Beek is the emoji-based book review site aiming to change e-commerce in Latin America

Beek is the emoji-based book review site aiming to change e-commerce in Latin America


Leveraging post-literate tools like YouTube and emojis to create a website and mobile app that allows people to review the books they’re reading while they’re reading them, Beek is a startup that embraces the amazing contradictions of the internet age.

The Mexico City-based company, graduating from the most recent batch of YCombinator, began as a hackathon project in Austin, Texas, where co-founder Pamela Valdes was studying at the University of Texas.

Beek co-founders Pamela Valdes and Max Holzeu

 

It was at the AngelHack hackathon that Valdes met her partner, Max Holzeu, a Guatemalan immigrant and coder who was working at a web studio in the city.

“Austin is like San Francisco in terms of its culture, but it’s much cheaper,” said Holzeu.

As the only person at the hackathon who didn’t know how to code, Val des said that she was shunned by most of the developers, but Holzeu was intrigued (and maybe a little piteous) of the brave woman who came with an idea but no technical chops, and agreed to work with her on the project.

The initial idea for the company actually pre-dated the hackathon, where Valdes had gone to rustle up some talent to help her build a minimum viable product. The idea came from a class that Valdes had talked her way into with the famous venture investor Robert Metcalfe, a professor on the faculty of the  UT Austin.

“I didn’t have a product before I had the class with Bob,” Valdes recalls. “I had the idea with 10,000 followers on Facebook when it started. I did a lot of sketches and mockups on the design.”

By the end of the class, when she had met Holzeu, Valdes knew she had a business and convinced Max to return to Mexico City with her to get the idea off the ground.

The key to Beek’s simple success is its ease of use. A user can download the app, sign in through an integration with Facebook, or Twitter, or by generating an email and password.

Once in the app, a user can either browse through book titles or genres that are automatically populated or import a reading list from GoodReads. This user had a hard time getting the integration with GoodReads to work and wound up giving up on the process after waiting about a minute for the integration to occur.

Under the genre heading (with categories like “Teen”, “LGBT”, “Dystopias”, and “Fantasy”) users get pre-populated book suggestions as well as clips from famous BookTubers (YouTube reviewers who film book reviews).

In Mexico, where BookTubing (creating book reviews on YouTube) is a thing with its own conference, Beek has been racking up the hits.

Ideally, future integrations would include getting access to booklists in an Amazon, iBooks, or Google’s Play Books accounts.

Already the company has about 250,000 monthly active users, who have reviewed roughly 200,000 and according to the founders, the company is only just getting started.

Because Beek has loftier goals than simply being a book review site. Like Amazon founder, Jeff Bezos, Valdes and her partner see books as a gateway to an expanding number of markets.

Ultimately, the company wants to be the user-generated source for online reviews across Latin America.

“Amazon is not really popular in Latin America,” says Valdes. “There’s a huge opportunity in becoming the trusted review site for people and then using that platform to sell products.”

A vision like that could turn this simple book review site, into a next-generation e-commerce juggernaut.

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