Mountain View, CA – WhatsApp Founder: Ukranian Jewish Immigrant, Tough Beginnings Into Self-Made Billionaire

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     A file picture dated 20 January 2014 shows Jan Koum, founder of messaging service WhatsApp, speaking during the Digital Life Design conference in Munich, Germany, 20 January 2014.  Facebook announced on 19 February 2014 that it will buy messaging service WhatsApp for 19 billion dollars.  EPA/MARC MUELLERMountain View, CA – The Facebook purchase of WhatsApp for $19 billion has made headlines in past 24 hours, and the tough beginnings of founder and CEO Jan Koum show the intelligence and spirit of a man coming from practically nothing and growing into a billionaire.

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    According to Wired Magazine, Koum, 38, grew up mostly in Communist Ukraine in a small village outside of Kiev. He grew up Jewish and as a described “rebellious little kid.” When discussing his education in Kiev, he can recall a school and town so poor that there wasn’t even a bathroom inside the school, and small children had to run across the parking lot in freezing temperatures just to use a bathroom.

    His area and society was very cut off from what most U.S. 16-year-olds are accustomed to – the technology CEO did not even have his first computer until he was 19.

    After moving to the United States in 1992 when he was 16 due to an unsafe and anti-Semitic setting, his family still didn’t have much and they depended on government assistance to survive. His mother babysat to make extra money and Koum worked in a grocery store. They also lived off his mother’s disability income when she was diagnosed with cancer. By 18, Koum had taught himself computer networking by reading manuals from used bookstores.

    Koum struck up friendship with fellow ex-Yahoo employee and WhatsApp co-founder Brian Acton in 1997. They met at Yahoo and Acton offered Koum support when his mother died in 2000 – Koum was then alone, as his father had passed away in 1997.

    In 2009, two years after leaving Yahoo, Koum’s own use of the iPhone made him think about the app age and how it would grow. Remembering how international calls were extremely expensive and how he and mother usually couldn’t afford to call relatives in Ukraine sparked the first idea of creating a service where international messages could be sent for a cheap price.

    Growing up in Communist Ukraine also molded Koum’s idea of a communication piece that wasn’t bugged or recorded in any way. Because of this, messages sent via WhatsApp are not kept long-term on a server, and the company does not request personal information from its users.

    After essentially working for free for the first few years, Koum and co-founder Brian Acton had created an app that by early 2011 was in the top 20 in the U.S. App Store.

    Two years later in Feb. 2013, Koum and Acton agreed they needed to raise more money when WhatsApp’s user numbers grew to about 200 million with an employee base of 50. They held a second funding round and gained $50 million in investments from Sequoia, who also invested $8 million in 2011. WhatsApp’s value was at $1.5 billion in 2013.

    Koum’s company has grown from a small two-man start up configuring the details in a Mountain View, California coffee shop to gaining 450 million active users –not bad considering he barely graduated from Mountain View High School and dropped out of San Jose State University.

    Five years after leaving Yahoo! in 2007 with Acton, WhatsApp was sold to Facebook for a staggering 19 billion. Koum and Acton recently leased a new three-story building that is now under construction, and will house the new WhatsApp company and its staff of 100.


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    13 Comments
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    10 years ago

    these ukranians when they are not busy killing jews they kill each other, thanks god koum left.

    CRITICISM
    CRITICISM
    10 years ago

    Mi K’amcha K’Yisroel

    hashomer
    hashomer
    10 years ago

    I hope he is supported by the Jewish community, not preyed upon. Way to go Jan.

    shvigger
    shvigger
    10 years ago

    Another thumbs down for college.

    Yitzchok
    Yitzchok
    10 years ago

    To: # 2 anonymous; Do you have his number? I want to try and convince him that he should be supporting kollel lifers who have 10 kids at home and their wives are working so they can sit and learn and better themselves, I am sure he will see the value that kind of giving… I also want to try and convince him NOT to give to the Chabad rabbi who probably took him in as a poor immigrant and fed him and his ailing mother, and then cobbled together a minyan for a “poor” Russian women’s funereal that he probably had to pay for also, and then kept up with the kid and invited him to his house for Friday night dinner and Shabbos lunch and kept him going with kind words and put his arm around his shoulder. Those nasty Chabad rabbi’s your right, it’s only about the money with them,

    hmmmm
    hmmmm
    10 years ago

    Honest , hardworking Jewish kid. With no mother or father. Amazing. Started from a hole in the wall. Good for him !

    ShmutzVesh
    ShmutzVesh
    10 years ago

    Good for him. I am happy with his success. May he enjoy it and build a bayis neeman biyisrael!!

    Benny
    Benny
    10 years ago

    All I can say I am very happy for you Jan, keep up good work.
    Please do a lot of kindness with it.
    Good luck!

    P.S. Your name is not typical American name