+

Cookies on the Business Insider India website

Business Insider India has updated its Privacy and Cookie policy. We use cookies to ensure that we give you the better experience on our website. If you continue without changing your settings, we\'ll assume that you are happy to receive all cookies on the Business Insider India website. However, you can change your cookie setting at any time by clicking on our Cookie Policy at any time. You can also see our Privacy Policy.

Close
HomeQuizzoneWhatsappShare Flash Reads
 

Secret-Sharing App Whisper Is Nearing 3 Billion Monthly Pageviews Because It Does Something Facebook Can't

Dec 16, 2013, 21:30 IST

Business Insider/Alyson ShontellMichael Heyward, CEO of Whisper, in the Santa Monica office. The office is a house has a pool, a giant trampoline, a basketball court and a gas fireplace (pictured).

If you open mobile app Whisper, it looks like a collection of Internet memes. Each entry is a picture with bold text on top, created in seconds by users.

Advertisement

Unlike memes, Whisper's photo messages aren't often funny.

They're thought-provoking and serious; the kind of secrets only best friends reveal to each other.

Complimentary Tech Event
Transform talent with learning that works
Capability development is critical for businesses who want to push the envelope of innovation.Discover how business leaders are strategizing around building talent capabilities and empowering employee transformation.Know More

"That moment in the locker room when all your teammates are making fun of gays and you're just sitting there like 'glad you don't know about me…'" one popular Whisper reads.

"I danced with two people at my wedding," says another. "The one I married and the one I wish I married instead."

Advertisement

There are some light-hearted messages on Whisper too.

WhisperA post on Whisper.

"Snow, the only time a girl gets excited over three inches," is one example.

Reading Whisper is like "watching a trainwreck," one user told Business Insider. It's hard to pull your eyes away.

The two-year-old app is rapidly gaining popularity. Millions of people use Whisper and it is approaching 3 billion monthly pageviews. On average, people spend more than 20 minutes per day with Whisper, checking its content 8-10 times per day. Whisper has raised $25 million from early Snapchat investor Lightspeed and others.

Advertisement

The people who are spilling their guts on Whisper fall between ages 17 and 28. Heyward says less than 4% of his users are under the age of 18. The vast majority of its users - 70% - are women.

The reason Whisper gets so many people to share things they'd never say out loud is because everything is posted anonymously. In the past, anonymous social networks have been nasty places. Just look at the comments on YouTube. Or at failed startups like Juicy Campus, which were sued by people defamed on their sites.

Michael Heyward, the app's 26-year-old founder, has gone to great lengths to keep Whisper's content respectful. He never wants anyone to read Whisper and feel like they need to shower. He has 92 people moderating content and comments in the Philippines in addition to the 32 people Whisper employs full-time.

Business Insider/Alyson ShontellThe Whisper house sits in a residential neighborhood in Santa Monica, where 32 people work, occasionally sleep, and hack away at the app.

"You are who you are when no one else is looking," Heyward told Business Insider at his Santa Monica headquarters in early December. "Anonymity is a really powerful tool. But we think about it like that Spiderman quote, 'With great power comes great responsibility.' Think about all the things you can do with a hammer. You can build something great...or you can kill someone."

Advertisement

Heyward occasionally teaches at USC. In a recent class, he asked students to raise their hands if they were virgins. No one did. Then he blindfolded them, turned off the lights, and asked the same question. Half of the hands went up. Think of the first scenario as Facebook and the second as Whisper.

Facebook, Pinterest and Twitter are social networks tied to identities. Because of that, people only share things they're proud of like engagements, articles, weddings, vacations and pregnancies. Heyward, who grew up on Los Angeles and went to the same high school as Snapchat CEO Evan Spiegel, says he's innovating loneliness.

Heyward's mission is to make sure people only use anonymity on Whisper to protect themselves and not to hurt someone else. The result is something that looks like an open-source diary, with supportive comments from people who understand the intense feelings being described. Often, users will respond to one Whisper with another.

Not all of Whisper's content is real. A few posts are dreamt up by imaginative users. But for the many that are, Whisper acts like a therapy group that connects people based on intimate, shared experiences. Some Whisper users say the app has saved their lives.

"Why are spouses intimate?" Heyward asks. "Because they know things about each other no one else knows. We're connecting people around thoughts and ideas and emotions and experiences versus connecting people around people. Imagine being able to connect with someone on another level. Image you're another guy in the locker room who is secretly gay. That's a very strong bond."

Advertisement
Next Article