The idea, now in beta, comes from a few folks who currently work at social good e-commerce company Sevenly. They’re all active Tumblr users themselves, and were inspired to build Babblr because of their own passion for Tumblr and social media in general.
According to Babblr co-founder Brandon Sowers, between himself and Babblr’s other creators, Brett Williams and Trevor Clarke, they have a combined 700,000 Tumblr followers. ”We’re always looking at new, innovative ways to communicate with our fans,” says Sowers.
Today, Tumblr’s social features are more lightweight – its users can follow others’ blogs, favorite posts, and re-blog content while adding their own 2 cents, but direct communication between users isn’t possible.
“People want to communicate in realtime with their followers,” Sowers explains, “and this is a great tool for that.”
Babblr isn’t overly complex software. It’s not that much different from other on-site chat clients, in fact. The difference is that it’s built on top of the Tumblr API, and through a Chrome extension launching in a few weeks, it will integrate directly into your Tumblr dashboard.
The messaging app is designed to be family-friendly, too, as it censors curse words by turning them into silly or nonsense phrases like “fudge this” or “schmeggs.” (The F word and S word, respectively.)
The Babblr team has been working on the client for about six months, and as of two months ago, they allowed people to discover it on their own through search and other posted links, in order to try it out. As of now, Babblr has 25,000 users who have since done so. In fact, a post teasing the client’s development which Williams posted to his own Tumblr blog ended up with more than 200,000 “notes.”
“We got 25,000 emails that day from people wanting whatever this chat was at the time,” says Sowers. “It’s pretty insane when you see something like that,” he adds.
Of the now 25,000 users who have set up Babblr accounts, the majority of them are female, ages 16 through 24 – something which lends support to reports of Tumblr’s popularity among a younger demographic. Around 80 percent of those who signed up are also U.S.-based.
Today’s “launch” of Babblr is still really more of a sneak peek than it is a public debut. The client is in beta and won’t be available on Tumblr dashboards until the Chrome extension is finished up. But Sowers says that part is almost done.
When Babblr launches in a couple of weeks, it will be free to download, but the plan is to shortly thereafter begin charging a 99-cent fee for the download after word spreads.
All three co-founders still work at Sevenly and are bootstrapping the project with their own “passion, sweat and tears,” says Sowers.
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