| Published
September 16, 2008 |
Volume
16, Number 9
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Fun Mobility's Adam Lavine Ushers in New
Era of Self-Expression
By Nicole Zaro Stahl
NETWORK Editor
There is one thing you can say for sure about Adam Lavine: he is not a
late bloomer. His entrepreneurship might not have started as far back
as the childhood lemonade stand, but it was certainly in evidence by
the time he was a college student supporting himself with juggling
gigs. In the classroom he developed a passion for computer
animation, turning a class project into a successful business that he
and partner Dennis Chen ultimately sold to a publicly traded company in
1997. In a few months he will be celebrating a decade as founder and
CEO of the duo's second start-up, FunMobility, a pioneer in
personalized multimedia communication, and he has barely hit 40.
"What we do is pretty
amazing," Lavine comments. Leading the charge in new mobile phone
applications, FunMobility "allows people to consume multimedia content
anywhere, anytime," he explains. The possibilities go far beyond what
many traditional users could ever imagine. "We are moving to a
new era of using mobile phone content to communicate with each other,"
Lavine asserts.
FunMobility's early applications of ringtones and wallpapers have
broadened into animated comics and other imaginative forms of
expression that are easily shared with others. "The urge to communicate
is a pretty fundamental thing, and this is a very fun way to do it," he
observes, adding, "It's an untapped area that's very interesting to
explore."
Pushing the Content
Envelope
Although the company's core demographic is consumers between the ages
of 16 and 25, the goal is to integrate its applications into day-to-day
mainstream American life. Any apprehension about the novelty is quickly
vanquished by the convenience factor. Suppose, Lavine says, you forget
an important occasion, and there is no time to shop for and mail a
store-bought greeting card. FunMobility enables users to create their
own mobile greetings, complete with music and images, on the cell phone
and send them off instantly to whomever is on their list.
Still, that example is fairly conventional. SMS, short message service,
a form of text messaging on mobile phones, is opening up entirely new
opportunities for communication—and profit. According to one newsletter
on marketing to Generation Y, teens and young adults, from ages 13
through 24, send more than 50 text messages per week. More than half
use SMS for social networking; a little less than half use it for
flirting or dating. Some, albeit a much smaller fraction (10 percent),
have even used it to terminate a romantic relationship. Enlivened with
pictures and other user-created content--videos, music, graphics, or
slideshows—a message becomes a unique, meaningful, entertaining
experience for both sender and recipient.
The power of this mobile content is one of the reasons behind
FunMobility's just-announced venture with Rock the Vote, the
organization that promotes political participation among America's
young voters, and mobile carrier AT&T. The latest offerings in the
FunMobility catalog feature pop singer Christina Aguilera delivering
the RTV message in a series of downloadable ringtones and wallpapers.
It is an effective tactic. "We know that mobile content, whether it's
wallpaper from a historical Rock the Vote campaign or a ringtone from a
supporting artist, encourages today's youth to engage in the political
process and show their support for the upcoming election," says Lavine.
These creative ways of linking young people with their favorite images
music, and recording artists transform mobile content into a highly
prized and visible badge of self-expression.
Performers Expressing
Themselves
It's not surprising that Lavine and Chen have wound up with so many
touchpoints to the entertainment industry. Lavine, a New England
native, comes from a family of musicians; his grandfather taught organ
at Yale University, which named the impressive H. Frank Bozyan Memorial
Organ in his honor. His wife of 14 years was a piano performance major
when they met in college at University of Massachusetts in Amherst.
Eager to share the limelight, he points out that partner Dennis Chen
also plays the piano and guitar.
A talented piano player himself (he started lessons at age five),
Lavine is also a big fan of the ukulele. "George Harrison once said
that the world would be a happier place if everyone had a ukulele," he
remarks. "It's a great instrument. It only has four strings, so kids
can learn very quickly."
Acquiring skills as a magician and a juggler added to his repertoire as
a performer. When he was 19 he confidently set off for a summer in
Japan, where he landed a job juggling in an amusement park that was
part of a Disney-like chain. "I went through tryouts and got the job,
which was well paid," he recalls. "It was considered exotic for them to
have an American juggler." A side note to the episode reveals his
independent streak: "I forgot to tell my mom I was going." It was only
a few days before his departure that he called home and mentioned the
trip. One gets the sense the family, which includes an older and
younger sister, was accustomed to his pursuit of adventure.
Back at the University of Massachusetts in Amherst, from which both
Lavine and Chen graduated with honors in 1995, a class project in 3-D
computer animation turned into his first technology venture. "I was
working with Dennis, and initially we thought, 'Let's try to be the
best in the class,'" Lavine relates. Expectations were raised as the
photorealistic images their software produced started drawing rave
reviews. "This was striking eye candy that got people's attention.
Everyone wanted to create this kind of thing for themselves."
The outgrowth was Specular International, a 3-D graphics and animation
software company that did business with media giants Disney, ABC
Television, and Industrial Light and Magic. Specular was sold to
MetaTools, a publicly traded company in 1997, and Lavine spent two
years working on streaming 3-D technologies there before leaving to
found FunMail, FunMobility’s predecessor, again with Dennis Chen, in
1999. This time, they decided to set up shop out here in California, a
frequent destination from their Specular days.
With FunMobility's current headcount of roughly 110 employees, Lavine
no longer has to do the kind of business traveling he did in the past.
In his leisure time he has trekked all over Europe and logged time in
Thailand and Japan. "I like Japan a lot," he say. "My wife is Japanese.
It's a culture and a country I have a strong affinity for." The couple
has two school-age children and find the Tri-Valley "a great place to
raise a family."
For fun beyond music, Lavine enjoys racketball and swimming. To keep up
the fun quotient in the office, he has been known to break out the
juggling torches at company parties. Both Lavine and Chen recognize how
fortunate they are to see so many of their talents and
passions converge in their work life, where the business they
have created is their own form of self-expression.
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