
KillerApp founder Ben Chiu
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Old Barn 1987 (acrylic)
Benjamin Tse-Kun Chiu ( ; born
December 27,
1970) is the founder of
KillerApp.com, a popular
comparison shopping site for computers and consumer electronics
that was acquired by
CNET
Networks Inc. in
1999.
Early life
Born in
Taichung, Taiwan, Ben, the
only child moved to
Chapel Hill, North Carolina at
eight months of age with his mother (Hsiu Lan) and father (Sheng
Dien) where they lived for six years before moving to
Toronto, Canada. He
attended high-school at
Albert
Campbell Collegiate Institute in
Scarborough,
Ontario and graduated with honors and awards in
Computer Science
and
Visual Arts.
In 1993 he received his
Bachelor's Degree in
Applied Science,
Industrial Engineering from the
University of Toronto.
When he was
11, Ben began to take an interest in programming. One summer, Ben's
father assigned him to write a database system (using
DBASE) for their family business. With
help from his father, Ben started Linguasoft Corp. and sold his
system to bookstores and libraries. To this day, the
Royal Ontario
Museum is still using his software.
Barely a teenager, Ben
Chiu played
table-tennis for the provincial (Ontario) team.
Under the relentless training of renowned
Czechoslovakian coach
Zoran
Kosanovic, Ben won the Canadian National Championships (junior
singles), Formosa Cup (men's singles) and took 2nd place at the
1984 U.S. Open (junior doubles). Oddly enough, Ben is
cross-dominant (ex.
plays table-tennis with his
south paw but writes with his right hand).
In
addition to high school, Ben also attended school for the gifted in
visual arts. His art teacher once offered to buy one of his oil
paintings but Ben declined. Some of his wildlife paintings have
been displayed at the
McMichael
Gallery in
Kleinburg, Ontario. At the time, his
style was inspired by
Robert Bateman,
Glen Loates and
Andrew
Wyeth.
Career
In 1994 while the Internet was still in
its infancy, Ben moved to
Fremont, California to help manage his
father's publishing business--
Pan
Asian Publications. While buying computer hardware for the
company, he discovered it was tedious to browse through thousands
of magazine listings for the best deals.
Instead, he cut the
spines off publications like
Computer Shopper and
PC
Magazine and keyed all the specs and prices into a
database, page after page, one page at a time. After e-commerce
sites began to appear on the Internet, Ben developed a
web crawler that
would automatically gather and update prices around the clock. This
was to form the foundation for his new company.
Ben formally
incorporated
KillerApp, Corp. in 1995 and went on to
pioneer the concept of online comparison shopping (also known as
the
price
engine). This paradigm shift proved devastating to the computer
publication industry. "Print" simply could not compete with the
timely content and convenience of these specialized
search engines.
The
web crawlers at KillerApp ran 24/7, updating 1.5 million prices
daily. Within two years,
killerapp.com was receiving 14
million
page views
per month and 1/2 million monthly users. The site was also
generating 150,000 leads per month for its base of 360
merchants.
In order to sustain the growth of its business, Ben
raised two rounds of funding from angel investors that included:
C.S. Ho (founder of
Mitac/
Synnex and honorary chairman of
Computex);
Charlene Wang (president
of
FIC and daughter of tycoon
Y.C. Wang);
Ming Chien (chairman of FIC) and
Cher Wang
(chairperson of
VIA Technologies and daughter of Y.C.
Wang).
In 1998,
Ziff-Davis approached Ben with a buy-out offer.
He declined but instead brought in
Deutsche Bank to produce competitive
bids. A long
M&A roadshow ensued. Ben held
due
dilligence discussions with
Microsoft,
ZDNet,
Yahoo!,
CNET,
Excite,
Lycos and
Inktomi. On March 23, 1999 he sold his company to
CNET in a
stock
swap valued at USD $54 million and joined CNET as the Director
of Commerce Services. In
2000,
his net worth was $50M.
In the media
Ben Chiu is the
second
Taiwanese American (since
Jerry Yang co-founder of
Yahoo!) to appear on the
cover of
Wired Magazine.
Po Bronson chronicled Chiu's
rags-to-riches story in his best-selling novel
The Nudist on
the Late Shift (ISBN 0-7679-0603-9). His story has also been
recounted in Chinese by Peggy Teng ( ) in her book
華裔網路英雄傳奇 (translation: Unique
Passages of Overseas-Chinese Internet Heroes).
Further
reading
Po
Bronson (1999) Wired Magazine
07/99: Gen EquityPo Bronson (1999) The Nudist on the Late
Shift: And Other True Tales of Silicon Valley (ISBN
0-7679-0603-9) ISBN 0-7679-0603-9鄧海珠 (2000) 華裔網路英雄傳奇﹕-有想法也能玩出一片天 ISBN
957-607-390-1 External links
CNET,
Inc. Acquires KillerApp, Corp. KillerApp.com is now CNET Shopper.com
25,
2001&author=SHAWN HUBLER&pub=Los Angeles Times&desc=How
Green Was the Valley; Five 'poster children' for Silicon Valley's
heady glory days reflect on money, reality and changing the
world. First
LA Times Article: How Green Was the Valley? LA
Times Follow-up Article: Heading to Greener Pastures When the
Valley Turns Brown