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Is the Tech Bubble Popping? Ping Pong Offers an Answer

Sales of tables rise and fall with the startups that love them

Ping-pong playing gets intense at Pivotal’s San Francisco office, so the software company installed netting to catch errant balls.
Ping-pong playing gets intense at Pivotal’s San Francisco office, so the software company installed netting to catch errant balls. Photo: Pivotal

SAN FRANCISCO— Twitter TWTR 3.03 % ’s gloomy quarterly report last week unsettled investors. They might have anticipated trouble more than a year ago had they noticed one key indicator.

Until late 2014, Twitter was regularly ordering ping-pong tables from Billiard Wholesale, a store in San Jose, Calif. Then, suddenly, it wasn’t.

The store’s owner, Simon Ng, figured it either ran out of space “or they’re having company problems.”

Twitter Inc.’s slowing user growth has been unsettling analysts, and the company’s revenue growth was unexpectedly weak in last week’s report. Asked why Twitter stopped buying tables, spokesman Jim Prosser says: “I guess we bought really sturdy ones.” Twitter spokeswoman Natalie Miyake says: “Honestly, we’re more of a Pop-A-Shot company now,” referring to an indoor basketball game.

Is the tech bubble popping? Ping pong offers an answer, and the tables are turning.

“Last year, the first quarter was hot” for tables, says Mr. Ng, who thinks sales track the tech economy. Now “there’s a general slowdown.”

In the first quarter of 2016, his table sales to companies fell 50% from the prior quarter. In that period, U.S. startup funding dropped 25%, says Dow Jones VentureSource, which tracks venture financing.

The table-tennis indicator is a peek into Silicon Valley culture, in which the right to play ping pong on the job is sacrosanct.

“If you don’t have a ping-pong table, you’re not a tech company,” says Sunil Rajasekar, chief technology officer at Lithium Technologies, a San Francisco software startup.

ENLARGE

FutureAdvisor’s ping-pong table, bought in December, stands near the free-lunch area under exposed concrete ceilings, next to the beer taps near where the San Francisco wealth-management startup’s employees park bicycles.

Joe Fahr, its 30-year-old head of marketing, keeps his $100 Butterfly-brand paddle in a special bag at his desk and brings in his dog Gigi, a Brussels Griffon. He is No. 2 in the internal ping-pong rankings at the startup, recently bought by BlackRock Inc. BLK 1.46 % , and says the table is an equalizer that “breaks down the hierarchy.”

“It does make a psychological statement to the founders and employees that we’re not your father’s company,” says Steve Blank, who installed a ping-pong table at the game company he founded and now teaches entrepreneurship at Stanford University and University of California, Berkeley.

“It’s equivalent to ‘we don’t wear suits.’ ”

Sales of ping-pong tables to companies by Simon Ng’s San Jose store track the tech economy.
Sales of ping-pong tables to companies by Simon Ng’s San Jose store track the tech economy. Photo: Zusha Elinson/Wall Street Journal

Pivotal, a San Francisco software company, has eight tables. It has netted off the area to block errant balls.

The tables aim to give coders a break, says spokesman Michael Lee. “This is an activity thoughtfully selected by our CEO for their benefit for the sake of their corneas.”

Established tech companies deploy tables, too, and ping-pong leagues abound in the Bay Area. The annual SaaS Ping Pong tournament in June, staged at Pivotal, pits teams from “software as a service” providers such as Oracle Corp. ORCL 1.68 % and Dropbox Inc.

Venture capitalist Michael Cardamone, the tournament’s co-organizer, approves of young companies buying tables with venture funds.

“You absolutely should,” he says. “It’s part of building culture.”

Table buying “tracks most closely with startups that hit that threshold where they’re taking out office space,” says Russell Hancock, chief executive of think tank Joint Venture Silicon Valley, which follows economic trends. “That’s when you’re going to get your first ping-pong table.”

Table sellers seeing a decline include David Vannatta, sales team leader at Sports Authority in San Francisco. The store was getting a “good flow of tech companies” buying tables, he says, but sales have fallen since Christmas.

Mr. Ng, 38, who drives a Porsche Boxster to work, sells ping-pong, foosball and pool tables from a store wedged between a CrossFit gym and a cabinet shop. His company sales are primarily to tech firms.

In February, when the Nasdaq NDAQ 0.14 % index fell to its lowest in over a year, he says he sold the fewest ping-pong tables to companies since he started keeping track in 2014. That tech-heavy index includes many more-established companies.

Yahoo YHOO 0.70 % ? “They haven’t bought stuff in a looong time,” he says, pulling up a picture of a purple foosball table, the last piece he sold to the company. (Yahoo Inc. has been hard hit by shrinking revenue.)

Intel INTC 1.14 % ? It stopped buying over a year ago, he says. (Intel Corp. announced 12,000 job cuts last month.)

Google? “Just bought a bunch of stuff.” (Google parent Alphabet Inc. GOOGL 1.41 % missed Wall Street estimates but posted healthy increases in first-quarter revenue and profits.)

A game of ping pong in Facebook's New York headquarters  in 2014.
A game of ping pong in Facebook's New York headquarters in 2014. Photo: Peter Foley for The Wall Street Journal

Yahoo spokeswoman Carolyn Clark says while headquarters hasn’t bought a table recently, its offices elsewhere have. “I can assure you that people are still playing ping pong at Yahoo.”

Google spokeswoman Roya Soleimani says ping-pong tables “are part of our real estate and work place services budgets as well.” Intel didn’t respond to inquiries.

Mr. Ng says he definitely wouldn’t invest based on ping-pong sales. “I think it tracks but not predicts it.”

Mark Cannice, a University of San Francisco professor, issues a quarterly index of venture-capitalist confidence. “I put more faith in venture capitalist insights and confidence,” he says, “than I would in ping-pong-table sales.”

“You could probably track Odwalla juices,” says venture capitalist Joseph Floyd, referring to the drink ubiquitous in tech workplaces.

“I thought it was the foosball index,” says Mr. Blank, the startup founder. That table-soccer game, a fixture in the dot-com boom, is still common.

During that boom, which ended in 2000, pool was the popular table. Some say the switch to table tennis shows entrepreneurs now are more practical. The tables are cheaper and double as meeting surfaces.

Ping pong, however, has a downside in a downturn. The tables offer a lousy return for companies selling assets to raise funds or return money to investors and creditors.

Startups pay up to $2,300 for a high-end Butterfly-brand table. Mr. Ng says he won’t buy them back, because nicks make them nearly worthless.

Martin Pichinson, co-president of Sherwood Partners, which auctions failed Silicon Valley firms’ assets, says he can sell pool tables but used ping-pong tables often fetch only $5 or $10.

Sherwood gives them to churches and synagogues. “If the banks want ’em, they can have ’em,” he says.

Google staff members play ping pong at Google's offices in New York in 2013.
Google staff members play ping pong at Google's offices in New York in 2013. Photo: KEITH BEDFORD for The Wall Street Journal

Write to Zusha Elinson at [email protected]

60 comments
David McCrabb
David McCrabb subscriber

I did my first official start up in late 1988 - a company called Primary Access.  Yes we had a ping pong table and yes it was used by all in the company.  I would not characterize it as a "cultural" statement but what it really was - a chance to take a short break and play a quick game.  Our rules were simple.  If two were playing and a third showed up, that person was brought in after the game in play ended and cutthroat was played.  If a fourth the same rule and doubles was played.  If a fifth the person who was there the longest dropped at the end of the game.  Did it help develop a culture, no I believe our attitude towards customers and commitment to milestones went a lot farther in that area than ping pong.  Did it create a sense of community - again maybe a little, but that faded quickly as the company grew and there were more people outside of HQ than in it


PS. I was VP Sales and Marketing



GEORGE RASKO
GEORGE RASKO user

Using information from Sports Authority (which has declared bankruptcy) to gauge the health of the tech economy was a bit of comic relief. 

james johnson
james johnson subscriber

I'm think along the line of the story about old Joe Kennedy getting a stock tip from a shoe black.

Joshua Wiseman
Joshua Wiseman subscriber

We used to refer to the ping-pong tables at our offices as "slacker-traps."  

James L. Dillard
James L. Dillard subscriber

Pardon me, but this sounds an awful lot like early 2000.  I'm just sayin'.

Norm Levy
Norm Levy subscriber

You slam, you win, you're able.

Then fate may "turn the table."

jonathan allman
jonathan allman subscriber

If the layoffs don't get you the unpasteurized Odwalla will! 

James Ewins
James Ewins user

We had PP tables at Hughes Aircraft in the late 50s-60s. sometimes the coffee breaks and lunch times got stretched. I still have a tournament trophy...Ha

Paulette Altmaier
Paulette Altmaier subscriber

The game is called table tennis.  Ping Pong is a brand name.  Where is your trademark acknowledgement?


THOMAS HALL
THOMAS HALL subscriber

Well I was standing at the xerox machine drinking a coke and realized I needed a kleenex.

Thomas Stanley
Thomas Stanley subscriber

@THOMAS HALL Did you get the coke from the fridge?  If so, watch out for the moldy jello and the crockpot lunches in the tupperware and definitely don't eat the old popsicles.  At my old company, we used to wear onesies to play ping pong and afterwards, we were so tore-up, we had to get out the bandaids and sit in the jacuzzi's for an hour! 

Alan Nazarelli
Alan Nazarelli subscriber

The falling "ping pong index" may be a sign of all the things the article mentions. It's also a sign that its a great time to be a start up (and to invest in one). The frivolity of the last few years is disappearing, companies do not need to spend $10,000 to put in a climbing wall in their San Francisco offices just to attract new employees. They can get to serious work building value in their companies. 

George Whittier
George Whittier subscriber

Daydreaming about whether it is worth it to drive to the Bay Area from Chicago to pick up a ping pong table for $5 and drive it back...

Chris O'Donnell
Chris O'Donnell subscriber

A concerning datapoint.  For confirmation, watch the secondary market for Aeron chairs.

Pat Hester
Pat Hester subscriber

So, what does the Ping Pong table manufacturer, Mr Ng, do for a fun break...create cost analysis spreadsheets?

Mark Jackson
Mark Jackson subscriber

“This is an activity thoughtfully selected by our CEO

> for their benefit for the sake of their corneas.”


What B.S. It's pandering to the self-important, and self-obsessed that attempts to show them, they are special.


It's hipster nonsense.


When I was working in dot-coms in the 90s, we had foosball. Oh it was just so coooool! Then "we" went out of business .... several times.

Jim Niblack
Jim Niblack subscriber

I'm guessing that ping pong table sales is more an indicator of organizational ebullience than it is of budget availability.  A leading or lagging indicator depending on whether tech employees know their destiny.

Mark Jackson
Mark Jackson subscriber

@Jim Niblack I'm guessing you received a Thesaurus for Christmas? Possibly a selection of Beat Poetry?


You would be wrong about the budget, and drive to acquire a table. Ping Pong tables are inexpensive (less than one months rent in SF of a 10x10 room). 


They are the latest in "tech cool." It's nothing new, and in 10 years when we have another "tech boom" it will be something else. 


I'm guessing washers (can't break the concrete, so build a sand pit - yes I've seen this), or beanbags (aka "corn hole"), might even play horseshoes - back to basics movement!

JOHN DEBELLO
JOHN DEBELLO subscriber

I hate hate hate hate hate hate hate the ping pong table at the ultra-cool office commune that my (established) company shares with approximately 3 million startups. Two observations:


None of my employees use it, which offers hope that we'll continue to be profitable.


And the kids--I mean "entrepreneurs" who do use it invariably go home by 5pm. (Guaranteed future billionaires can do that.)

MICHAEL CARNEY
MICHAEL CARNEY subscriber

Let's have a new diversified MSCI tech index tracking sales of pingpong tables, fooseball, Odwalla, catered burritos, skinny pants, beard trimming accessories, pomade, messenger bags, that is smugness-weighted.

Tim Downey
Tim Downey subscriber

Gee, maybe if employees actually, you know, worked rather than playing games, the company wouldn't be having so many problems.



Mark Jackson
Mark Jackson subscriber

@Nicholas Jackson maybe you could lighten up? I know, you were trying to be clever while denigrating ... something ... tech people, their culture. Maybe deflecting your own issues?


Whether you like it or not; and/or refuse to accept it: there are many indicators that do reflect what's happening in tech fields. Most look funny to those who don't understand the field, or refuse to accept reality.

Nicholas Jackson
Nicholas Jackson subscriber

Me lighten up? You sure read a lot into my post. I work in tech - and there are plenty of good indicators that things are getting soft. Not sure ping pong table purchases are among those indicators.

Site is hilarious though, check it out.

Dennis Morrow
Dennis Morrow user

This premise is silly.

Ping Pong tables and the necessary playing area take up a lot of space. How much physical space is necessary in order to keep buying tables?

If a company is not expanding their physical footprint, they can only buy so many game tables and then, well, it's game over (for purchases).

Mark Jackson
Mark Jackson subscriber

@Dennis Morrow So your thinking is that when the companies ARE NOT EXPANDING aka HIRING MORE PEOPLE, they stop buying ping pong tables due to lack of space.


O.K.

Stephen Huff
Stephen Huff subscriber

maybe they are playing virtual ping pong? anyone remember the buggy whip?

Stephen Huff
Stephen Huff subscriber

TWTR has issues, no doubt.  but they have a brand that can be sold.  the question is...who is set to gobble up TWTR?

tom doyle
tom doyle subscriber

“If you don’t have a ping-pong table, you’re not a tech company,” saysSunil Rajasekar, chief technology officer at Lithium Technologies, a San Francisco software startup."


oh, ok.

David Merkel
David Merkel subscriber

That's the way the ball bounces.

Mukund Sharma
Mukund Sharma subscriber

Maybe new startups are using Craigslist to buy used ping-pong tables from companies going  under?  I'm sure there's some link to Bitcoin and the dark web too. 

Konrad Perlman
Konrad Perlman subscriber

Ping pong tables are not an essential product to the consumer, but only seem to be important to start-ups who seem to be making a go of it. But startups are on shaky ground because of careful investors who have lost on startups and withhold financing. Maybe ping pong tables are a measure of the success of startups. But the financial journalists should pay more attention to the condition of startups and help the ordinary reader understand just what is going on.

TJ Jackson
TJ Jackson user

I remember being in Silicon Valley before the last tech bubble popped, and thinking how all that silly frat culture stuff was creating the kind of "group think" blinders that were going to cause a lot of people not to see the mountain of ice in front of them while they danced on the Titanic's deck.


In early 2000, the principal I worked for gave a presentation during an executive retreat hosted by our consulting group's digital strategy practice positing that we were on the edge of a tech bubble, many of the executives in the room refused to believe it. A year later...

R Cook
R Cook subscriber

@Marc Boswell @R Cook @TJ Jackson Just another cycle. Valuations will collapse, startups will fold, traffic on 101 will ease a bit.  NY Times will have another 'told you so' story. 

Some people will hunker down, some will move back to wherever they moved from.  Inventory of ping-pong tables will build.

The cycle will start again in a few years with the next big ideas.

Brian Mcneill
Brian Mcneill subscriber

@T Richter @R Cook @Marc Boswell @TJ Jackson I'm from D.C. and I hope for the same outcome. Could you please arrange to have all your politicians shipped home?


D.C. is actually a terrific city for us natives--it's your lot that gives us a bad reputation--especially now that Mayor-for-Life Marion "Nightowl" Barry has departed the stage for the final time.


R Cook
R Cook subscriber

@TJ Jackson If you listen to every consultant claiming we are in a 'bubble' or are 'ready for takeoff' then you are guaranteed to fail. 

David Henry
David Henry subscriber

I'm not sure how lack of new venture capital supported firms means there is a tech bubble.  Can't that also mean that existing businesses are more firmly established?  Also, do ping pong tables wear out so fast that anyone would expect a constant stream of continuous sales?  I'm not seeing much logic in any of this.

Kevin Iadonato
Kevin Iadonato subscriber

@David Henry It depends on what you mean by "firmly established." If that means "thriving," then there should be more table sales as existing businesses move into larger offices.

Eli Ruiz
Eli Ruiz subscriber

@David Henry VC funds drying up, plus start-up valuation taking a hit. Not to mention the old guards aren't doing to well either.

TJ Jackson
TJ Jackson user

@David Henry  I think the writer's logic goes something like this:


1) Silicon Valley is ground zero for the tech sector;

2) Given that hyper-innovation and entrepreneurship are driving forces within the sector, their levels can be treated as a measure of sector health;

3) Like hipsters, hippies and hip hop, Silicon Valley culture is very scripted and formulaic (e.g., nondescript jeans...check,  vintage/collectible sneakers...check, ping pong table...check);

4) Purchases of the trappings of a group or set, can be treated as a metric for that group or set's economic success or prosperity;

5) Any significant increase or decrease in ping pong tables is an indicator that startup money may no longer be flowing like champagne at a Lil Wayne after party.

Sam Knight
Sam Knight subscriber

if you are wondering where all the easy Fed money went, you can see it at work here...

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