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Key people at Evite.com, an InteractiveCorp (IAC) company.
Evite.com, historically an InteractiveCorp (IAC) company, is a United States-based digital invitation platform that enables users to create, send, and manage online invitations and RSVPs for various events. The platform facilitates event planning at scale, sending approximately 7 million invitations annually with an average of 30 guests per event, thereby reaching hundreds of millions of individuals each year. Generating revenue through premium offerings and affiliate marketing, the company sees approximately 10% of its user base opt for paid digital designs. Evite has established significant commerce integrations, notably serving as the largest gift affiliate partner for Amazon. Previously owned by Liberty Media, the platform was acquired in 2020 by current CEO David Yeom and co-owner George Ruan, who successfully restructured the business model to achieve profitability. Evite was originally founded in 1998 by co-founder Selina Tobaccowala.
Key people at Evite.com, an InteractiveCorp (IAC) company.
Evite.com is an online invitation platform that enables users to create, send, and manage digital invitations for events via email, text, or social media, offering thousands of professionally designed templates, RSVP tracking, reminders, guest messaging, and contact management.[5] Originally part of IAC/InterActiveCorp (now IAC Inc.), a media and internet holding company known for acquiring and spinning off brands like Ticketmaster, Expedia, and Match.com, Evite served consumers planning celebrations, solving the problem of coordinating events digitally in an era of growing online commerce.[1][3][5] As a portfolio company under IAC's early multi-brand strategy aiming to dominate interactive commerce, Evite contributed to IAC's portfolio of e-commerce and ticketing services but has since operated more independently, with no recent direct ties evident in current records.[1][3]
Evite emerged in the early 2000s as part of Ticketmaster, which IAC acquired a controlling interest in during 1997-2002, positioning it within IAC's expanding online portfolio that included event-related services like ticketing and reservations.[1][2][3] IAC, founded in 1996 as HSN Inc. and evolving through names like USA Interactive (2002) and InterActiveCorp (2003), aggressively built its internet assets via acquisitions such as Expedia (2001), Hotels.com, Match.com, and Hotwire.com, with Evite fitting into this mix under Ticketmaster's oversight alongside ReserveAmerica.[1][3] Early traction came amid the dot-com boom's shift to interactive commerce, where IAC bundled consumer-facing digital tools; pivotal moments included IAC's 2005 spin-off of travel assets like Expedia, refocusing on core media brands, though Evite's specific founding details predate public records here, humanizing it as a product of Barry Diller-led IAC's opportunistic e-commerce push.[2][3]
Evite rode the early 2000s wave of internet commercialization, aligning with IAC's strategy to dominate online transactions in travel, ticketing, and social coordination amid broadband adoption and e-commerce growth.[1][3] Timing was ideal post-dot-com recovery, as consumers shifted to digital tools for everyday tasks like event planning, bolstered by market forces like rising email penetration and the decline of physical mailers.[2][5] It influenced the ecosystem by pioneering digital invitations within IAC's portfolio, paving the way for modern apps in social planning (e.g., precursors to Eventbrite or group chat integrations), while IAC's spin-offs like Expedia amplified interactive commerce trends.[3] Today, it exemplifies enduring niche digital services in a landscape dominated by all-in-one social platforms.
Evite's trajectory points to sustained relevance in digital socializing, potentially expanding into AI-personalized invites, virtual event hybrids, or deeper integrations with calendars and social networks amid hybrid work-celebration norms. Trends like mobile-first experiences and data-driven personalization will shape it, evolving from IAC's commerce roots to a standalone leader in invitation tech. Its influence may grow by influencing broader event ecosystems, circling back to simplifying life's gatherings in an increasingly connected world.[5]