WhatsApp Founder Brian Acton’s Missed Opportunity At Facebook Leads To $3 Billion Windfall

Rejected by Facebook in 2009, Acton’s decision to launch WhatsApp pays off with a $3 billion acquisition deal

<p>Brian Acton speaks onstage at the WIRED25 Summit 2019 - Day 1 at Commonwealth Club on November 08, 2019, in San Francisco, California. Acton is an investor and a member of the board of the Signal Foundation, which runs a messaging app focused on end-to-end encrypted messaging. PHILIP FARAONE/GETTY IMAGES FOR WIRED.</p>

In 2009, Brian Acton applied for a job at Facebook, now known as Meta Platforms Inc (NASDAQ: META). He’s lucky he didn’t get the gig.

“Computer engineer and author Brian Acton cofounded messaging app WhatsApp with Jan Koum in 2007; the two had met while working at Yahoo,” said Forbes.

“Facebook turned me down&mldr; looking forward to life’s next adventure,” said Acton on Twitter at the time.

Well, his next adventure would end up being a lucrative one. Acton went on to launch WhatsApp with Jan Koum, one of Acton’s former colleagues at Yahoo.

GettyImages-1186386344.jpg
Brian Acton speaks onstage at the WIRED25 Summit 2019 – Day 1 at Commonwealth Club on November 08, 2019, in San Francisco, California. Acton is an investor and a member of the board of the Signal Foundation, which runs a messaging app focused on end-to-end encrypted messaging. PHILIP FARAONE/GETTY IMAGES FOR WIRED.

WhatsApp continued to grow, eventually receiving investments from Sequoia Capital and others.

By 2014, Facebook — just five years after passing on Acton — offered to acquire his company $19 billion. At the time, Acton held about a 20% stake in WhatsApp, netting him more than $3 billion in the acquisition.

He wasn’t the only one who made big bucks from the deal. Sequoia Capital received nearly 5000% on its investments in WhatsApp. At the time of Sequoia’s investment in WhatsApp, the messaging company was valued at around $1.5 billion. 

WhatsApp Today: The app has more than 2 billion active users, making it one of the most popular apps in the world. Meta runs WhatsApp along with Facebook and Instagram.

GettyImages-1186386344.jpg
Brian Acton speaks onstage at the WIRED25 Summit 2019 – Day 1 at Commonwealth Club on November 08, 2019, in San Francisco, California. Acton is an investor and a member of the board of the Signal Foundation, which runs a messaging app focused on end-to-end encrypted messaging. PHILIP FARAONE/GETTY IMAGES FOR WIRED.

According to Forbes, Acton and his business partner sold WhatsApp to Facebook for $22 billion in cash and stock in 2014. Acton left WhatsApp at the end of 2017.

Acton is an investor and a member of the board of the Signal Foundation, which runs a messaging app focused on end-to-end encrypted messaging. 

“In 2018, he committed $50 million to Signal Foundation – the nonprofit behind the signal mobile app focused on preserving private communication,” said Forbes.

© 2023 Zenger News.com. Zenger News does not provide investment advice. All rights reserved.

Produced in association with Benzinga

Edited by Judy J. Rotich and Newsdesk Manager