• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Welcome debuts a smarter city guide app on iOS, backed by $3.5M led by Accel

October 7, 2021 by David Barret Leave a Comment

When you’re exploring a city — whether one you’re visiting on your travels or your own — there are a number of tools that can help you find out where to go, what to see, and what to do, like Google Maps, Yelp, TripAdvisor and others. But a startup called Welcome thinks that today’s set of tools could be smarter and more personalized to the individuals who use them. Its new app instead uses “real-time” technologies to make recommendations that take into account a user’s preferences as well as other details about their current context — like the weather, season, traffic, and the popularity of the place at the current time of day — in order to provide a better-curated set of recommendations.

The end result is meant to be a city guide that’s more like “a concierge in your pocket,” says Welcome co-founder Matthew Rosenberg.

Image Credits: Welcome

Rosenberg says he was inspired to build Welcome after traveling, pre-pandemic, with his then-girlfriend, now-wife following the acquisition of his first company, a mobile video creation app called Cameo, by Vimeo. During this time, the couple explored parts of Europe, Latin America, and the U.S., which was an amazing experience he says, and one that ultimately brought them closer together, as it turned out.

“But something I found myself doing in in those moments — we’re in all these beautiful places…we’re in an incredible museum or at a wonderful lunch — and I found myself hunched over my phone, trying to figure out where to go next,” Rosenberg explains. He was sifting through Google Maps, recommendations from friends, and trying to read reviews to make a decision about what was next on their journey.

This led him to wonder: “why isn’t there a tool that like can be smart and go beyond just place [recommendations] — that can really look at what’s going on in my life and in the world around me, and make smarter recommendations?” he recalls.

Image Credits: Welcome

This led to the development of what’s now become Wonder, a city guide app that combines intelligence, recommendations, personalization, and even media, like photos and videos, to help users find things to do.

The startup is co-founded by fellow Vimeo employees Peter Gerard, Mark Armendariz, and Mark Essel, who together with Rosenberg launched an early version of Welcome back in 2019 as something of a market test. Their idea landed them some seed money from Accel, which gave them enough runway to build the version of the app they had in mind.

That version has now arrived on the App Store.

Upon first launch, you’ll give Welcome some input about your interests and you’ll have the option to pick from a series of publishers to follow — like Condé Nast, Lonely Planet, Eater, Culture Trip, Food & Wine, and others — whose content is used to help inform Welcome’s recommendations.

Image Credits: Welcome

You can then scroll through the app’s home feed to see relevant articles for the city you’re currently researching or browse the map, where suggestions are marked with icons related to the place — like a cheeseburger for a restaurant, martini glass for a bar, tree for an outdoor place (like a farmers market), and so on.

As you tap into each place, you’ll be presented with photos and videos, and links to get directions, the website, the phone number, as well as a button to order an Uber or Lyft, and more. You can also leave your own tips for fellow Welcome users, mark the list as a favorite, and add tags.

As you browse the map, buttons at the top let you filter to see only a subset of places, like food, drinks, activities, arts, and more.

The app itself is well-designed in terms of the look of its user interface, but it’s perhaps not as simple to use as an app that’s more heavily focused on collecting user-generated content — like business ratings and reviews.

It was not immediately obvious, for example, how you could contribute your own photos and videos to a place, as some listings offered a prominently placed “Add” button for uploading your media, while it seemed others did not. In reality, the “Add” button wasn’t missing — you just had to scroll over to the right to see it. But it wasn’t clear that the row was scrollable. It looked like the Add button simply wasn’t there. (See below examples.)

Image Credits: screenshots from Welcome

Still, Welcome’s underlying data and parsing engines are interesting. The team developed custom tools that pick up keywords in the articles from publishers and turn them into tags. Eventually, it wants to expand this technology to any site — like local blogs, for instance — which users could click and save, perhaps via a web browser extension. The team is even thinking about offering a way to ingest the travel lists and tips people collect in less obvious places — like spreadsheets, notes, and emails.

In time, Welcome would also like to better integrate suggestions and guides from travel content creators to enhance its recommendations further. This could also later aid its business model, where premium travel guides from specific creators or publishers could be made available for a fee. The company also plans to add more ways to transact in-app, like booking tickets or other activities where a revenue share would be involved.

Before its public debut, Welcome grew to over 50,000 beta users across more than 350 cities worldwide and now has over 6.5 million places its database. It’s offering over 300,000 curated recommendations globally, at launch.

The startup is backed by a $3.5 million seed round led by Accel, with Lakestar Ventures participating. The round closed in 2020 but hadn’t yet been announced. Including pre-seed funding, Welcome has raised $4.2 million to date.

Welcome’s app, for the time being, is available on iOS only as a free download.

Source Link Welcome debuts a smarter city guide app on iOS, backed by $3.5M led by Accel

David Barret
David Barret

Related posts:

  1. UK card spending slips to 93% of pre-COVID level – ONS
  2. Fitch says possible China Evergrande default may have broader effects
  3. Mastercard taps into buy now, pay later market with latest offering
  4. Ring debuts ‘Virtual Security Guard,’ new Pro alarm system and smarter motion alerts including package delivery

Filed Under: News

Reader Interactions

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Primary Sidebar

  • Enormous Coronal Hole And Beast-Like Crawling Prominences Dazzle On The Active Sun
  • Dramatic Drone Footage Of Iceland’s Latest Volcanic Eruption Shows An Epic Scene From Hell
  • A Shrimp That Lives In A Tree? Indonesia’s Cyclops Mountains Are Home To Some Seriously Strange Wildlife
  • Is NASA’s Claim That Saturn Could Float On Water Really True?
  • Pangea Proxima: This Is What Planet Earth May Look Like 250 Million Years In The Future
  • The Story Of Dogxim, The Fox-Dog Hybrid That Shouldn’t Have Existed
  • Neanderthal Butchers From Different Caves Had Their Own Specialities
  • On July 20, The US And Canada Will Witness The Little-Known Seven Sisters Eclipse
  • First-Ever Giant Ichthyosaur Soft Tissues Preserved In “Extraordinary Fossil” Dating Back 183 Million Years
  • The Worst Day In History For Humans
  • Could You Survive Being Sucked Into A Tornado?
  • AI Aliens: What If Extraterrestrial Life Is Artificially Intelligent?
  • Lighting Hit Apollo 12 Just 36.5 Seconds After Launch – “After That It Got Very Interesting”
  • Northwest Africa 12264: Ancient Meteorite May Change Our Timeline Of The Solar System
  • A New Hole Has Emerged In The “Hottest, Oldest, And Most Dynamic” Part Of Yellowstone National Park
  • “Something Extraordinary Occurred”: A New 380-Kilometer World Has Been Found In Our Solar System
  • “Earliest Moment” Of Planet Formation Spotted For First Time Around Star 1,300 Light-Years Away
  • First Known Trilobite Fossil Collected By Romans Was Used As “Magical” Pendant
  • Why Do Pigeons In Cities Have Missing Toes And Disfigured Feet?
  • Bernardinelli-Bernstein: The Biggest Comet In The Solar System Could Stretch From New York To Philadelphia
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version