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Marissa Mayer’s startup just rolled out photo sharing and event planning apps, and the internet isn’t sure what to think

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Marissa Mayer poses for a picture on the red carpet for the 6th annual 2018 Breakthrough Prizes at Moffett Federal Airfield, Hangar One in Mountain View, Calif., on Sunday, Dec. 3, 2017. (Nhat V. Meyer/Bay Area News Group)
Image Credits: Nhat V. Meyer/Bay Area News Group / Getty Images

When Marissa Mayer co-founded a startup six years ago in Palo Alto, California, expectations were sky high for the former Yahoo CEO and early Google employee. When that startup, Sunshine, revealed that its first app centered around subscription software for contact management, people wondered if something more ambitious might be around the corner. Today, after Sunshine released two equally mundane features — event organizing and photo sharing — internet commenters were decidedly mystified.

I was also baffled last week when Mayer walked me through Sunshine’s new offerings. Though there are AI components to all that Sunshine offers, it’s hard to understand how Sunshine’s new photo app enhances photo sharing as it exists today, and the same could be said of its new events app, which looks very much like something that was designed 20 years ago.

It’s tempting to dismiss the 15-person outfit as out of touch. But Mayer may be onto something with Sunshine, and that’s nostalgia. Throwback tech is all the rage these days. Further, while most Silicon Valley startups focus on the newest new thing, America is getting older, as the U.S. Census Bureau declared last year. Mayer says Sunshine is tackling problems for people “of all ages,” but targeting a slightly older demographic that gravitates toward the familiar would be a smart move. Older Americans now account for a record share of spending. They have the time to socialize and take pictures. Sunshine’s interface is even steeped in the same purple hue that was long associated with Yahoo, which she famously led for five years beginning in 2012.

Asked if the design choice was intentional, Mayer seemed surprised for a moment, calling it “purely coincidental.” She instead offered that users’ photos are hosted on Sunshine’s servers and “available indefinitely,” and that users can share albums and send invites easily through text, iMessage, email and other sharing platforms. Mayer further stressed that Sunshine will never sell its customers’ data to a third party and that the company is “not building models or deriving any other data for any other purposes from what is shared.”

Mayer sees the need for something simpler, certainly. “There are a lot of companies that focus on that bleeding and leading edge of AI,” she said. “But we think there’s a lot of things that can be done with AI that just help with everyday problems, things that we all experience every day, and are often overlooked.”

She mentioned, for example, that before launching events and photo sharing, Sunshine rolled out a birthday app as “kind of an adjacent area to addresses and contacts.”

She declined to discuss customer numbers, but the product is reminiscent of an app run by entrepreneurs Michael and Xochi Birch called BirthdayAlarm.com. The birthday reminder and e-card site is not exactly design forward, but with more than 50 million registered members at one point, it has made the couple — who earlier sold a social media company to AOL for $850 million in cash — many millions more dollars.

Mayer is friends with Birch and says she was “definitely influenced by Michael. He talked about the fact that [BirthdayAlarm] was a very simple app and got a lot of traction early on.”

Sunshine seemingly didn’t see that kind of traction from contacts management, an area where consumers have largely steered clear owing to privacy concerns. But perhaps its simple and free (for now) new apps will change the game for Sunshine, which raised a $20 million round in 2020 and is largely self-funded, per Mayer.

In the meantime, Mayer has other tricks up her sleeve, including, eventually, video sharing. “I’ve got a list of all the different things that we thought would be in the first version and will hopefully come out soon after,” she said last week. “The core thesis has always been to take the mundane and make it magical.”

The team “thought about naming [the company] Mundane AI,” she continued. “I sometimes think that might have been a better name.”

Image Credits: Sunshine

Disclosure: TechCrunch is owned by Yahoo.

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