
Plynk
closedSocial payments application for instant peer-to-peer transfers.
Date | Investors | Amount | Round |
---|---|---|---|
N/A | €0.0 | round | |
investor investor investor | €0.0 | round | |
* | €25.0m | Series A | |
Total Funding | 000k |
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Plynk was a Dublin-based fintech startup that developed a money-messaging application for peer-to-peer payments. The company was founded in 2015 by Charles Dowd and Clive Foley. Dowd had a background in startups and multinational corporations, including Facebook, while Foley was a software developer with experience at companies like Microsoft and Wonga. They identified a gap in the market for an effective person-to-person payment network that was as seamless as sending a text message.
The company's core product was a mobile app that integrated social chat features with payment functionalities. It allowed users to log in via their Facebook accounts to instantly send and receive money within one-on-one or group chats, free of charge. Upon creating an account, each user was provided with a dedicated IBAN and a virtual Mastercard for online purchases, with plans to integrate Apple and Android Pay. Plynk's target market was primarily younger consumers, such as college students, for splitting expenses and making small, informal transfers. The business model aimed to generate revenue through future services, as the core peer-to-peer transfers were free.
Plynk gained significant attention after raising €725,000 in a seed round in 2016 from investors including Bank of Ireland's startup fund, Delta Partners, and Enterprise Ireland. This was followed by a widely publicized Series A funding announcement of €25 million in June 2017, led by Swiss Privée Ltd, one of the largest Series A rounds for an Irish company at the time. However, this funding was structured in tranches, contingent on the company hitting specific user growth and expansion metrics. Plynk failed to meet these targets, which led to a funding crisis in early 2018. The company was unable to pay staff and ceased accepting new customers, ultimately leading to the appointment of a liquidator in June 2018.
Keywords: P2P payments, social payments, fintech, mobile payments, money messenger, instant transfers, Dublin startup, Charles Dowd, Clive Foley, NDRC, virtual debit card, IBAN, payments app, financial technology, startup failure, venture capital