Instapage raises $15M to make landing pages smarter

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
Landing pages might not sound like the most exciting problem for a startup to tackle, but Tyson Quick, founder and CEO of Instapage, said
that they’re a real issue for marketers.Quick was previously working on a marketing product called Jounce, where he was frustrated by the
fact that even after someone had clicked on a Jounce ad and ended up on the company’s website, only 3 percent of them were
converting.“It was kind of ridiculous, since they’d already engaged with the ad,” Quick said
So just by creating a few personalized landing pages that targeted “major” customer segments, Jounce was able to increase conversions to
around 20 percent.In 2012, Quick decided to switch the company’s focus to Instapage, and it now offers a broader platform for creating and
testing different landing pages that are personalized for different visitors.“We can be this middleware between ad tech and traditional
marketing and sales tech,” Quick said
“All this technology has made it so the ad-buying side has sophisticated targeting and relevancy
And once you capture a lead, you’ve got marketing automation that pushes them into your CRM
It’s the point of conversion that’s missing.”Instapage now has more than 15,000 customers who are seeing average conversion rates
about 22 percent
And it’s announcing that it’s raised $15 million in Series A funding from Morgan Stanley Expansion Capital.Quick admitted that it
hasn’t just been a straight line to success
He recalled moving from Salt Lake City to San Francisco and living in his car for part of the month so that he could rent out his apartment
on Airbnb.“I didn’t want to get a job,” he explained — and the Airbnb money helped him devote his time to Instapage.Quick also said
it took some time to find the ideal customers, namely larger companies that are always running digital advertising campaigns
The strategy seems to have worked, with Instapage not losing a single enterprise customer in the past year.Quick also sees a broader
opportunity around what he calls “post-click conversion,” which he said has three key components — scalable creation, optimization and
personalization
(That last category is what his team is focused on building out now.) And while other companies like Optimizely might tackle some of those
segments, he said Instapage is leading the way at combining all three.I wondered whether GDPR or other shifts in the landscape around
online data and privacy could affect Instapage’s business, but Quick argued that the company doesn’t need detailed user data to be
helpful: “The personalization comes form the advertising itself
We can glean insights from what ads did they engage with.”As for raising money, Instapage had already raised $2 million in seed funding
Quick said that when he started to have conversations about a Series A, most VCs weren’t interested in giving the company “the valuation
we felt we deserved.” (He speculated that they were “a little preoccupied by the buzzy things that were going on” like cryptocurrency
and on-demand delivery.) And the company was profitable, with what Quick said is $12 million in annual recurring revenue, so it didn’t
need to raise the funding.However, he found that Morgan Stanley was more willing to dig in and learn about Instapage’s
business.“Instapage has a clear vision for improving digital marketing efficiency and has built an impressive product for marketers to
create more successful advertising campaigns without the need for external or technical resources,” said Pete Chung, the head of Morgan
Stanley Expansion Capital, in the funding announcement
“We’re confident that this next phase of growth will further establish Instapage as the authority on converting ad clicks and optimizing
conversions, and we look forward to working with Instapage to bring post-click optimization to a larger audience.”