Weebly, a subsidiary of Block, Inc., is an American web hosting and web development company based in San Francisco, California. Founded in 2006 by David Rusenko, Chris Fanini, and Dan Veltri, the company offers WYSIWYG website creation services and hosting. David Rusenko served as the Chief Executive Officer, Chris Fanini as the Chief Technology Officer, and Dan Veltri as the Chief Product Officer.
History
The company was established to simplify the process of building personal websites. In early 2006, Rusenko began development of Weebly in his college dorm at the Pennsylvania State University where he met Chris Fanini. By June 2006, an invitational beta version was introduced, followed by the official launch of a private beta in September 2006. Before its acquisition by Block in 2018, Weebly had raised approximately $35 million in funding from a range of investors, including angel investors and venture capital firms.[2][3] In 2018, co-founder Dan Veltri departed from the company.
In March 2007, Weebly re-launched with its WYSIWYG editing interface,[4] "Pro" accounts and Google AdSense monetization features, as well as compatibility with Google Chrome and Safari.[5] In 2010, the company added French, Italian, Spanish, and Chinese languages[6] followed by integrated JotForm software into its services.[7] On October 1, 2015, Weebly Carbon was released to allow plugin integration among other features. In 2016, Weebly began focusing on its e-commerce offerings with the release of Weebly 4 and Weebly Promote, an integrated marketing tool.[8]
As more sellers began using the company, the company created features for doing taxes, integrations with Shippo, a Facebook Ad creator, email marketing and lead capture, abandoned cart features, the release of Mobile 5.0 to help sellers run their store from anywhere, and deep integrations with Square payment processing.
Weebly initially faced criticism for its lack of CSS/HTML editing support, but this functionality was added in 2009.
The company expanded its offices in 2015, including a 36000 sqft warehouse in San Francisco.[9] Additionally, Weebly opened a Berlin office in 2015/2016 to offer European-based support and marketing.
In 2018, Weebly was acquired by Square, Inc. (now known as Block, Inc.[10]) for approximately $365 million in cash and stock.[11] At the time of the acquisition on June 4, 2018,[12] Weebly had millions of customers and over 625,000 paid subscribers. As of March 2025, Weebly is used by 0.5% of all websites.[13]
Product
Weebly's website creator operates in a web browser, using a widget-based site builder with drag-and-drop[14][15] functionality. Storage is unlimited, but the service restricts individual file sizes.[16] It automatically generates a mobile version of each website and supports blogging and e-commerce. Sites can be in various top-level domains, including weebly.com, com, net, org, co, info, or us.
Weebly also provides Android and iPhone apps for monitoring website traffic, updating blog posts, managing e-Commerce stores, and more.[17][18] Users can incorporate advertisements on their websites and track visitor statistics through Weebly's tracking tool or Google Analytics. The platform also offers integrated newsletter marketing features and supports multiple languages: English, French, Spanish, Italian, German, Portuguese, Polish, Norwegian, Dutch, Danish, Swedish, Chinese, Japanese, Russian, and Turkish (as of 2020).[19]
Awards and recognition
Weebly has received recognition for its contributions to web development, including being listed among TIME'S 50 Best Websites of 2007 and receiving mentions in Forbes and Business Insider.[20][21] However, it has faced censorship in some countries and has implemented geo-blocking in several regions.
Censorship
In December 2014, the Indian government blocked Weebly in India, due to fears that ISIS propaganda was being spread through the site.[22] On December 31, the site was again made available throughout India.[23]
Weebly also applies censorship to its availability with a wide selection of geo-blocked countries where Weebly is unavailable to internet users. Site owners are unable to log in from these geo-blocked locations to administer the site just as internet users cannot reach the site. According to Weebly's official support forum, the exact list of blocked countries is secret, but the employees confirmed the blocking of Côte d'Ivoire, Iran, Russia, Turkey, Ukraine, as well as much of the Middle East, West and Central Africa.[24]
See also
- Website builder
External links
References
- Anthony Ha. Square is acquiring website builder Weebly for $365M TechCrunch, April 26, 2018, retrieved January 19, 2020^
- Casey Newton. Startup Weebly takes profitable leap forward San Francisco Chronicle, August 14, 2011^
- Alisha Green. Why Square CEO Jack Dorsey is spending $365 million to buy out these startup founders San Francisco Business Times, April 26, 2018^
- Blake Robinson. Weebly Launches blog Platform, Closes $650K Investment TechCrunch, May 9, 2007, retrieved September 24, 2012^
- David Adewumi. Weebly, a Simple web page creator, launches Adsense feature and pro accounts Venture Beat, June 10, 2008, retrieved September 24, 2012^
- Anthony Ha. Simple website builder Weebly goes international VentureBeat, February 24, 2010, retrieved January 19, 2020^
- Roy, Rohit. Weebly Users Gain Access to Easy-to-use Form-Creator JotForm Martech Advisor, 1 April 2016, retrieved 11 January 2017^
- How Weebly 4 Is Leading An E-commerce Revolution www.forbes.com, retrieved 2018-04-25^
- Weebly Opens New Worldwide Headquarters in San Francisco's Historic SoMa District Business Wire, May 14, 2015, retrieved January 15, 2025^
- Kate Rooney. Jack Dorsey's Square changes corporate name to Block CNBC, December 1, 2021^
- Anthony Ha. Square is acquiring website builder Weebly for $365M TechCrunch, April 26, 2018, retrieved January 15, 2025^
- Square Updates Second Quarter and Full Year 2018 Guidance Square, retrieved 2021-05-20^
- Usage statistics and market share of Weebly w3techs.com, W3Techs, 24 Mar 2025, retrieved 24 Mar 2025^
- cite news |author=Mattis König |date=2014-07-07 |title=Weebly Testbericht |work=Weebly Testbericht |url=https://homepage-baukasten-vergleich.de/weebly-testbericht^
- name="BBC"> Kate Russell. Webscape BBC News, February 15, 2008, retrieved September 24, 2012^
- Weebly, Inc. Weebly iTunes Store, September 19, 2012, retrieved September 24, 2012^
- 12 Best Free Website Builders retrieved 12 January 2018^
- iPhone and Android Apps Weebly, retrieved 27 April 2014^
- Company Info Weebly, retrieved January 19, 2020^
- Mary Murray Buner. 50 Best Websites 2007 TIME Specials, July 8, 2007, retrieved September 12, 2012^
- 30 Under 30:Social/Mobile Forbes, 2011, retrieved January 18, 2020^
- Jeff Stone. Vimeo, DailyMotion, Pastebin Among Sites Blocked In India For 'Anti-India' Content From ISIS International Business Times, 31 December 2014, retrieved 2015-01-03^
- Ravi Sharma. Indian government unblocks Vimeo, Dailymotion, 2 other websites The Times of India, January 2, 2015, retrieved January 3, 2015^
- Weebly doesn't work in Russia 15 April 2019^