
Toro is the best way to run high performance Facebook campaigns for mobile apps.
Location: United States, California, San Francisco
Mentions in press and media 6
Date | Title | Description |
26.02.2015 | Google Acquires Toro | Toro, a mobile marketing platform built by San Francisco, California-based Red Hot Labs, has been acquired by Google (GOOG). The amount of the transaction was not disclosed. Founded in March of 2012 by Amitt Mahajan, Joel Poloney and Dave P... |
24.02.2015 | Google Acquires Facebook Marketing Startup Toro | Toro, a startup that helps developers promote their apps on Facebook, just announced that it’s been acquired by Google. The company was originally known as Red Hot Labs, and it’s led by Amitt Mahajan and Joel Poloney. They previously co-fou... |
24.02.2015 | Facebook marketing tool Toro gets picked up by Google | Toro, launched by Red Hot Labs, is a tool to help manage Facebook Mobile App Install ad campaigns Last last year Red Hot Labs launched Toro, a service designed to make it easy as possible for developers to launch successful mobile app insta... |
05.11.2014 | FarmVille Co-Creators Launch Toro To Help Developers Market Their Apps On Facebook | Two creators of Zynga’s social gaming hit FarmVille are launching a new app-marketing product today called Toro. Amitt Mahajan and Joel Poloney were co-founders at MyMiniLife, the Zynga-acquired startup that was instrumental in creating Far... |
05.11.2014 | Red Hot Labs launches Toro to make mobile-ad buying easy on Facebook | We are excited to bring Transform 2022 back in-person July 19 and virtually July 20 - 28. Join AI and data leaders for insightful talks and exciting networking opportunities. Register today! Red Hot Labs is announcing its Toro tool today so... |
05.11.2014 | Red Hot Labs launches Toro to make mobile-ad buying easy on Facebook | Red Hot Labs is announcing its Toro tool today so that it can make it much easier for mobile app and game developers to buy ads on Facebook. The startup says it can cut the cost of acquiring a mobile user by 40 percent. That’s not bad, comi... |