Weedmaps is an online legal marijuana community that allows users to review and discuss cannabis strains and local dispensaries. The website is similar to Yelp and contains a database with over 3,000 medical marijuana dispensaries and over 950 strains of cannabis. The company was launched in July 2008 by Justin Hartfield and Keith Hoerling. The site attracts approximately two million monthly visitors and has annual revenue of $18 million. Chris Beals is the president of the company Weedmaps Media Inc.
Video Weedmaps
History
A 2009 New York Daily News article said of Weedmaps, "There's a new stoner's paradise on the Web" that is a website "where medical marijuana patients can connect with other patients in their area, to freely discuss and review local cannabis co-operatives and dispensaries." In November 2010 WeedMaps was acquired by General Cannabis Incorporated for an undisclosed amount. As part of acquisition, founder Justin Hartfield became WeedMaps' Chief Web Officer.
A 2010 TechCrunch article reported that WeedMaps grew their 2009 monthly revenue of $20,000 to $400,000 a month in 2010 with approximately 50,000 registered users.
In November 2011 Weedmaps acquired Marijuana.com for $4.2 million. The acquisition included the Marijuana.com domain name as well as all of the site's content.
In December 2011, Weedmaps acquired MMJMenu, a Denver-based software entity that "provides back-end enterprise software for medical marijuana dispensaries. The software handles everything from patient management to inventory control to checkout at point of sale." MMJMenu allows medical marijuana businesses to track their sales and revenue from seed to sale, servicing medical marijuana states such as California, Colorado, Washington, and Michigan.
In February 2013 General Cannabis sold all cannabis-related businesses, including WeedMaps, back to the original founders.
In June 2013, Hartfield and business partner and COO Doug Francis formally announced the formation of Ghost Group and its offspring, the Emerald Ocean Capital firm, the first marijuana Venture Capital firm to connect and invest through "Emerging Companies in Legal Cannabis and Medical Marijuana Sectors."
Also in June 2013, Business Insider dubbed Hartfield "The First Venture Capitalist of The Pot Industry."
Weedmaps partnership with NORML
In October 2011, Weedmaps entered into an online partnership with NORML.org, helping to revamp the site. This partnership signified Weedmaps' effort to aid legalization efforts and take a more active approach within the marijuana community.
Hartfield Wall Street Journal interview
In a July 2009 Wall Street Journal interview, Justin Hartfield admitted that he exaggerated the severity of his insomnia to gain access to medical marijuana for recreational use. Hartfield commented that his interaction with the medical cannabis system is evidence that the system "is a total farce."
Maps Weedmaps
Products and services
Content
Weedmaps provides listing services for medical marijuana dispensaries, doctors' offices and delivery services throughout the United States. The site accepts reviews from any patient in medical marijuana states. Along with its business and social services, Weedmaps also participates in and hosts events connecting medical marijuana patients with one another and promoting activism and safe access.
Community
Weedmaps combines local dispensaries reviews and social networking functionality to create an online community. The website includes a forum, private messaging function, a job board, and Q&A from fellow patients.
Proximity map
The Weedmaps proximity map utilizes a Google Maps interface that pinpoints the dispensaries which are closest to a user. The proximity feature also presents advertisements for dispensaries based on a user's geographical location.
Mobile applications
Weedmaps is also the most widely used and downloaded medical marijuana mobile application in both Google and Apple's Application Stores, providing services for both Android and iPhone users who are medical marijuana patients on the Google Play and the Apple App Store.
Criticism
Controversy
Weedmaps reviews are suspicious. Weedmaps mistakenly leaked data showing that the majority of reviewers were from a small group of IPs that all gave good reviews of the site which means that individual users were leaving multiple reviews. An independent analysis of the text of reviews estimates that 62% of reviews are fake. An auditing company called Fakespot found that only 38% of reviews were valid on Weedmaps. Fakespot CSO Ming Ooi gave Weedmaps an F-grade. Weedmaps maintains an extensive listing of unlicensed dispensaries.
References
External links
- Media related to Weedmaps at Wikimedia Commons
Source of the article : Wikipedia