become successful companies,” wrote Moore.

A spokesperson for Photoroom specifically pointed TC to the a16z research when contacted for comment, although she declined to say whether a16z is one of the investors in the company. We have contacted a16z to ask, too, and will update this story as we learn more.

Marissa Mayer poses for a picture on the red carpet for the 6th annual 2018 Breakthrough Prizes at Moffett Federal Airfield, Hangar One in Mountain View, Calif., on Sunday, Dec. 3, 2017. (Nhat V. Meyer/Bay Area News Group)

Marissa Mayer's startup just rolled out photo sharing and event planning apps, and the internet isn't sure what to think

Marissa Mayer poses for a picture on the red carpet for the 6th annual 2018 Breakthrough Prizes at Moffett Federal Airfield, Hangar One in Mountain View, Calif., on Sunday, Dec. 3, 2017. (Nhat V. Meyer/Bay Area News Group)

Image Credits: Nhat V. Meyer/Bay Area News Group / Getty Images

When Marissa Mayer co-founded a startup six years ago in Palo Alto, California, expectations were sky high for the former Yahoo CEO and early Google employee. When that startup, Sunshine, revealed that its first app centered around subscription software for contact management, people wondered if something more ambitious might be around the corner. Today, after Sunshine released two equally mundane features — event organizing and photo sharing — internet commenters were decidedly mystified.

I was also baffled last week when Mayer walked me through Sunshine’s new offerings. Though there are AI components to all that Sunshine offers, it’s hard to understand how Sunshine’s new photo app enhances photo sharing as it exists today, and the same could be said of its new events app, which looks very much like something that was designed 20 years ago.

It’s tempting to dismiss the 15-person outfit as out of touch. But Mayer may be onto something with Sunshine, and that’s nostalgia. Throwback tech is all the rage these days. Further, while most Silicon Valley startups focus on the newest new thing, America is getting older, as the U.S. Census Bureau declared last year. Mayer says Sunshine is tackling problems for people “of all ages,” but targeting a slightly older demographic that gravitates toward the familiar would be a smart move. Older Americans now account for a record share of spending. They have the time to socialize and take pictures. Sunshine’s interface is even steeped in the same purple hue that was long associated with Yahoo, which she famously led for five years beginning in 2012.

Asked if the design choice was intentional, Mayer seemed surprised for a moment, calling it “purely coincidental.” She instead offered that users’ photos are hosted on Sunshine’s servers and “available indefinitely,” and that users can share albums and send invites easily through text, iMessage, email and other sharing platforms. Mayer further stressed that Sunshine will never sell its customers’ data to a third party and that the company is “not building models or deriving any other data for any other purposes from what is shared.”

Mayer sees the need for something simpler, certainly. “There are a lot of companies that focus on that bleeding and leading edge of AI,” she said. “But we think there’s a lot of things that can be done with AI that just help with everyday problems, things that we all experience every day, and are often overlooked.”

She mentioned, for example, that before launching events and photo sharing, Sunshine rolled out a birthday app as “kind of an adjacent area to addresses and contacts.”

She declined to discuss customer numbers, but the product is reminiscent of an app run by entrepreneurs Michael and Xochi Birch called BirthdayAlarm.com. The birthday reminder and e-card site is not exactly design forward, but with more than 50 million registered members at one point, it has made the couple — who earlier sold a social media company to AOL for $850 million in cash — many millions more dollars.

Mayer is friends with Birch and says she was “definitely influenced by Michael. He talked about the fact that [BirthdayAlarm] was a very simple app and got a lot of traction early on.”

Sunshine seemingly didn’t see that kind of traction from contacts management, an area where consumers have largely steered clear owing to privacy concerns. But perhaps its simple and free (for now) new apps will change the game for Sunshine, which raised a $20 million round in 2020 and is largely self-funded, per Mayer.

In the meantime, Mayer has other tricks up her sleeve, including, eventually, video sharing. “I’ve got a list of all the different things that we thought would be in the first version and will hopefully come out soon after,” she said last week. “The core thesis has always been to take the mundane and make it magical.”

The team “thought about naming [the company] Mundane AI,” she continued. “I sometimes think that might have been a better name.”

Image Credits: Sunshine

Disclosure: TechCrunch is owned by Yahoo.

Three screenshots of Retro's new journal feature

Retro, an actually good photo-sharing app for BFFs, launches collaborative journals

Three screenshots of Retro's new journal feature

Image Credits: Retro

As big social apps are optimizing for maximum engagement using algorithmic feeds and personalized content recommendations, Retro wants to go in the opposite direction: The company is launching a new feature called journals. It’s a flexible way to share photos with your favorite people and create visual records of whatever matters in your life. So the feature can be akin to a shared photo album or used to keep a private record.

Yes, I know. Photo-sharing isn’t new. Many have tried, most have failed. Even Marissa Mayer’s recent attempt — with an app called Sunshine — has raised questions. But it’s important to pay attention to Retro given the résumé of the founding team. The relatively new social app was created by Nathan Sharp and Ryan Olson, two former Instagram team members who played an important role in shipping breakthrough features such as Stories.

With its dedicated focus on photos and videos from your loved ones, Retro is progressively rolling out features that could quickly turn it into a must-have for long-distance friends, extended families and everyone who likes to carefully curate photos and pick the best ones from their camera roll.

Retro’s main feature is a way to share your most important photos of the past week with your favorite people. As you start adding photos, it creates a story of the week that your friends can check out. But that only works if your social graph is a perfect replica of the most important people in your life. Which is why people spend some quality time together and then just dump a bunch of photos in a WhatsApp group or iMessage thread.

Retro’s answer to this use case is journals: A new flexible way to share photos as a group. Co-founder and CEO Nathan Sharp compares the feature to a “photo-first WhatsApp group.”

Gunning for product-led growth

Retro, which launched last summer, is still fairly under the radar. It is well regarded by product designers who care about social mobile apps. But it hasn’t become a mainstream app. The startup is still shipping features in the hopes that it will unlock a “product-led growth engine,” as Sharp puts it.

“The first task right now is building the perfect product for catching up with family and friends. And then the second part is making sure that your family and friends can easily get on there. … I think journals are a big part of that,” he told TechCrunch. “You can’t really separate those two tasks as a social app but what you can do is focus on features that provide high utility for groups of people which bring them on.”

You can use journals to curate photos around a particular topic. For instance, you can have one family journal for each of your kids so that you can quickly and easily review earlier photos of them, free from the usual clutter of your photo library. It’s a way to foster that unique, individual bond.

You can also have a journal with your partner to share important moments you’ve spent together without spamming all your friends on Retro. Or you can create a journal for your recent weekend trip so that everyone can add and share photos without necessarily adding you as friend on the app.

Three screenshots of Retro's new journal feature showing how you can keep albums private, share a link or create a public link
Image Credits: Retro

“One of the favorite ones that I’ve made is for Valentine’s Day. I made one for my wife, which is just pictures of the two of us. And I went back, like, ten years — we’ve been together ten years,” said co-founder and CTO Ryan Olson. “Now when there’s a picture of the two of us, I just add it there. And it’s fun to have this sort of living thing for the two of us.”

Some people might even use journals for personal projects or hobbies. If you like woodworking, say, and want to track your progress, you could create a journal dedicated to furniture making with just you as the unique journal member.

“A photo journal is like a wonderful format for reviewing something, looking back, reflecting on something that kind of grows very subtly over time — but over long periods,” Sharp said.

The new feature could help build awareness of Retro if the startup can get people using journals during real-life events. Such as scenarios where an organizer might otherwise leave disposable cameras out on tables for guests to snap pics for pooling and sharing later.

“If you’re trying to gather photos at an event, we’ve created this very beautiful QR code that you can either save to your camera roll or print,” Sharp noted. “It’s very easy to just put a QR code and say ‘hey, if you’re at this dinner, share all your photos.’”

There’s also a viral aspect to this feature as journals can be shared outside Retro. In the app, you can generate a public link and share it on your Instagram Story or elsewhere online — there’s no need to install the app to view the photos. So some people might use it to share wedding pictures, for instance.

Building a social consumer app involves many experimentations — and journals are one of those experimentations. As people discover the app by clicking on public links for these shared albums it could, potentially, become Retro’s product-led growth engine. Only time will tell.

Retro is a deeply personal photo journaling app for close friends

Retro lets you create recaps of your most memorable photos and send the best ones as postcards