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A social-calendar app that helps friends sync their schedules and make plans raised $8 million. Read its pitch deck.

<p class="ingestion featured-caption">Howbout was created by cofounders Jake Jenner (CFO), Neil Tanna (CEO), and Duncan Cowan (CTO).Courtesy of Howbout</p><ul class="summary-list"><li>Howbout is a social-calendar app that wants to help friends make plans.</li><li>The UK-based startup raised an $8 million Series A led by Goodwater Capital.</li></ul><p>Many <a target="_blank" class href="https://www.businessinsider.com/irl-social-startups-combat-loneliness-among-millennials-gen-z-2024-5">friend groups</a> have one friend who keeps the group chat alive and makes plans to get everyone together.</p><p>Howbout, a new social-calendar app, has a name for those friends: Chief Friendship Officers.</p><p>"That person — and it's usually she — is so powerful in her friendship group," Howbout CEO Neil Tanna told Business Insider. "She's the <a target="_blank" class href="https://www.businessinsider.com/how-much-money-micro-influencers-charge-instagram-brand-sponsorships-2020-8">micro influencer</a>, she's the one who's sending all these messages on group chats trying to get everyone to hang out, and she's taken for granted. Without her, that friendship group would fizzle out because they just wouldn't meet."</p><p>These friend group CFOs are the target early adopters of Howbout, which announced last month that it raised an $8 million Series A round led by Goodwater Capital's Chi-Hua Chien.</p><p>The UK-based startup, founded in 2020, lets users sync their calendars (like <a target="_blank" class href="https://www.businessinsider.com/apple">Apple</a> or <a target="_blank" class href="https://www.businessinsider.com/google-calendar">Google</a>) to the app, and then share their schedules and <a target="_blank" class href="https://www.businessinsider.com/gen-z-fighting-loneliness-making-friends-book-run-social-clubs-2024-8">make plans with friends</a>. Users can see when their friends are available and within the app, vote on plans, chat, schedule future events, and also share photos and videos from hangouts.</p><p>Users can toggle how much they want to share with peers on the app. Tanna noted that Gen-Z users are more likely to lay it all out there and share their entire calendars.</p><p>"Socializing how we spend our time is the best way to actively and passively stay connected with those closest to us," Tanna said, adding that the company is not trying to pitch itself as a better calendar alternative to the time management apps already out there.</p><p>Howbout is approaching 5 million users, Tanna said, and is currently ranked No. 15 on Apple's <a target="_blank" class href="https://www.businessinsider.com/apple-app-store">App Store</a> "Social Networking" ranking, as of October 10.</p><p>As it grows, it's focused on retention and reaching the right demo, Tanna said. Howbout is targeting young adults instead of teens or college students.</p><p>"We found out really quickly our product is not for students," Tanna said. "Time isn't really a commodity or a luxury that you need to trade like it is when you are an adult."</p><p>Pie, another IRL social app that <a target="_blank" class href="https://www.businessinsider.com/pitch-deck-irl-social-startup-pie-raises-andy-dunn-bonobos-2024-10">recently raised a Series A</a>, is also targeting young adults as its demo — specifically 22 to 34.</p><p>Howbout is pre-revenue, but experimenting with potential <a target="_blank" class href="https://www.businessinsider.com/how-new-social-media-startups-monetizing-scaling-their-apps-2024-3">revenue streams</a> like subscriptions or a freemium model, moving some features behind a paywall, and also strategically inking partnerships. Tanna said the startup has already partnered with Tinder and Sony Music.</p><p>Tanna recognizes the difficulties of building and growing a <a target="_blank" class href="https://www.businessinsider.com/founders-disrupting-social-media-networking-landscape-new-apps-2024-1">consumer social app</a> right now, too.</p><p>"It's all about retentive features," Tanna said. "It has to scratch an itch, it has to solve a problem."</p><p><strong>Read the 12-page pitch deck that Howbout used to raise its $8 million Series A:</strong></p><p><em>Note: Some slides have been edited and details have been redacted to share the document publicly.</em></p>
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