Ring’s James Siminoff Talks “Shark Tank,” Crime Prevention, and More

You might recognize Ring CEO James Siminoff from TV commercials, or maybe you’ve seen his company’s high-tech doorbells on display at stores like Best Buy, Costco, and The Home Depot.

But hearing Siminoff narrate the story of his Santa Monica, CA-based company in person reminds you just how much of a rollercoaster the life of a tech entrepreneur can be.

On Thursday evening, Siminoff stopped into the Madison, WI, offices of startup accelerator Gener8tor, where he spent about an hour discussing Ring’s origins, mission, and growth.

First, a quick word about Ring’s products: Its flagship device is a sensor-equipped, Wi-Fi enabled doorbell with a built-in camera. It sells for $199 on Ring’s website and through other online retailers like Amazon, as well as in brick-and-mortar stores. When a visitor rings the bell, residents receive a mobile alert, and, if they choose, can see and talk to the person at the door using the company’s smartphone app. Earlier this year, Ring introduced the slimmer Ring Video Doorbell Pro, which costs $249 and offers better video quality than the cheaper model.

The history of Ring has some elements of the classic startup success tale. The company started in a garage and came close to going broke on several occasions before eventually hitting it big.

Siminoff was one of three people inside the garage workshop—which they christened “Edison Jr. Design Labs”—tinkering away on projects, one of which was a “snap-together gardening system,” he says. It was a behind-the-house garage, which made answering the doorbell a pain. Siminoff says this annoyed them to the point that he instructed a colleague named John to buy an electronic doorbell on Amazon so they could see and communicate with visitors.

“John said, ‘There isn’t one [on Amazon].’ I said, ‘That’s bullshit.’”

Siminoff searched online himself before concluding that John was right: As far as he could tell, nobody had created a front door monitoring system for the masses.

“Being the inventor, I started building one,” Siminoff says.

Doorbot, the device he constructed along with a team that included a handful of engineers, showed promise, he says. However, despite reaching the marketplace and bringing in hundreds of thousands of dollars in revenue, the team ultimately rebuilt Doorbot into a new device, which came to be known as Ring. We’ll get to that in a moment.

In October 2013, two months before Doorbot was scheduled to ship for the first time, the company was basically out of cash, Siminoff says. One of his friends suggested going on ABC’s “Shark Tank” to pitch Doorbot. So Siminoff applied and, to his surprise, he was invited onto the show.

Standing before a panel of rich and successful investors, Siminoff demonstrated Doorbot, and said he was seeking $700,000 for a 10 percent stake in the company.

None of the sharks bit on that proposal. But one of them, Kevin O’Leary, made a counteroffer. Siminoff declined it.

“That was brutal,” he says. “We needed that money. But it was a shit offer that I couldn’t take.”

Even though Siminoff walked off the set with no deal in hand, his appearance gave the Doorbot exposure, which translated into better sales.

“After [the episode] aired, money started pouring in,” Siminoff says.

The proceeds allowed the company to rent space in a warehouse, which brought efficiency 

Author: Jeff Buchanan

Jeff formerly led Xconomy’s Seattle coverage since. Before that, he spent three years as editor of Xconomy Wisconsin, primarily covering software and biotech companies based in the Badger State. A graduate of Vanderbilt, he worked in health IT prior to being bit by the journalism bug.