Three Years Later, Clinkle Launches Less Than Impressive App The oft-maligned startup rolled out a product that looks very different from its initial $30 million idea.

By Nina Zipkin

Mobile-payment company Clinkle officially launched its app this week, following months of scrutiny and well-documented upheaval. And it is a bit underwhelming.

The San Francisco-based startup was founded three years ago by its now 23-year-old CEO Lucas Duplan, a Stanford University grad who raised $30.5 million from 22 investors, including Andreessen Horowitz, Accel Partners, Diane Greene, Intel, Marc Benioff, Peter Thiel and Richard Branson, according to CrunchBase.

At the time, Duplan didn't have a working prototype but instead focused on the potential of what the Clinkle app would be able to do. The investors took the bait. (His original seed round was $25 million, which was supposedly the largest in Silicon Valley history.)

Related: Richard Branson Invests in a Startup That No One Understands Yet

It was initially thought that maybe Clinkle users would be able to enable money transfer through sound waves with the company applying to patent that kind of technology last year. It was also rumored that they were going to integrate some sort of virtual currency and points system into the platform. While in development, it remained a well-funded yet troubled mystery.

During its three-year beta period, the company had a revolving door of big-name executives come and go. Former Netflix CFO Barry McCarthy had a six month stint as Clinkle's COO and exited in March. And in November, Chi-Chao Chang, a former Yahoo exec, was reportedly hired to be the VP of Engineering and left after one day. In addition to these high-profile departures, Clinkle laid off a quarter of its employees in December.

Related: Apple Pay May Be the Creative Leap That Outmaneuvers Samsung

But after months of jokes about the company that had punchlines akin to "pay no attention to that man behind the curtain," Clinkle's app is now up and running -- yet somewhat different than what people expected.

It is basically a pre-paid credit card program aimed at college students and available now at "select colleges" according to its website.

Related: 8 Ways to Influence Users to Download Your Mobile App

A user is sent a Clinkle Visa Prepaid Card to connect with their bank account. With each seventh purchase, they can get "treats," such as free coffee. Treats can be sent to friends, but they have to make a payment in order to receive them. The app can also be used monitor spending and pay back another Clinkle user. The account is insured by the FDIC for up to $250,000 and protected by a secure pin number.

Clinkle's Facebook and Twitter accounts have been silent since January, when former PayPal exec Mike Liberatore's hiring as CFO was announced. Whether the underwhelmed reaction to the new app signals more trouble for Clinkle remains to be seen.

Related: Why You Need to Start Accepting Mobile Payments Now

Nina Zipkin

Entrepreneur Staff

Staff Writer. Covers leadership, media, technology and culture.

Nina Zipkin is a staff writer at Entrepreneur.com. She frequently covers leadership, media, tech, startups, culture and workplace trends.

Want to be an Entrepreneur Leadership Network contributor? Apply now to join.

Business Ideas

70 Small Business Ideas to Start in 2025

We put together a list of the best, most profitable small business ideas for entrepreneurs to pursue in 2025.

Business News

Baby Boomers Over 75 Are Getting Richer, Causing a 'Massive' Wealth Divide, According to a New Report

A new paper outlines the three factors driving the generational wealth divide. Here's how some baby boomers keep getting richer.

Growing a Business

Your Startup Seems On Track — But An Invisible Growth Blocker Says Otherwise

Your startup may seem on track, but an invisible growth blocker in your tech or team could be quietly holding you back from scaling successfully.

Business News

Starbucks Bets Big on Protein Cold Foam, Protein Lattes Hitting Menus This Month: 'Growing Consumer Demand'

Starbucks announced on Tuesday that the coffee giant is "all in" on protein.

Business News

CEO Apologizes for Viral Hat-Stealing Moment at the U.S. Open: 'Extremely Poor Judgment and Hurtful Actions'

A Polish CEO has apologized for the caught-on-camera incident and said it was not his "intent to steal away a prized memento from the young fan."