6vle Ancestry.com Hopes to Stand Test of Time_89
But the company’s sluggish growth rates are a concern. In 2008 revenues were $197.6 million, up 18.8% from 2007, when revenues were $166.4 million. That’s respectable for most companies, but a bit slower than investors may want to see in a newly public tech company. "This is a company that’s growing, but not at a speed that is typical for a technology company," says David Menlow, founder of IPO Financial. "It’s not really moving the needle off the scale." Also of concern is a high attrition rate: About 4% of users leave the site each month, which means that nearly half of its subscribers leave over the course of a year.
One person that disagrees is Paul Allen, who helped found what would become Ancestry.com when his company Infobases bought the brand in 1997. After leaving the company in 2002, Allen now runs FamilyLink, a free Web community for family members. Allen calls Ancestry’s IPO "fantastic" for the whole genealogy business. "Ancestry.com is about building your historic family tree," he says. "Facebook and [FamilyLink] are focused on your living relatives. I think it’s a different market."