Weather Company
Weather Company is a company.
Financial History
Leadership Team
Key people at Weather Company.
Weather Company is a company.
Key people at Weather Company.
Key people at Weather Company.
The Weather Company is a leading provider of weather forecasting, data analytics, and digital services, offering consumer apps like Weather.com, The Weather Channel mobile, Weather Underground, and Storm Radar, alongside enterprise solutions for industries such as aviation, media, advertising technology, and broadcast.[3][5] It serves over 415 million monthly consumer users and more than 2,000 businesses, solving critical needs for hyper-local weather predictions, severe weather alerts, and data-driven insights by leveraging vast datasets from 3 billion forecast points, smartphones, aircraft, and over 200,000 personal weather stations worldwide.[2][3] Acquired by IBM in 2016 for $2 billion to bolster its IoT and cloud platforms, it was sold to private equity firm Francisco Partners in a deal announced in August 2023 (expected to close by Q1 2024), marking a shift toward standalone growth focused on consumer and enterprise expansion.[1][3][5]
Founded in 1980 as The Weather Channel, The Weather Company evolved from a cable TV network into a global weather data powerhouse, incorporating subsidiaries like Weather Underground (launched in 2001) to build a personal weather station network spanning 195 countries.[2][3] Prior to IBM's 2015 acquisition of its B2B, mobile, and cloud properties (including weather.com, WSI, and the brand) from private equity firms Blackstone, Bain Capital, and NBCUniversal, it employed 400 meteorologists and data scientists for advanced modeling up to 62 miles into the atmosphere.[1][2][4] The deal closed in January 2016, integrating its platform—handling 26 billion daily inquiries—into IBM's Watson IoT and cloud ecosystem, while the TV segment licensed data separately.[1][4] In 2023, IBM divested the assets to Francisco Partners to streamline its hybrid cloud and AI focus, retaining only its Environmental Intelligence Suite for ESG and climate applications.[3][5][6]
The Weather Company rides the wave of big data, IoT, and AI-driven weather intelligence, capitalizing on exploding demand for real-time, hyper-local data amid climate volatility, natural disasters, and ESG reporting.[2][3][5] Its timing aligns with post-2015 IoT growth (integrated into IBM Watson) and 2023's AI surge, where weather data fuels models for crop yields, land management, and disaster tracking—IBM retains access for watsonx AI.[5][6] Market forces like smartphone proliferation and personal sensors enhance its edge, influencing ecosystems by licensing data to media/TV, enabling adtech personalization, and supporting aviation safety, while Francisco Partners' spin-off positions it to disrupt consumer health (e.g., weather-linked wellness) and emerging B2B sectors.[3][6]
Under Francisco Partners, The Weather Company is poised for aggressive expansion as a standalone entity, prioritizing consumer apps, enterprise data solutions, and new verticals like health impacts from weather, building on its 415M+ user base and tech platform.[3][5][6] Trends in AI-enhanced forecasting, climate tech, and geospatial analytics will propel growth, especially with regulatory pushes for ESG data and rising severe weather events. Its influence could evolve from IBM's IoT backbone to a dominant player in AI-weather fusion, potentially redefining daily decision-making from personal alerts to global supply chain resilience—echoing its origins as the go-to for precise, life-saving weather insights.[2][3]