Amazon to acquire Ring video doorbell maker, cracking open the door in home security market

Gemini

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
Amazon to acquire Ring video doorbell maker, cracking open the door in home security market

ring-amazon-1260x871.png

Amazon has reached an agreement to acquire Ring, the Santa Monica, Calif.-based maker of video cameras, doorbells and other smart home technologies, GeekWire has learned. The companies are expected to announce the acquisition this afternoon.

The surprise acquisition marks the latest move by the Seattle-based tech giant into the smart home technology market. Financial terms were not disclosed, but Reuters puts the deal at more than $1 billion. Amazon is expected to treat the Ring deal similar to past acquisitions such as Zappos, Twitch and Audible, pursuing product and feature integrations where appropriate but maintaining the Ring brand and largely allowing the company to continue operating as it has in the past.

“Ring is committed to our mission to reduce crime in neighborhoods by providing effective yet affordable home security tools to our neighbors that make a positive impact on our homes, our communities, and the world,” a Ring spokesperson said in a statement. “We’ll be able to achieve even more by partnering with an inventive, customer-centric company like Amazon. We look forward to being a part of the Amazon team as we work toward our vision for safer neighborhoods.”

Amazon is positioning its Echo smart speaker, with the embedded Alexa voice assistant as a home technology hub.

“Ring’s home security products and services have delighted customers since day one,” an Amazon spokesperson said in a statement. “We’re excited to work with this talented team and help them in their mission to keep homes safe and secure.”

Ring makes WiFi enabled doorbells equipped with cameras that detect when someone is at the door. The smart doorbell rings users’ tablets or smartphones through an app that lets them see audio and video and talk to the person at the door, wherever they are.

The company’s mission is to reduce crime in neighborhoods while providing affordable options that work for every home. It started with a single video doorbell, now priced at $179, and has since expanded to offer several different versions as well as security systems and cameras.

Just last month Ring acquired a startup called Mr. Beams that makes WiFi-enabled LED lighting with motion-sensing capabilities.

Amazon previously invested in Ring via its Alexa Fund, which helps companies building skills and products for the tech giant’s digital brain.

This past October Amazon unveiled its own $119.99 home security camera, Cloud Cam, with a companion Amazon Key app that works with smart locks to let Amazon Prime members give house cleaners, dog walkers, package delivery companies and other service providers access to their homes. Amazon sells an Amazon Key In-Home Kit, including an Amazon Cloud Cam and a compatible smart lock, for $249.99.

The Cloud Cam competes with a variety of security cameras on the market, including Ring, Arlo and Google’s Nest Cam. It can be used with subscription plans for extended storage and other extra features, ranging from $7 to $20 a month, or a free plan offering 24 hours of cloud storage.



The technology addresses the ongoing challenge of package theft and provides an additional benefit for Amazon Prime members. The concept, however, is not popular with some people concerned about Amazon controlling access their front doors.

Ring rolled out integration with Amazon’s Alexa voice platform in June, connecting select products to the Echo Show and Fire TV devices. “By working with Alexa, Ring is making home security even simpler and more convenient. Now, you not only have the power of home security at your fingertips, you can also have it at the sound of your voice,” Ring noted in a blog post. The skill has a 2-star rating.

Ring CEO and Chief Inventor James Siminoff appeared on the show Shark Tank in 2013 to raise money for his product, which was called Doorbot at the time. He failed to make a deal on the show, but since then, the company has raised more than $209 million, according to CrunchBase, including a $109 million round in January 2017.

In an update to the show last November, Siminoff said the company is valued at more than $1 billion and employed at the time more than 1,300 people and offered 10 core products, sold in more than 16,000 stores.

Ring counts Virgin CEO Richard Branson as an investor. Branson described in a 2015 blog post what he liked about the company.

“I am an investor in Ring, and while the product is exciting and its mission to reduce crime in communities is important; what I found so interesting was the story of the young entrepreneur – James Siminoff – behind it. Like many others at the start of their journey, James tried and failed to raise money for his idea – for him it was on the popular US show Shark Tank. Unbowed, he went on to develop the product and the business and just raised a substantial fundraising which I joined.”

In December Amazon acquired Blink, a startup based in Andover, Mass. that makes wire-free smart security cameras and video doorbells.

https://www.geekwire.com/2018/amazo...aker-cracking-open-door-home-security-market/
 

Gemini

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
I think prime is going to cover that Ring subscription fee. So do i get my money back cause i paid for the year? :suicide: :lol:
 

TheBigOne

Master Tittay Poster
Platinum Member
They gonna damn near be giving the doorbell away in a few weeks to get you to buy everything else that follows as soon as Bezos gets them cranked out
 

p5ych3

Curry Is My God
BGOL Patreon Investor
man its ironic how many years ago microsoft was being heralded as the one to be at the head of home automation. they even had a prototype home........
now its companies that started out doing anything besides computers and software leading things....
 

Hotlantan

Beep beep. Who's got the keys to the Jeep? VROOM!
BGOL Investor
Amazon is well on it's way to having full control of our lives. That ring doorbell is dope tho.
Something told me to buy their stock back in 2012 but instead I tried to make a quick come up on another stock. :smh: ...shoulda, woulda, coulda. Live and learn.
I sold all of my Apple stock last October @ ~ 160 and bought Amazon @ ~ 975 (not a lot, but enough :D ). Apple was still @ ~ 160 until a nice run this month, but Amazon is now over 1500! Just raised my stop limit order today to 1350 so even if/when the Trump hits the fan, I should still realize a nice profit.
:groupwave:
And to think back in 2007 we could have gotten Amazon stock for ~ 34 a share. Damn! Damn! Damn!
:hypnotised:
 
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p5ych3

Curry Is My God
BGOL Patreon Investor
I sold all of my Apple stock last October @ ~ 160 and bought Amazon @ ~ 975 (not a lot, but enough :D ). Apple was still @ ~ 160 until a nice run this month, but Amazon is now over 1500! Just raised my stop limit order today to 1350 so even if/when the Trump hits the fan, I should still realize a nice profit.
:groupwave:
And to think back in 2007 we could have gotten Amazon stock for ~ 34 a share. Damn! Damn! Damn!
:hypnotised:

nice!!

don't they split stocks anymore?! i think the last time i heard of a split was when apple did it.
 

Gemini

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
Amazon's Ring Play Is About Seamless Home Delivery



ADT:itsawrap:

 
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Blackmayne

Rising Star
Registered
The Ring doorbell is really nice.
Word I just copped the Ring 2 doorbell and floodlights camera a few days ago... on sale at costco. .I was gonna get ADT might at well wait for their build it yourself system coming out later this year for 10$ a month
 

Ceenote

Thinkn with My 3rd Eye!
Platinum Member
He gave dude his props and said he was the only shark to make an offer but couldn't close the deal.

I don't think he is salty as much as disappointed.


i see what ya saying. but i put salty n disappointed all in the same bowl...:grin:
 

A to Dah K

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
same...but I kinda prefer UPS just in case I’m not home I can reroute the delivery
I kinda like the amazon one. U can track the location of the driver & how many stops before they get to you. Also they took a picture of where the package was left and i coulda see it on the amazon app
poVYitA6p
 
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Gemini

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
Ring making smoke alarms and flood & freeze sensors now. And they have a home security kit dropping soon. If they start making DVR's and NVR's they could dominate. ADT needs to do something ASAP lol.


Alarm Smoke/CO Listener
https://shop.ring.com/collections/s...alarm-smoke-co-listener?variant=2047594004511

Alarm Flood and Freeze Sensor
https://shop.ring.com/collections/s...arm-flood-freeze-sensor?variant=2047648759839

Alarm Indoor Security Kit
https://shop.ring.com/collections/s...alarm-indoor-security-kit?variant=56549618187


https://shop.ring.com/collections/security-system
 

Camille

Kitchen Wench #TeamQuaid
Staff member
I just want a ring app for kindle fire. If they put it it in the amazon app store I might be able to get it to work on my blackberry. I'll probably have to upgrade to a blackberry running android in the next year, but I'm trying to hold off for as long as possible. Tim Scott almost made me want an iphone with that town hall they did this past week.
 

Gemini

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
Amazon drops first-gen Ring doorbell price to $100 after closing acquisition


As of today, Amazon officially owns Ring, the smart home company that was famously rejected onShark Tankand went on to popularize the smart doorbells with built-in security cameras. Amazonpurchased Ring in Februaryfor more than $1 billion, and the dealformally closedtoday.

Now, Amazon is already taking action in a very typically Amazon fashion: lowering prices. It’s starting withRing’s standard video doorbell, which is dropping in price from $180 to $100. Amazon did a similar thing when it closed the acquisition of Whole Foods, dropping prices on avocados and other staples like bananas and ground beef.

Amazon has been making some big moves in the smart home space lately. There’s Alexa, of course, which is slowly invading more and more homes through Echo products and other integrations. But there are also a number of other smart home products and services that Amazon is offering. The company sells a security camera that works with its in-home delivery service. It alsobought anothersmart home company in December, Blink, which sells battery-powered smart doorbells and security cameras.

These acquisitions make Amazon increasingly well-positioned to capitalize on the growing smart home market. And since Amazon doesn’t care all that much about up-front prices — it likes to sell cheaper products and make more money later through additional sales or services — it can make these products even more appealing by selling them for less than basically anyone else. Nest’s smart doorbell is $229; August’s is $199.

That said, there’s still a hidden cost to all these products, and Amazon isn’t making that any cheaper: the subscription. While you can use Ring’s doorbell without a subscription, you’ll have to pay a monthly fee if you want to view any saved videos. Otherwise, you’re just confined to the live feed.

None of Ring’s other products are getting discounted, though. That includes its higher-resolution doorbell cameras (likethe Video Doorbell 2, seen above), its spotlight cameras, and its security system.

Amazon says that Ring will continue to operate under the Ring brand, though it’s hard to imagine that it won’t eventually be tied in even more closely to Amazon’s growing list of smart home services.

https://www.theverge.com/circuitbreaker/2018/4/12/17229086/amazon-ring-acquisition-price-drop
 
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