Apps

Now a Series A startup, kids’ app and ‘digital toy’ Pok Pok is coming to Android

Comment

child playing Pok Pok
Image Credits: Pok Pok

Pok Pok, a kids’ app maker focused on building play-based learning experiences for the preschool set, has made a name for itself in the iOS developer community after winning both an App Store award for cultural impact and an Apple Design Award. But now the company is ready to expand its reach by bringing its app and new STEM-based activities to families with both iOS and Android devices, thanks to its latest funding.

The app, Pok Pok Playroom, today offers 17 play experiences that are more akin to “digital toys” than games, as they allow kids to explore with creative play. There are “toys” that respond to touches, drawing tools, those for interacting with shapes, dress-up toys, dinosaur toys and much more.

Originally incubated inside Snowman, the studio behind award-winning iOS games like Alto’s Adventure, Alto’s Odyssey, Skate City and others, the idea for Pok Pok emerged from the company’s culture of tinkering.

Snowman employees Mathijs Demaeght and Esther Huybreghts, now Pok Pok VP of design and chief creative officer, respectively, were looking for an app to entertain their young son James when he was a toddler. However, the co-founders didn’t find many options they liked. They wanted something playful, but not too technical and not gamified. After prototyping a product, they showed it to Snowman co-founder and creative director Ryan Cash, who saw the potential. Ryan’s sister, Melissa Cash, whose background was in developing products for babies and toddlers at Disney, joined the team and is now CEO of the Pok Pok spinout.

In the years since its May 2021 debut, Pok Pok has added new learning experiences to its app, raised a $3 million seed round and reached six figures in terms of monthly recurring revenue. Over the past year, the business has grown by 5x and the subscriber base by 9x, though the startup isn’t yet ready to share hard numbers. The app itself has over a million downloads.

Image Credits: Pok Pok

The startup’s growth caught investors’ attention, leading to a $6 million Series A. The round was led by Adjacent’s Nico Wittenborn, who has also backed other subscription businesses like Oura, Calm, Clue and Blinkist. Also participating in the round were Konvoy Ventures, Metalab Ventures, Banana Capital and other angel investors, including Instacart’s Brandon Leonardo.

Though pleased to have raised an oversubscribed round, the team realized they didn’t have any women on their cap table, which made them uneasy, given that the women-led company builds products for families.

“That just didn’t sit right,” said CEO Melissa Cash. “So we decided to make some allocation changes. We set aside some cash from the round. We did a first close because we didn’t want to hold up everything, but we took cash out and did a second close, which actually took us longer to raise than the first close because it was very tough to find female investors who participate at Series A and beyond.”

The team found that a lot of the women-led VCs tended to be pre-seed or seed or those who were involved in funds, but weren’t the decision-makers and check writers.

“That nuance was pretty important to us. And then we would find a lot of wonderful angel investors, but they didn’t have the capital or the wealth, frankly, to be able to invest in a Series A because, obviously, there’s a minimum check size. So it was a really eye-opening experience,” she said. “We thought if there’s any company that can get female backing, it’s Pok Pok.”

The second close of the round took them longer than the first due to these challenges and includes investors like Michelle Kennedy from Peanut.

Another one of the new investors ended up being Pok Pok’s fractional CFO, Julie McGill, who’s also an LP in several bigger venture funds. Like Pok Pok’s team, she was frustrated by the trouble the company was having to find women to add to the cap table. McGill ended up starting a brand-new fund, Julie Change Fund, just to invest in Pok Pok. The fund will now focus on bringing in wealthy individual women investing at the Series A stage and beyond.

“Pok Pok is the catalyst for starting a fund I have been thinking about for years; this fund is my commitment to breaking barriers women face in accessing, driving and accumulating capital,” McGill said in a statement. “We are thrilled to partner with Pok Pok, a company that excels at driving capital efficient growth, led by two amazing women.”

With the additional funds, Pok Pok is going to expand its offerings to include more STEM-based activities, in response to parents’ requests for more traditional learning experiences in the app alongside the more playful ones. The new activities will still be targeted to the preschool crowd, though Pok Pok is aware that even younger and older users continue to use its app and designs accordingly.

The company will also be able to address demand for Android later this fall. Many families have Android tablets for their kids because of the more accessible price points, Cash said.

“We want to make sure Pok Pok can be accessible to everybody. And we’ve had this waitlist growing for quite some time, so we have thousands of users … just waiting for it,” she said.

More TechCrunch

GenAI is everywhere these days, but Amazon Web Services has been perceived in some circles as being late to the game. In reality it’s still early, and the market is…

AWS App Studio promises to generate enterprise apps from a written prompt

Cybersecurity experts are criticizing Microsoft for data breach notification emails that are confusing customers.

Microsoft emails that warned customers of Russian hacks criticized for looking like spam and phishing

After securing $14 million for its second fund in 2023, early-stage VC firm Kearny Jackson is back with a third fund.

Marc Andreessen, Sequoia again back Kearny Jackson, this time in $65M Fund III

The question now is whether Spotify will add something similar for music artists in the future.

Spotify is no longer just a streaming app, it’s a social network

The core issue relates to a 2019 licensing change whereby Microsoft made it more expensive to run Microsoft’s enterprise software on rival cloud services.

Microsoft settles with European cloud trade body over antitrust complaints

Featured Article

From Facebook to the face of crypto: Inside Anthony Pompliano’s wild career

He’s known by a single-syllable name: Pomp. But his story is of an unconventional rise to success that almost ended two years after it began.

From Facebook to the face of crypto: Inside Anthony Pompliano’s wild career

As TikTok continues to test the waters with longer videos, Instagram Head Adam Mosseri has said the Meta-owned social network will continue to focus on short-form content. In an Instagram…

While TikTok chases YouTube, Instagram vows to focus on short-form content

Are you a Series A to B startup aiming to make a big splash in the tech world? Look no further than the ScaleUp Startups Exhibitor Program at TechCrunch Disrupt…

Elevate your startup with the ScaleUp Program at TechCrunch Disrupt 2024

While Samsung has maintained its own familiar design with the standard Galaxy Buds 3, the Pro are experiencing a sort of Apple identity crisis.

Samsung unveils Galaxy Buds 3 Pro and Buds 3, available for preorder now and shipping July 24

At Unpacked 2024, the company shared more details about the Galaxy Ring, which represents the first take on the category from a hardware giant.

Samsung’s Galaxy Ring, its first smart ring, arrives July 24 for $399

At the heart of the features is the Snapdragon 8 Gen 3, which is the same system on a chip that powered the Galaxy S24.

Samsung Galaxy Z Fold and Z Flip 6 arrive with Galaxy AI and Google Gemini

Vimeo joins companies TikTok, YouTube, and Meta in implementing a way for creators to label AI-generated content. The video hosting service announced on Wednesday that creators must now disclose to…

Vimeo joins YouTube and TikTok in launching new AI content labels

The search giant is updating its Gemini for Android app to be more suitable for foldables with the ability to use Gemini with overlay and split screen interfaces.

Google brings new Gemini features and WearOS 5 to Samsung devices

The European Union has designated adult content website XNXX as subject to the strictest level of content regulation under the bloc’s Digital Services Act (DSA) after it notified the bloc…

XNXX joins handful of adult sites subject to EU’s strictest content moderation rules

Months after Microsoft gained an observer seat on OpenAI’s board, the company is leaving the position of the non-voting seat. In a letter sent to OpenAI on Tuesday, Microsoft said…

As Microsoft leaves its observer seat, OpenAI says it won’t have any more observers

SaaS founders trying to figure out what it takes to raise their next round can refer to Point Nine’s famous yearly SaaS Funding Napkin. (The term refers to “back of…

Deep tech startups with very technical CEOs raise larger rounds, research finds

Iceland’s startup scene is punching above its weight. That’s perhaps in part because it kept the 2021 hype in check, but mostly because its tech ecosystem is coming of age.…

Iceland is dodging the VC doldrums as Frumtak Ventures lands $87M for its fourth fund

Index Ventures is announcing $2.3 billion in new funds to finance the next generation of tech startups globally. These new funds are spread across different stages with $800 million dedicated…

Index Ventures raises $2.3B for new venture and growth funds

Prompt engineering became a hot job last year in the AI industry, but it seems Anthropic is now developing tools to at least partially automate it. Anthropic released several new…

Anthropic’s Claude adds a prompt playground to quickly improve your AI apps

Hebbia, a startup that uses generative AI to search large documents and respond to large questions, has raised a $130 million Series B at a roughly $700 million valuation led…

AI startup Hebbia raised $130M at a $700M valuation on $13 million of profitable revenue

NovoNutrients has raised a $18 million Series A round from investors to build a pilot-scale facility to prove that its fermentation process works at scale.

NovoNutrients tweaks its bugs to turn CO2 into protein for people and pets

Seven years ago, Uber and Lyft blocked an effort to require ride-hailing app drivers to get fingerprinted in California. But by launching Uber for Teens earlier this year, the company…

Uber for Teens has reignited an old debate over fingerprinting drivers

Fast-food chain Whataburger’s app has gone viral in the wake of Hurricane Beryl, which left around 1.8 million utility customers in Houston, Texas without power. Hundreds of thousands of those…

Whataburger app becomes unlikely power outage map after Houston hurricane

Bumble’s new reporting option arrives at a time when, unfortunately, AI-generated photos on dating apps are common

Bumble users can now report profiles that use AI-generated photos

The concept of Airchat is fun, especially if you’re someone who loves to send voice memos instead of typing out long paragraphs on your phone keyboard.

Talky social app Airchat gets a major overhaul, making it more like an asynchronous Clubhouse

Featured Article

The fall of EV startup Fisker: A comprehensive timeline

Here is a timeline of the events that led fledgling automaker Fisker to file for bankruptcy.

The fall of EV startup Fisker: A comprehensive timeline

Ahead of these potential competitors comes Openvibe, a simple aggregator for the open social web.

Openvibe combines Mastodon, Bluesky and Nostr into one social app

Welcome to TechCrunch Fintech! Last week was a holiday in the United States, so news was a bit lighter than normal. But there was still fintech-related items to report, including…

Should venture capitalists be held accountable when startups screw up?

Fisker Inc. co-founders Henrik Fisker and his wife, Geeta Gupta-Fisker, are lowering their salaries to $1 in order to keep their failed EV startup’s bankruptcy proceedings funded, as lawyers work…

Henrik Fisker drops salary to $1 to keep Fisker Inc. bankruptcy case alive

After announcing a whopping $20 million seed last year, Unlikely AI founder William Tunstall-Pedoe has kept the budding U.K. foundation model maker’s approach under lock and key. Until now: TechCrunch…

Alexa co-creator gives first glimpse of Unlikely AI’s tech strategy