In a period of social distancing, making new professional connections feels harder than ever. So Amsterdam-based Cooper is building a network thatâs all about making and receiving introductions.
âEverything that happens in the network is based on on the foundation of introductions,â CEO Robert Gaal told me. âYou should never get an unwanted message, and thereâs no such thing as a connection request, because itâs not necessary if you have an introduction.â
The startup is launching internationally today and announcing that it has raised $2 million in seed funding.
Gaal (who co-founded the company with CTO Emiel van Liere) described Cooper as âa private professional network thatâs not about how many connections do I have, itâs about bringing the people that you already trust into a circle.â
Thatâs in contrast with existing professional networking sites, which are most useful as âdirectoriesâ of online résumés, and usually emphasize the quantity of connections, rather than the quality. (Iâll admit that on LinkedIn, Iâm connected to a bunch of people who I barely know at all.)
So Cooper tries to take the opposite approach, limiting usersâ connections to people they really know. To do this, it can pull data from a userâs online calendar, and it also provides them with a personal invite code that they can share with their professional contacts.
Image Credits: Cooper
Users then post requests or opportunities, which are viewable by their connections and by friends of friends, who can offer to make useful introductions via email or in Cooper itself.
In fact, Gaal said that during the initial beta test, multiple people have successfully used Cooper to find new jobs â sometimes after pandemic-related layoffs, which theyâre comfortable sharing with their inner circle but donât want to broadcast to the world at large.
âThereâs more discovery, more trust and you can reinvent other things on top of that â what the résumé is, what mentorship is â if you get trust right first,â he said.
Of course, simply sharing a calendar invite with someone doesnât really mean you trust them or know them well. Cooper could eventually start looking at other measures that indicate your âconnectivityâ with someone, like how often you email with them, Gaal said â but the first step is simply recreating the professional circle in which you feel comfortable saying, âOh, youâre looking for a job? My friend is hiring.â
Yes, those kinds of conversations are already happening offline, but he noted that most of us can only remember âa handful of peopleâ at once. Cooper is making that âmarketplaceâ much more visible and easy to track.
The startup doesnât sell ads or user data. Instead, Gaal hopes to make money by charging membership fees for features like customizing your profile or promoting your request more broadly.
The startupâs seed funding was led by Comcast Ventures, with participation from LocalGlobe and 468 Capital.
âAt a time when the ability to connect is limited, Cooper is building a professional network fostering meaningful and substantive connections, âsaid Daniel Gulati, founding partner at Forecast Fund and former managing director at Comcast Ventures, in a statement. âWe are excited to support the team on their journey ahead.â
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