Hosun Profile picture
Dec 27 21 tweets 6 min read Read on X
They were the fastest company EVER to hit a billion-dollar valuation.

Their revenue grew 22,000% in one year.

Then they refused Google's $6B acquisition offer.

Now, no one knows if they'll survive.

The crazy story of Groupon's meteoric rise — and devastating fall 🧵 Image
2008: The financial crisis hits.

Businesses are desperate for customers.

Consumers are hunting for deals.

Enter Andrew Mason with a revolutionary idea:

What if we could guarantee businesses customers by offering massive group discounts?
The timing was perfect.

Groupon acted as a middleman, connecting local businesses to customers through deeply discounted deals.

The model was simple: Businesses offered huge discounts, and Groupon
took a commission on each sale.

But no one predicted what happened next...
By 2011, Groupon had grown to:

• 150 million subscribers
• Operations in 35 countries
• Fastest company to reach $1B valuation

The growth was so explosive that Google offered $6B to acquire them.

But Groupon declined. This decision would reshape their future:
Their confidence wasn't unfounded - initially.

Their 2011 valued them at over $12B.

The company's revenue had grown an astounding 22,000% to $713M in 2010.

Their subscriber base exploded from 3.4M to 83.1M in just one year.

But beneath this growth, problems were brewing: Image
The first major issue? Merchant relationships.

Groupon promised businesses new customers.

But these weren't loyal patrons - they were one-time deal hunters.

Businesses started realizing they were losing money on Groupon deals.

The economics weren't sustainable:
Merchants faced a tough reality:

• Deep discounts to customers
• Commission to Groupon
• Result: Significant losses on sales

As the economy recovered, businesses started questioning if these losses were worth it.

Then came the second blow:
The economic recovery changed everything.

Businesses didn't need deep discounts anymore — and consumers weren't desperately seeking deals.

Groupon found out the hard way...

Their entire foundation was built on recession economics.

But their biggest challenge was internal:
They expanded too aggressively.

By 2011, Groupon had 8,000 employees with half in sales roles.

54% of operating expenses were in marketing.

Translation?

They were burning cash for growth, believing profitability would follow.

The market wasn't convinced:
Their first quarterly results after going public?

A $37M loss.

Investors started questioning their fundamentals.

But instead of fixing their core business, Groupon made another critical mistake:
In 2015, they spent $69M to acquire OrderUp and enter food delivery.

They partnered with Grubhub in 2017, accessing 55,000 restaurant partners.

But they were competing in an already crowded market.

The result was devastating:
By 2024:

• Revenue had fallen 80% from peak
• Less than a year of cash runway remained
• Profitability remained elusive

The company that once turned down Google's $6B was now worth a fraction of that.

But there's a crucial lesson here:
Today, Groupon operates in 27 countries.

Q1 2023: $121.6M in revenue.

They're focusing on local experiences and services, trying to reinvent themselves.

But they're still searching for sustainable profitability.

The lesson?
There's a deeper truth here:

Markets change. Economics shift. But trust endures.

Groupon's biggest mistake wasn't just their business model.

It was failing to build lasting relationships with their audience.

Let me explain:
Groupon built something that their customers used cyclically.

But once the recession faded...

Their customers had no use for them. They became less relevant.

Which is why this story resonates with me a ton:
We've spent the last 1.5 years building a way for founders to never lose relevance.

For them to build trust & reputation at scale so customers come to them ALL the time.

The method?
Building an authentic personal brand.

When you become an authority in your niche, you create a perpetual moat around your business.

You're always relevant — and you always have a constant stream of customers.

The best bit?
You don't need millions in marketing spend.

You don't need to rely on temporary market conditions.

You just need to share your authentic insights and experiences.

Because in a world of uncertainty, authenticity is the ultimate competitive advantage.

So:
Founders: We’ll build your personal/company brand on 𝕏 (and beyond) without you lifting a finger.

To date, we've already helped 60+ founders get 2+ Billion combined views.

Interested in how we can do this for you? Book your free discovery call here: form.typeform.com/to/JWuXNkxQ?ut…
Thanks for reading! A bit about me:

In 2023, I was a banker in London when I found the opportunity of the decade: Personal Branding.

So, I dropped everything to build @ThoughtleadrX — a premium media agency designed to build personal and company brands.

Follow me for more content like this!Image
We’re hiring!

We’re looking for top writers for our agency:

• Generalists
• Crypto/Web3

Note: English must be your 1st language, and you must be able to work in US time zones.

Want to work with our amazing portfolio of founders? Apply here: notion.so/Creative-Direc…

• • •

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More from @hosun_chung

Dec 28
In 2014, Peter Thiel called Twitter "horribly mismanaged" with "a lot of weed-smoking going on".

Today, X has its fewest employees in 10 years and highest usage ever.

The Elon Effect is real.

Here's how he transformed X into one of the most efficient businesses ever: Image
Let's rewind to 2014.

Peter Thiel, PayPal co-founder and tech oracle, drops a bombshell on CNBC:

"Twitter is horribly mismanaged—probably a lot of pot-smoking going on there."

Twitter's CEO at the time, responds with a joke about Doritos:

What stemmed this?
Perhaps a reference to a 2011 incident:

Snoop Dogg visited Twitter HQ and reportedly held an impromptu weed-fueled dance party.

Yes, really. A rap legend hotboxed Twitter's office.

Silicon Valley's "work hard, play hard" culture taken to the extreme...

Fast forward to 2022:
Read 17 tweets
Dec 26
This is the weirdest tax case in history...

Apple found a way to pay 0.005% tax while others paid 12.5%.

The EU demanded $13 billion in revenge.

But Ireland fought AGAINST receiving $13 billion in tax money.

This is the bizarre story that exposed Big Tech's biggest secret: Image
Picture this: You're running the world's most valuable company.

You've built an empire worth trillions.

Then one day, the European Commission comes knocking with a €13 billion tax bill.

But that's exactly what happened to Apple in 2016...
The EU's investigation revealed something shocking:

Apple was paying an effective tax rate of just 0.005% in Ireland in 2014.

This means Apple paid just 50 cents in tax for every $10,000 in profit.

But here's where it gets interesting:
Read 20 tweets
Dec 21
This is the craziest stunt in business history...

In 2013, the truck industry was brutal: Every brand said they were the best.

Then Volvo created a legendary $4M video that neuroscientists studied for decades.

It changed advertising forever.

Here's the full story: Image
The truck industry in 2013 was a battlefield of titans.

Every manufacturer claimed their trucks were the most stable, precise, and reliable.

But something was about to change everything...
Volvo had just completed their biggest product renewal in history:

• New Eicher Pro Series for India
• New Volvo FH range in Europe
• New Renault Trucks lineup
• New UD Quester for Asia

They were ready to make a statement. But not with specs or features...
Read 17 tweets
Dec 19
In 2019, Amazon declared war on FedEx.

With one brutal move, Amazon cut FedEx out of its entire delivery network.

FedEx tried to get revenge by targeting Amazon's customers.

What happened next changed e-commerce forever.

Here's the full story 🧵 Image
Let's rewind to 2018.

Amazon dominated e-commerce with net sales of $232 billion.

They controlled the market, but had one critical weakness:

They relied on FedEx for deliveries.

And Bezos was about to change that... Image
Amazon's Prime 2-day shipping had completely transformed how people shop.

Millions now expected packages at their doorstep within 48 hours.

But there was a problem: Amazon couldn't guarantee this speed when depending on FedEx's network.

The tension was building...
Read 16 tweets
Dec 17
This decision shocked Silicon Valley:

Google, at its peak, decided to rebrand.

No one understood it at the time.

But that one move unlocked $100s of billions in value...

Here's the full story: Image
See, Google had a problem:

It was trying to be everything at once - search engine, self-driving cars, anti-aging research, smart homes.

Investors couldn't track their money. Leaders were lost in bureaucracy.

The solution was radical:
Split Google into pieces.

Core business (search, ads, YouTube) stays as "Google" under new CEO Sundar Pichai.

Everything else? Separate companies under Alphabet:

• Waymo for self-driving cars
• Calico for anti-aging research
• Wing for drone delivery
• X for moonshots
Read 13 tweets
Dec 16
The $9 billion battle that shook Silicon Valley:

Oracle claimed Google stole their code.

Google said they did it to encourage innovation.

The Supreme Court's decision shocked everyone...

Here's the copyright case that reshaped technology forever: 🧵 Image
It started with a simple acquisition.

In 2010, Oracle bought Sun Microsystems, gaining ownership of the Java platform.

Within months of the acquisition, they discovered something that would
spark a decade-long legal battle.

And Google was in their crosshairs:
Oracle found Google had copied 11,500 lines of Java API code for Android.

This wasn't random code - these were APIs:

The defined rules that let different software systems communicate with each other.

Without them, modern software couldn't function.

The problem?
Read 16 tweets

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