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Branchout 1 year on – 3 million jobs and catching up with LinkedIn

Branchout – the app for business networking on Facebook launched just over a year ago now and the latest figures they’ve provided shows it’s been a busy year for them with some seriously impressive growth. They have hosted over 3 million job vacancies on the app and are active in 60 countries and ten languages, with a somewhat vague ‘millions of users’ according to Inside Facebook. The figures round off a good first year for Branchout, in which they also raised 2 rounds of investment totaling $24 million, with the most recent round closing in May this year. While it might seem a little too early to start comparing them to LinkedIn, they show incredible potential as providing an alternative to LinkedIn despite being young compared to the dominant business social network.

Branchout’s unique advantage

Of course the one thing that Branchout can hold over Facebook is the very fact that they’re on Facebook itself. While LinkedIn has 100 million users, Branchout has now over 750 million users on Facebook to potentially reach out to. The benefit is also in the fact that they offer people a ready made network of friends with which to use the business networking features. When you start out from scratch on LinkedIn, it takes longer to build up your community and healthy group of connections. As with Twitter, one of the first questions people ask when they start a profile in LinkedIn is ‘how do I get more followers’. LinkedIn has lots of nice features such as migrating email contacts, but if you’re a recent graduate for example, the chances are you don’t really use email that often, with Facebook being the dominant method to contact friends and, increasingly, colleagues. For this reason their rate of growth is impressive and shows another good example of Facebook providing a good platform for startups to operate within.

Compare Branchout’s near 3 million active users on Facebook to the 100 million on LinkedIn and you can see that the race is very much on. But as well as the one year figures being impressive, it’s the rate at which Branchout have achieved this that particularly stands out. The growth rate of active users taken from Inside Facebook shows this in context, starting at just over 255,000 in June 2010 :

LinkedIn blocking access

What’s perhaps most telling in the ‘LinkedIn vs Branchout’ race, is that LinkedIn recently blocked access of its newly launched groups API to Branchout, alongside a load of job/recruitment sites including Monster, Beknown and Visible.me. LinkedIn claims that the sites were blocked from accessing the API because the violate the site’s terms of service. Make no mistake however, that this marks the start of a battle between LinkedIn and Branchout, as Branchout moves from being a young pretender to a serious contender. The actions of LinkedIn here look similar to Facebook recently blocking Google’s attempts to allow people to transport their contacts over to Google+ and show that they’ve got their eye on BranchOut and see them as a valid competitor. Of course LinkedIn are not just sitting back while Branchout competes for their users. They are ramping up the functionality on the site and also the opportunities available for brands, showing that where they do clearly have one up on Branchout, users aside, is in the ability to monetise the site.

Branchout themselves are developing some impressive products and addons to the app, that show their understanding of social and how it can be linked to business networking in a new way. Like Facebook themselves, they’re extending the reach of their product outside of their own branded space, across other properties. They’ve recently launched a nice jobs tab, that allows Facebook Page owners to easily list current job vacancies, allowing people to apply for jobs within the app as well. The screenshot from Kiva shows this in action :

Certainly not a bad first year for Branchout being live and I’d expect a lot more advancements from both companies as they try to become the ‘Facebook’ of the business social networking world. What remains to be seen is whether LinkedIn decides to stay decidedly separate, or whether they spot an opportunity to become more integrated with Facebook themselves and potentially beat Branchout at their own game.

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