A beverage company bought — and shuttered — the Poncho weather app

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
They say you can&t predict the weather
Acquisitions are often the same way
If you had told me yesterday, for instance, that adorable weather app Poncho was about to be acquired and effectively shuttered by a
direct-to-consumer beverage company, I&d have told you that about as plausible as a cat who also a meteorologist
And yet, here we are
Dirty Lemon, a high-end drink maker that sells products through text message for ~$10 a pop, has purchased the beloved app
The company confirmed the acquisition in a press release that contains the following buzzwordy quote from CEO Zak Normandin: &This
partnership advances our vision to build a frictionless conversational platform by expanding our technological capabilities as an
organization.& Well, yeah, obviously. Poncho was a bit more straightforward in describing what all of this means for the fate of the app
&It means no moreweather…forecasts,& reads the note on the company front page
&Obvi there will still be weather, duh lol
And I hope you think of me every time you look at it, unless it nasty weather in which case pls think of a competitor weather service
instead.& As far as what this means for Poncho itself, the company CEO Sam Mandel will be serving as an adviser for Dirty Lemon, and the
rest of the team will be folded into its parent company
The employees will work to help improve the drink company SMS-based sales model
Mandel tells Fast Company that the service ultimately wasn&t able to monetize its product, in spite of raising $2 million courtesy of an
appearance onPlanet of the Apps last year
&We weren&t able to achieve critical mass,&he says
&It been a challenge […] to build a product that was independently compelling.& The same, apparently, can&t be said for Dirty Lemon pricey
beverage business.