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Month: June 2006

MOG Starts Test of Music-based Social Network

Posted on June 21, 2006

REUTERS — June 20 — MOG is Myspace for music junkies. The free site was started by former MTV marketing executive David Hyman with $1.4 million from private investors, requires users to download its application, MOG-O-MATIC, and catalogs the music on users' computer hard drives and monitors what they play the most.

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Mobile to Drive Google Growth

Posted on June 20, 2006

MARKETING VOX — June 19 — Google's mobile division, based in London, is expected to drive the company's next growth phase as it focuses efforts on mobile phones, wireless laptops and personal digital assistants. According to director of wireless products Deep Nishar. "You only have to look at the global trends for mobile use and PC use to see where our business is going." By year end India will have more mobile phones than the U.S., and China has 3.6 million mobile-phone users but relatively few PC-owning households.

The full article was originally published at Marketing Vox, but is no longer available.

Mark Brooks: Mobile dating growth rates will outstrip internet dating growth rates for the foreseeable future. Webdate, Lavalife, and Match are the top pure mobile dating plays in the USA. Webdate has the nicest application and is growing quickly.

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Imbee.com Launches; Social Network for Kids

Posted on June 20, 2006

DetiPR NEWSWIRE — June 19 — Industrious Kid Inc., developer of online destinations for children, has launched imbee.com; a new secure social networking and blogging destination for 8 to 14's. Imbee protects its members by keeping their personal online content private and secure behind a firewall, it cannot be accessed by Internet search engines, and Imbee allows parents to monitor, approve, and if necessary modify settings related to their child's activities. $3.95 per month for two kid members and one adult. Imbee.com was named the "official kids social networking destination" of Paramount Parks and will kick off its promotional tour on June 19th at Paramount's Great America in Santa Clara, CA. FULL ARTICLE @ SYS-CON

Mark Brooks: Social networks for kids, social networks for christians, social networks for dog lovers. Here we go… Social networking is following the same trajectory as internet dating. When will we see the fulcrum I wonder? There are still some wide open opportunities for social networks.

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How to Make 80 Million Friends and Influence People

Posted on June 19, 2006

Bebo_4THE GUARDIAN — June 18 — Michael Birch's (Bebo Founder) original internet plans were aimed at an older age group – thirtysomethings – but he soon learnt that social networking online depends on finding a focus based on more than age – a classroom, for instance, or a particular hobby. Teenagers are always the early adopters online because they have more time on their hands and less money – and social networks are free.' Bebo spread entirely by word of mouth in schools and colleges, to the point where his site now has 100 million page views every day. Bebo is just a refinement of Ringo, which Birch built in 2003 and sold not long after it reached 400,000 members. That grew out of BirthdayAlarm.com, a successful birthday reminder service using eCards that currently has 40 million users. The real reason Bebo has taken off so fast is because it can be mastered by a 12-year-old. Birch believes we are only at the beginning of things. Social networking sites 'are becoming much more of a utility over time rather than being a pure gimmick', he told the website Online Personals Watch. FULL ARTICLE@ THE GUARDIAN

Mark Brooks: The trick to starting a successful social network is… 1. target an active hive of users  2. get the initial userbase seeding right  3. get the site product mix right.  There will be more successful, targeted social networks in the future. There's still space in the market.

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This Social Networking Site Means Business

Posted on June 19, 2006

LinkeYAHOO NEWS — June 16 — Konstantin Guericke says the site he co-founded, LinkedIn (6 million users since 2003), broke even last quarter. Whereas MySpace and most of the other social net sites depend on ad revenue, LinkedIn is going the subscription route.  "Businesses pay us because they want to find people," he said, "and people pay us because they want to be found."  If users want to contact someone from outside their original network, they must fork over some cash. $20 a month provides three contacts a month outside a person’s immediate network. $200 a month allows 50 contacts a month.

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Watch Your PPC Campaigns for Trademark Infringement

Posted on June 19, 2006

LovecityDENVER POST — June 18 — A Colorado company that owns lovecity.com sued Yahoo, (also TRUE and Spark Networks) claiming they improperly used a trademark domain name to direct consumers looking for lovecity on Google to Yahoo's dating site. FULL ARTICLE @ DENVER POST

Mark Brooks: Dating companies typically manage tens of thousands of keywords for their PPC campaigns. Affiliates often do the same. It's super competitive, and easy to miss lower level trademarks. Were these affiliates I wonder?

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OPW Interview – Peter Ward, Co-founder WAYN

Posted on June 16, 2006

Wayn_swns212OPW INTERVIEW — June 16, 2006 — WAYN.com is unique as a social network. They are successful and are making money with a paid VIP membership. Here’s my recent interview with WAYN.com Director/co-founder Peter Ward. – Mark Brooks   

How is WAYN different from other social networks?
WAYN has always been aimed at trying to differentiate itself from its competitors. We are based on locations, travel and people's whereabouts. Second, we are a premium social networking website service.  We offer a premium paid membership; 7 pounds 50 a month through 60 pounds a year for the VIP membership offering. Whether a user chooses to upgrade or not there is still a justifiable reason for using the service, which means we get the best of both worlds where we can trade a lot of traffic. 

How did you start WAYN?
WAYN was the vision of my colleague and good friend Jerome Touze, who came up with the initial idea when he was traveling on the Pacific Highway on the West Coast of the U.S. with some friends.  He just had a brain wave. Given that you meet so many fantastic people on your travels, wouldn't it be great to have a website where you can see where all your friends are at any given time. Jerome mulled over the idea and when he came back to the U.K., after we both had our year out to travel, he finally upped and told me about the initial idea. Of course, I'd just been vacationing around the world for one year, so I immediately related to that and suggested that we meet up over a beer to discuss it in more detail. We met up in Poland and in Marseille to brainstorm and brought it to one of my good friends, Mike Lines, who at the time, was the Systems Manager for Friends Reunited. We obviously needed somebody to build the website. We developed the proposition to a point where we could pitch it to Stephen Pankhurst, founder of Friends Reunited. He immediately fell in love with the idea and agreed to give us initial investment capital. We incorporated in September 2002 and went live in May, 2003. We then spent the next year and a half or so tweaking, testing, customizing, and improving the overall customer experience. 

WAYN has a paid membership level. What was the thinking behind this?
On the basis of advice received from Steve, we decided to implement a paying membership service offering. He felt that this was something that was crucial in order to ensure that we have a profitable and viable business model. We tailored the service around how we could differentiate ourselves from our competitors by setting up a premium service. It wasn't until March 2005 that we really hit the point of critical mass. In March 2005, we had 45,000 registered. Now we have almost 5 million members. We grew by over 400,000 last month alone.

How did the site grow so quickly?
First of all, the idea was to set up the service which allows you to keep track of your friends from around the world based on where you've been, where you are now and where you're going. We realized that the real value was to combine that with the ability to make new friends. Different people from different places. And, of course, if you plan a trip in the future wouldn't it be great to see who else is going to be in the same place as you. Say, if you're going to San Francisco in two months time, you could actually make some friends who are also from say London and hang out with them while you're there.

Does advertising work for growing social networks?
I think actually that it probably does if you have a good visibility over your customer acquisition costs.  There is also an argument that says it can work in terms of developing a brand. One of the most important things in business is to create a trusting and well recognized brand and advertising can help play a part in that. 

How is the membership program working out?
The membership program is working well for us. We are seeing membership numbers rise and we see a huge opportunity to increase that number over time by providing more payment mechanisms as well as more services which can be added on top of the existing membership platform.

Users can SMS each other through WAYN.  How is the SMS option working out?
SMS as you know has been very popular in Europe and is a very well understood method of interacting.   But interestingly, in the last few months we've seen an increase in the U.S. I think there's a lot of interesting talk about mobile content, a lot of investment, and a lot of hype. I think clearly the future is there. We're seeing a lot of the new handheld devices coming out, which are going to support access to the Internet. The key is to provide customers with a service that's useful and relevant. SMS has a lot more opportunity to grow before we even reach for web enabled or download-able outlets.

What's the future of social networking?
I think the social networking space is at a point of critical mass already. There are so many providers trying to take a piece of the action. Some of the traditional ways that social networks have grown to popularity are becoming diminished in value. Everyone has received an invitation from their friend inviting them to join one site or another. People are quite familiar with the services that are out there today and are trying to just understand what the best type of service for them is. The next wave of social networks will be very focused networks on target audiences, whether it'd be farmers or people who are interested in flying planes.

What are your plans for 2006 through 2007?
As you know in the Web 2.0 world things move at the speed of light and we're always trying to keep ahead of the game. One of the things that we're looking into is how we can set up a closed social network, which is secure, for the teenage market. The service will be only for those between the ages of 13 and 19, will be by invitation only and only existing contacts will be able to contact each other by default. So watch out for that one. Also, we're developing more advanced tagging for photos and we will provide our members with the ability to show streaming video, and to customize their profiles, with a focus on travel and lifestyle. We're doing a number of other things to strengthen our brand position in the travel and lifestyle sector and are looking to partner with some of the leading players in that space. We want to be the number one online membership community for those interested in travel and lifestyle. Social networking is a very exciting industry to be involved in and we couldn't have been in it at a better time. Good luck to all the people who are trying to be winners in this space.

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Dating Direct Hopes to Cash in on New Voice Service

Posted on June 16, 2006

Datingdirect_7NMA.CO.UK — June 15 — The new Dating Direct voice greeting service allows members to leave a three minute message describing themselves. Other members can then phone up to listen to the messages, charged at 25p per minute. Dating Direct found that 58% of women and 42% of men felt that a person's voice is as important as their appearance when choosing someone to date.

Mark Brooks: Live connections are the next step. Dating companies need to facilitate (and make money on) live anonymous connections. PhoneMatrix provides anonymous calling. I've talked to a few companies recently that are working on throwaway number services which will be another alternative.

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MySpace.com Surpasses 50 Million U.S. Visitors in May

Posted on June 16, 2006

Myspace_19PR NEWSWIRE — June 15 — The social networking phenomenon continued its stratospheric ascent.  MySpace.com reached 50 million visitors in May and YouTube.com nearly doubled its traffic from April, reaching 12.6 million visitors. "The popularity of social networking is not expected to wane in the near future," said Peter Daboll, president and CEO of comScore Media Metrix. "This is a phenomenon we’re seeing not only in the U.S., but also around the world. The challenge for social networking sites will now be monetization and how advertisers will respond to the global marketing potential of these sites." FULL ARTICLE @ SYS-CON

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How the Russians Do Verification

Posted on June 16, 2006

BlondegirlonphoneOPW — June 16 — iDate San Francisco is coming up. I’ll be talking about safety and background checks. I talked with AnastasiaWeb recently and they tell me AnastasiaWeb has a two-phase process of verification. VBP (Verify By Phone) agents contact each new woman directly and verify all her contact details. After the woman has started communicating with male clients and has written some correspondence, the VBP agents contact them by again phone and ask them to detail their most recent communication. Communication goes through the AW system, so they are able to cross check. AW has 90 employees apparently. – Mark Brooks

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