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Snapchat

The sneaky way Snapchat is trying to poach Uber engineers

By
Benjamin Snyder
Benjamin Snyder
Managing Editor
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By
Benjamin Snyder
Benjamin Snyder
Managing Editor
Down Arrow Button Icon
April 16, 2015, 10:22 AM ET
Photograph by Andrew Harrer — Bloomberg/Getty Images

Photo-sharing app Snapchat is getting creative to nab car-hailing service Uber’s engineers.

Snapchat users taking pictures with the app near Uber headquarters have found a built-in message aimed to entice Uber employees to come join Snapchat’s team, Forbes reports.

Snapchat’s tactics are as follows, per Forbes:

“This place driving you mad?” Read the filter, which can be applied to Snapchat photos before a user sends a disappearing message to friends. The photo filter, which can only be found if a user is in the vicinity of Uber headquarters, also shows a web address to Snapchat’s jobs page and drawings of Snapchat’s trademark ghost driving a cab while making frustrated and sad faces.

Snapchat spokesperson Jill Hazelbaker told Forbes that the efforts are “a unique and playful form of recruiting.” Tech firms often poach one another’s engineers, but this appears to be a new strategy for doing so. Interestingly, both companies have investors that overlap: Benchmark Capital and Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers, a situation that might reduce competitive hiring between them.

The company describes its geolocation filters as “special overlays for Snaps that can only be accessed in certain locations. Simply choose the geographic area you want your filter to be available in and upload an image asset.”

Snapchat is reportedly valued at $19 billion. Uber’s last funding round put its valuation at more than $40 billion, ranking it among the most valuable private companies in the world.

About the Author
By Benjamin SnyderManaging Editor
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Benjamin Snyder is Coins2Day's managing editor, leading operations for the newsroom.

Prior to rejoining Coins2Day, he was a managing editor at Business Insider and has worked as an editor for Bloomberg, LinkedIn and CNBC, covering leadership stories, sports business, careers and business news. He started his career as a breaking news reporter at Coins2Day in 2014.

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