Reading with love when you're away
At a later phase the company intends to offer premium content that can be downloaded into the reader for an additional fee. Thus, for example, one could listen to a Mickey Mouse voice "reading" a book about himself. "It’s a game that allows the child to benefit from parents even in their absence,” says Koren, rejecting criticism that suggests that the product will further disintegrate the modern family unit.
The Sparkup reader costs $50, and is available through the Canadian bookstore chain Indigo Chapters: parents in other countries can order it from the chain's website. Sparkup has plans to expand to additional markets, including in Israel, where the launch is scheduled for January 2014. Since its Canadian launch three weeks ago, it has already sold several thousand units, Sparkup says.
Partygoers unite
Sparkup began as an unconventional initiative, with founders deep in the party scene. Founders Amir Koren and Roei Simantov were childhood friends who attended the same school in Kfar Saba. Most of their career was in show business, such event production. In the army they served in the education branch, overseeing army troupes and the army’s theater group. After their discharge they continued organizing parties featuring up to 2,000 people.
Since the age of 16 they have established four companies. In 2007, after the birth of his daughter Aviv, Koren wanted to shift his activities to daytime. After a short stint in marketing Israeli-made handbags to American chains, the two friends established Sparkup, which is located in the Galilee. “I was flying around a lot at the time and had a 2-year old daughter at home. I wondered how I could maintain contact with her even when I was away, and how I could preserve those special and intimate moments during which I read to her,” Koren says.
Among the company's investors is Sami Sagol, the CEO of Keter Plastic. The company has raised $3.4 million from private investors.
Inbal Orpaz