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Bonobos cofounder Andy Dunn has a new IRL social startup. Read the 31-page pitch deck it used to raise $11.5 million.

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The team behind Pie, an IRL-social startup founded by Andy Dunn, is based in Chicago.

Courtesy of Pie



  • Pie, an IRL social startup, raised $11.5 million in Series A funding led by Forerunner Ventures.
  • Founded by Bonobos’ Andy Dunn, Pie focuses on in-person connections and events.
  • Pie plans to use the funds to support event creators and scale to other markets.

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Social-networking startups are ditching online friends and followers for in-person, real-life connections.

Pie, a Chicago-based startup founded by menswear brand Bonobos’ Andy Dunn, is joining the race to help people make friends.

One of many emerging “IRL social” apps, Pie lets users plan and join in on IRL hangouts. The app is already equipped with an AI assistant and is piloting an enterprise product offering.

“The battle for offline attention is the next big thing in consumer,” Dunn told Business Insider.

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Amid a loneliness epidemic declared by US Surgeon General Dr. Vivek Murthy, and social-media users growing jaded with online life, startups like Posh (a sort of TikTok feed for events) and 222 (a way to meet strangers via dinners or events) have also raised venture capital this year with apps aiming to help people find friends.

Pie recently announced that it raised a $11.5 million Series A led by Forerunner Ventures’ Kirsten Green. The round also included participation from Chicago-based fund Origin Ventures and Twitter cofounder Ev Williams. Its latest round puts Pie’s total capital raised at $24 million, per the company.

Building and growing an app for making friends

Like many startups, Pie has had to pivot. It launched in 2020 as a friend matchmaking app, akin to a Bumble Friends experience.

“We got a lot of matching, a lot of profile browse, but no one would reach out to the other person,” Dunn said.

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After reading Dr. Marisa Fanco’s book “Platonic,” Dunn said he went back to the drawing board. Scrolling through potential friends wasn’t going to cut it — it had to be recurring group hangouts to help people meet and stay connected.

With a team of 10 Chicago-based staffers, Pie doubled down on building an IRL app and using the city as a testing ground.

“Chicago doesn’t have the saturation of consumer apps you have in New York City, Los Angeles, or San Francisco,” Dunn said.

In February and March, the startup began testing local, curated events, dubbed “Pie Originals,” in Chicago, such as a monthly silent book club or a bi-monthly “Dudes Getting Pancakes” hangout. Dunn credits the app’s growth to this strategy. It hit 20,000 monthly active users in six months of testing the Pie Originals.

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Local event creators, like Mary Doctor, who hosts a show-and-tell event for adults, have used Pie to gather people and make money.

“There’s this whole creator economy of people who want to bring people together in person,” Dunn added.

With its Series A capital, Pie is rolling out a creator fund for event hosts, which pays $5 to the creator for every RSVP to an event (all of which are free for attendees).

The startup plans to experiment with different monetization models, eyeing a potential freemium model that apps like Bumble and Hinge have opted for.

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“This is venture-backed startups,” Dunn said, adding that by the time of Pie’s Series B, it will have a monetization engine locked down. “You have costs, and then you figure out revenues later.”

In the meantime, Dunn is betting on Pie’s Gen-Z staff and the app’s user growth, which stands at 40% month-over-month.

Read the 31-page pitch deck that Andy Dunn used to raise Pie’s Series A:

Note: Pie has redacted details and amended some pages so that the document could be shared externally.

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Pie’s pitch focuses on how it will help people overcome social isolation.

Pie



Courtesy of Pie


The deck starts with a reference to the US Surgeon General’s declaration of a “social isolation pandemic.”

In the last two decades, we've lost 24 hours of in-person time per month.



Courtesy of Pie


“In the last two decades, we’ve lost 24 hours of in-person time per month,” the slide reads.

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Then Pie cites research about loneliness from more than two decades ago.



Courtesy of Pie


Pie cites Dr. Marisa Franco’s book “Platonic,” too.

Can technology help save us?
                                            The science shows there are two ingredients in platonic friend formation:
                                            Running into someone 5-7 times in a group setting.
                                            As those conversations progress, reciprocal disclosure of vulnerable information.



Courtesy of Pie


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Pie compares its feed to the social media feeds we already have.

The Feeds We Have vs The Feed We Need



Courtesy of Pie


The deck includes testimonials from users.

Our users love Pie. Here's what they're saying.



Courtesy of Pie


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Pie outlines the competitive landscape of IRL social apps.

What if you're not on the guest list?



Courtesy of Pie


The app began testing “Pie Originals,” events curated for Chicago, earlier this year.

Pie Originals seed the market.
                                            Just like Netflix has their own content, so do we.
                                            We have 15 recurring experiences our growth team runs to create kindling.
                                            Launched in February and March.



Courtesy of Pie


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The app also has “creators” who host events.

Pie IRL Creators 10x the feed.



Courtesy of Pie


Then the deck breaks down its design and user experience.

The atomic unit of Pie is a plan. The UI mirrors how plans start: with an idea.



Courtesy of Pie


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Pie wants to use the friends-of-friends network effect to scale and help people meet.

2nd degree further fuels the experience.
                                            Meet your friends' friends.
                                            What LinkedIn does for your professional life, Pie does for your social life.
                                            Rapidly expand your social graph with 2nd degree friends' plans in the feed.
                                            Having a few things to do a week goes to having a few things to do a day.



Courtesy of Pie


Pie is also equipped with AI.

ntroducing Moosey.
                                            Moosey is your AI wingman for making and finding plans.
                                            Moosey, a GPT assistant prototype trained on Pie user data, uses network, demographic, interest, and in-app behavior data to create plans like magic, putting you in the room where it happens.



Courtesy of Pie


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Its AI assistant will help people make dinner plans.

Moosey's first job to be done: the Dinner Party.



Courtesy of Pie


How Moosey works his magic.



Courtesy of Pie


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AI features



Courtesy of Pie


Users are able to have profiles.

Gamified profiles will create a virtuous cycle between in-app and real life interactions.



Courtesy of Pie


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How Pie's AI feature works



Courtesy of Pie


Then Pie breaks down its growth so far.

Pie tracking to 50,000 MAU by EOY.



Courtesy of Pie


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User retention increases after three plans.

Pie users are hooked after three plans.
                                            Triple joiner retention is 80%.



Courtesy of Pie


Pie illustrates how it’s working so far in Chicago.



Courtesy of Pie


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Then Pie draws similarities to the creator economy.

We want to make the creator economy for IRL.
                                            The legacy players are stuck in business models built with the money flowing the wrong way.
                                            That's okay.
                                            They are 18 and 26 years old.
                                            It's time to do something new, now.



Courtesy of Pie


It also compares its market opportunity to Airbnb and Uber.

This is an Airbnb or Uber sized opportunity.
                                            We want to build a $100b company. And Chicago needs one.



Courtesy of Pie


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Pie launched a creator fund to help pay creators.

This inspired the
                                            Pie Creator Fund which will 50x the feed with future of work tailwinds.



Courtesy of Pie


It’s also building out an enterprise product offering.

A $154 billion problem.
                                            This is rare: a consumer app with enterprise monetization.



Courtesy of Pie


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Companies can use Pie to connect coworkers.

Here's what the enterprise offer looks like.
                                            Pie-Powered Workplace Socializing
                                            The Problem
                                            Our Solution
                                            Nobody is making friends at work anymore.
                                            Power at-work socializing as a bridge to the real opportunity: when colleagues meet outside of work and become real friends.



Courtesy of Pie


Pie lays out its monetization roadmap.

Monetization roadmap



Courtesy of Pie


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Its enterprise product will be key to Pie’s monetization strategy early-on.

Moosey has the power to bring people together in the workplace.



Courtesy of Pie


Wrapping up, Pie introduces CEO and founder Andy Dunn.

Our founder and CEO's mission in life is to improve the mental health of America
                                            Andy Dunn
                                            Andy served as founding CEO of Bonobos through its $310M exit. Bonobos pioneered the digital DTC model. He's backed over 100 companies as an angel and via Red Swan, including Coinbase and Hinge, where he served on the board. Recently he
                                            published Burn Rate: Launching a Startup and Losing My Mind, an Amazon editor's choice and national bestseller.



Courtesy of Pie


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It also introduces its team of 10 staffers.

Pie employees



Courtesy of Pie


And notable investors and shareholders.

Shareholders; Ev Williams
                                            Ev Williams is an American internet entrepreneur best known for co-founding several major online platforms, including Twitter, Blogger, and Medium. His career is marked by a focus on social media and content publishing, significantly influencing how content is created and shared on the internet.



Courtesy of Pie


Pie updated some parts of its pitch deck in the copy it shared with Business Insider, including investments from its Series A.

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Pie pitch deck



Courtesy of Pie


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