How Canva reaches 130M+ visitors/mo acquiring startups. [Read Online]( How Canva Gets 130M+ Visitors/Mo Acquiring Startups A dive into a distinct approach to startup acquisitions. [Nicolás Cerdeira]( [fb]( [tw]( [in]( [email](mailto:?subject=Post%20from%20Failory&body=How%20Canva%20Gets%20130M%2B%20Visitors%2FMo%20Acquiring%20Startups%3A%20A%20dive%20into%20a%20distinct%20approach%20to%20startup%20acquisitions.%0A%0Ahttps%3A%2F%2Fnewsletter.failory.com%2Fp%2Fcanva-gets-130m-visitorsmo-acquiring-startups) Hey â Itâs Nico. Welcome back to Behind Tactics ð§ , your go-to source for innovative strategies that startups are deploying to carve out their niche in the market. Today, we're exploring Canva's unconventional approach to startup acquisitions that is turning heads and rewriting the rulebook. Instead of the typical playbook of migrating and dismantling acquired startups, Canva has been quietly revolutionizing the game with its unique integration strategy. Let's dive into the canvas and paint a clearer picture! ð¨ Presented by PartnerHero Your Free, Evergreen CX Book Customer experience can make or kill a startup. Provide your customers with a good experience, and youâll enjoy the benefits of happy customers talking about your product everywhere. Ignore customer experience, and youâll suffer from high churn and low customer LTV. But building a support team is hard. It takes a lot of trial and error, money, and time. Thatâs why [PartnerHero has created CXOXO](, the step-by-step playbook to build a customer support team your customers will love. Whether you are: - A solo founder who needs to delegate customer support, - An early-stage founder starting to think further about CX, - Or a growing startup founder looking to scale your support team⦠[Youâll find this book]( super useful and actionable. Itâs sold for $14 on Amazon, but you can get a free copy for being a Failory subscriber (for a limited time). [Get your free copy ð]( The Strategy An Overview Usually, startup acquisitions follow one of three paths: - The buyer integrates the acquired solution into their platform. - The buyer migrates the acquired startupâs customer base to their business. - The buyer onboards the acquired startupâs team to the company. After that, the acquired startup gets shut down. [Canva](, however, is doing things a little bit differently. Instead of closing the acquired startup, they keep it alive and add useful integrations with Canva. Let's see some examples to understand why this strategy is so clever⦠Kaleido In February 2021, [Canva acquired Kaleido](, owners of remove.bg, an image background removal tool. The first thing Canva did was add this background removal functionality into their app. This is where most startups would have been done with it. Acquire a startup, add their solutions to their platform, shut down the startup, and move on. But Canva was smarter about it. They kept remove.bg alive and added a button where the user can, in one click, move the image to Canva to keep editing it. This transition from remove.bg to Canva is so smooth and straightforward that you do not even need a Canva account to keep editing your image. Now, remove.bg gets 60M+ in visits per month, with 50% of the traffic being direct and the rest being organic. This is because remove.bg ranks in the first position of Google for thousands of extremely high search volume keywords, like âbackground removerâ or âremove backgroundâ. Canva could have killed remove.bg and tried to position itself as the go-to tool for background removals, but instead, they chose to leverage remove.bgâs popularity and implement a smooth integration to re-direct their large traffic into their own platform. Pexels and Pixabay In 2019, Canva acquired two of the biggest stock photo libraries: [Pexels and Pixabay](. They were mostly looking to expand the images they offered to users on their platform but decided that they could also redirect some of the traffic in these sites to Canva with one simple button. In both cases, they added a button that allows you to edit the image in Canva. These two websites must be getting Canva a ton of new users, as together they get 65M+ visits per month, the majority from organic traffic. Flourish In February 2022, [Canva acquired Flourish](, a data visualization platform. Once again, Canva was not only interested in adding the data-vis solutions to their platform but also leveraged Flourish 1M users by adding this small button to their editor: Should I? Why This Works - They are acquiring companies whose users are potential Canva users. This strategy would not work if Canva was acquiring companies in a completely different niche, whose users are not interested in graphic design. And it would also not work if they tried to acquire a direct competitor, like [Stencil]( (in this case, a button to âcontinue editing in Canvaâ would not make sense since Stencil already provides image editing features). The reason these acquisitions work is that Canva looks for other startups in the graphic design niche that provide a service they are not providing. - They are leveraging the acquired companiesâ product and marketing efforts. It would be possible for Canva to integrate remove.bg into their platform, but this would waste all of remove.bg branding efforts. Instead, Canva is taking advantage of the âremove.bgâ keyword (which has a 1.1M monthly search volume on its own), the SEO built on the domain, and the product design that its users love. - It keeps things simple. Rather than migrating the acquired tools into Canva, they followed an easier path. For remove.bg, they simply copied their tech. For Pexels and Pixabay, they simply added their image stock. For Flourish.studio, they simply added a link for Canva users to create charts in the app. How to Apply It There are three main ways of applying this acquisition strategy: 1) Search In Your Space Look for tools in your same businessâ niche that do something that your company doesnât do. Ideally, the tool should have direct or organic traffic. Then, add a one-click seamless integration with your tool (no accounts should be needed). For example, the video-editing tool [VEED]( could buy [Unscreen](, an AI tool for removing video backgrounds. Many users who are looking to remove video backgrounds could be interested in continue editing the video in VEED. According to Similarweb, Unscreen gets 1M visits per month (80% of which comes from organic and direct traffic), so adding a button that says âcontinue editing in Veedâ could be a great way for them to gain new users. 2) Search In a Different Space Acquire a tool in a completely different space that does something your user might do as a step before or after using your tool. For example, a CRM tool like [Hubspot]( could buy [BuiltWith](, a company that shows which technologies a website is using. Many people use BuiltWith to find leads, which they then take to their CRMs. If Hubspot builds a seamless integration with BuiltWith, Iâm sure itâd drive many users to them. 3) Search For a Directory In Your Space Acquire a directory website that is in your same business niche. The users of this website are very likely potential users of your tool, so making an integration in the directory can be fruitful. For example, Coinbase, a cryptocurrency exchange platform, could acquire Coingecko, a crypto price tracking directory, and add a button for buying cryptos in Coinbase. Another example is [Canvaâs acquisition of SlidesCarnaval](, a site that offered free PowerPoint and Google Slides templates. They then added an eye-catching button to edit the templates in Canva: Yes, But - Sometimes it doesnât make sense to keep the business operating because it has high costs or doesnât generate significant revenue. An example of this happening could be [Canvaâs acquisition of SmartMockups](, a tool for creating product mockups. For some undisclosed reason, instead of doing what they typically do, theyâve decided to [shut down SmartMockups]( and create [Canva Mockups]( with all of the mockup options that were previously available in the acquired platform. - The integrations Canva builds into each of their acquired companies (the buttons they add) are only clicked by a small percentage of the users. If, instead, they fully integrated the acquired solutions into Canva (if they moved remove.bg to be only accessible within Canva, for example), they would drive far more users to their platform. - They are missing the SEO power of all the sites they acquire. If they did 301 re-directions from these websites into Canva, it would make canva.com an even more powerful domain. Keep Learning Others Playing It Semrush is another company that has been applying Canvaâs acquisition strategy. In 2022, Semrush acquired [Backlinko](, an SEO blog founded by [Brian Dean](, one of the most well-known people in the SEO industry. Since then, Semrush has been editing all articles to strategically mention them. See how this [On-Page SEO guide]( mentions using Semrush as one of the steps: Now, this strategy is not exactly the same thing Canva is doing. Semrush did not build a seamless integration but rather focused on creating a well-thought-out product placement campaign. Still, just like Canva, Semrush is acquiring other startups and keeping them alive so they can redirect their user base to their own platform. Backlinko gets 750K organic users per month, so you can bet Semrush is getting many thousands of users per month from this acquisition. Go Deeper - [A list of all of Canvaâs acquisitions](. - The full story of [Semrushâs acquisition of Backlinko](. - Another [recent acquisition of Semrush](. - A strategy to [generate backlinks and organic traffic]( by building side projects. - This list of ideas to start your [side-project marketing campaign](. Refer Failory, Get Rewards Share Failory Chances are you have some more friends who would enjoy Failory as much as you do. Share Failory with these friends and cash in on premium resources and swag. You currently have 0 referrals, only 1 away from receiving the 2024 Startup Failure Report. [Share Failory â]( Or copy and paste this link to others: Help Me Improve Failory How Was Today's Newsletter? If this issue was a startup, how would you rate it? [ð Launches to the moon!](
[ð¤ Room for a pivot](
[ð Crashes and burns]( Thatâs all for this edition. Cheers, Nico Update your email preferences or unsubscribe [here]( © 2024 Failory 1309 Coffeen Avenue
Ste 1200, Sheridan, Wyoming 82801, United States of America [[beehiiv logo]Powered by beehiiv](