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Month: August 2006

txtNation SMS Billing Provider

Posted on August 14, 2006

STT PRESSI.COM — Aug 14 — txtNation is one of Europe's leading independent carrier-neutral SMS billing provider. txtNation has introduced several services over the years, the first being PEOPLEFIND, a leading mobile chat and dating application. mENABLE is an SMS and mobile phone billing option. The Mobile Marketing Association Awarded mENABLE the "Best Mobile Billing Solution" awards in 2004.  It is now focusing on markets in the United States and Asia. 

The full article was originally published at STT Pressi.com, but is no longer available.

Mark Brooks: Does anyone know of any other SMS billing alternatives?  Please comment.

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OPW Interview – Great Expectations co-CEO – Robert Fisher

Posted on August 13, 2006

RobertOPW INTERVIEW — Aug 11, 2006 — Great Expectations has been around 30 years and charges thousands of dollars a year for it’s offline, high-touch, high service offerings. I spoke with Robert Fisher, CEO of the Valentine Management Group, one of the owners of a group of Great Expectations locations. – Mark Brooks

How was Great Expectations started?
It was started about 30 years ago in California as a franchise operation and was acquired in ’95 by a group from the Advanta Corporation. When they acquired it they started buying up locations and after a couple of years they divested and it became license based instead of franchise based. Today we have multiple owners but most locations are owned by four main groups of owners who are also the licensing arm of the company.

How large is Great Expectations today?
There are over 50 locations nationwide. I would say there’s between 100,000 and 200,000 members nationwide. Each of the locations are individually owned and operated. From a revenue point of view, we’re somewhere between $50 million  to $75 million a year now. Memberships are ~$3,000 each.

What does Great Expectations do differently compared to internet dating companies and why does it work so well?
Online dating's economic appeal was that you would drive traffic to a site and capture customers by providing a no-touch service allowing you to keep expenses down. Unfortunately, customer acquisition costs have risen to a point that many in the industry are struggling to maintain profitability. Along with this, online is so commoditized that prices cannot be raised without significantly changing the offering. Many online executives have told me they tried raising prices and it cost them signups.

We offer the personal touch. Offline dating companies are all about service and touch. So, that’s the biggest difference. Most of the time, the clients are the same, with the exception of those in their early twenties. We don’t typically handle that demographic very well. We have some clients in their early twenties, but not a lot. But, the same people that internet dating companies are selling a $30 a month membership to, we’re selling them a $3,000 membership. The difference is the amount of service the client gets. Also, of the top three offline dating companies, I believe most of their locations offer identity verification and background checks.

By virtue of us having the higher price point, we’re able to deliver a different service. It’s very difficult from an online perspective to truly get to know the client. For example, at Great Expectations, in our locations, we talk to each of our clients once every 60 days. When a client is a brand new client, we make sure, before we put them fully into the system, that we hold their hand with their first few selections.  Everybody in the industry has some people who are more difficult to match than others and you can either say, okay I’m not going to worry about that person, or you can say, what can I do to help them?  Maybe I’m a bit naive, but I believe that everybody can get out on a date. I believe that if you’re not guiding some people, their fear will keep them from taking the initial actions that will help them be successful. I’ve heard only a small proportion of the people that use an online dating service ever go on a date. Well last month in my locations over 70% of the people went on a date – yes, we measure it. So that’s a big difference, in my opinion, between offline and online dating services.

How are your online marketing efforts working out?
Our online efforts work very, very well. We started marketing online in 1998 and we’ve become really strong with our affiliate marketing. 

We have an online dating site, GreatDatingSite.com, that does quite well for us. We offer it through Relationship Exchange and our conversion rates are above the standard at around 11 to 13%. I’m hearing other sites typically convert registered members to paid members at 8% to 10%. I don’t know what brings about that difference.

How has online dating helped your business?  How might it help in the future?
We really didn’t get into online dating until 3 years ago. We should have gotten into it much earlier, so that was a strategic mistake on our part. What we have done well is use web marketing to drive traffic to our online sites. I think online dating has helped our service a lot because 10 years ago there was still a stigma attached to dating services. Today there’s not, and I don’t think that offline can take credit for that. I think it’s truly online dating that’s caused the shift. The question becomes today, what is the ultimate dating service going to look like? My opinion is that we’re going to be merged down the road.  There is going to be a marriage between offline and online, and I think it will happen sooner rather than later.

Another place that online truly helped us is that it drove some of the competitors in the offline space closer together and as the result we have learned from one another. Today, I count Brad Megahan at Together and Paul Falzone at The Right One as real friends. We talk regularly and Paul's son calls me "Fisherman." That might not have happened had there not been a first IDate Conference. I actually think you will see the offline companies working together to improve their offering and their marketing over the next few years. All of us are working more with some onlines as well. And here is a hint to the others: "Call us, let's talk!"

What should the online personals industry learn from Great Expectations?
Whether it’s offline or online, the thing everybody needs to understand is that if you want to have sustainability in a business model, you’re going to have to deliver something the customer truly wants.  We can no longer get by, and in the offline world for years we actually did get by, with not delivering a good service.  We were terrible at service. I believe that today you have to deliver a very high quality of service. I think you have to talk to your customer on a regular basis and find out what you’re doing right, and what you’re doing wrong? How are your customers doing? What can you do to assist? We’ve looked at customers, whether online or offline, as revenue numbers too many times. I think that we’ve made a big switch in the last two years. As a result of us really getting strong in customer service over the last two years Great Expectations has seen a tremendous increase in the number of referrals. Our clients are happy. We touch our clients more often, we ask them how they’re doing, and we follow up with them. I think that’s where we’re making big inroads today.

One place onlines and offlines could serve each other is through joint lead acquisition strategies. We have some of these in place with online companies and they are quite profitable for both parties. Unfortunately, some online and offline companies still refuse to even get into a dialogue out of some sense of competition or fear of revealing some presumed trade secret. That is a pity.

What are your plans for 2006 through 2007?
We’ve been working on a marriage between offline and online that will go live fairly shortly. I truly believe that there is a mid-tier space that can be served that’s not currently being served right now. I think both sides, online and offline, are looking for a way to bring all this together. I’ve had enough conversation with enough people in the last 180 days to know that it will happen.

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New Free Dating Service – Daft Name, Novel Approach

Posted on August 10, 2006

PR WEB — Aug 8 — Cheekymonkeydating allows users to publish personal contact details and incorporates Skype buttons. It's geared towards allowing people to contact each other directly. "I view the site more as a directory of people seeking dates than a traditional dating site," founder, David Thomas, commented. "Most online dating agencies get people to write their profiles which they will publish for free, then they charge them the earth for a subscription that allows them to send mail. Often the money will be wasted, because many of the people receiving the messages will not have paid a subscription fee, and therefore won't be able to reply." FULL ARTICLE @ PR WEB

Mark Brooks: Internet dating sites need to capture the entire communications continuum. Email is old hat. Instant Messaging is where most dating site users are at now. But they really want to talk to each other, and see each other. Voice and video. How can internet dating sites capture the full communicatios spectrum? Is it viable, really? Your comments please…

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Zorpia Plans to Launch 22 Social Networks Worldwide

Posted on August 10, 2006

LogoPR NEWSWIRE — Aug 9 — The "Social Network Wars" have begun and Zorpia is on a quest for global domination. Today the company announced the launch of its new Chinese social networking site, Zorpia.cn. Zorpia’s expansion into China is the first step in an aggressive global expansion plan of taking on 22 additional markets including the UK, Australia, Canada, India, Taiwan, Japan, Europe, Latin America, and beyond. "We see Zorpia.com as the first ‘Global Social Network,’" founder Jeffrey Ng said.  In the past year, Zorpia.com has added more than three million registered users and receives 3.6 million page views daily.  Zorpia Ltd. is a privately owned company and is currently seeking venture capital.  Jeffrey Ng, (650) 331-7390. FULL ARTICLE @ SYS COM

Mark Brooks: Currently Zorpia has a 996 Alexa rank. They’ve been around a couple of years but morphed more recently into a social network. Cyworld, South Korea’s monster social network, opened an office stateside but I’ve not seen too much of them. There’s more to social networking than just opening up a site in a new country and hoping new users come. The sites need seeding with local ‘connectors’.  That usually takes a local presence and network. There are numerous examples of sites that were borne in and did well in their respective countries.  Grono.net (Poland), Rate.ee (Estonia), Yonja (Turkey) LIST.  Orkut is over represented in Brazil. Friendster has a huge following in the Phillipines. MySpace is the biggest worldwide. 

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Scam and Fraud Consulting Service

Posted on August 10, 2006

PR WEB — Aug 8 — Pendulum Communications new consulting service "Scam Vigilante" will focus exclusively on assisting online relationship providers. Said Greg Moore. "We confidentially, audit the entire operation of the site from the IT, customer service, security and web development departments and make defensive, restructuring, decisions based on our knowledge of how scammers from Russia and Africa are able to get onto dating sites to scam innocent people, even when these countries are blocked from registering."  Greg Moore – (718) 593-4533. FULL ARTICLE @ PR WEB

Mark Brooks: If any of you use Greg’s services, please comment on them here, or email me and I’ll add a comment.

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Calling All Affiliate Managers

Posted on August 9, 2006

OPW — Aug 9 — Next month I’ll be launching a site for internet dating affiliates and affiliate managers.  It will offer news, links and useful resources for affiliates of internet dating sites.  If you’d like to be involved and are an affiliate manager for a top tier dating site please email me at mark@onlinepersonalswatch.com.  Thanks.  – Mark Brooks

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Google To Pay $900M To Provide Search For MySpace.com

Posted on August 8, 2006

Google_3TECH WEB — Aug 7 — Google will be the exclusive provider of text-based advertising and keyword-targeted ads on the Fox Interactive Media network, including MySpace. In return, Google will make guaranteed minimum revenue share payments to News Corp. of $900 million through Q2 2010, based on Fox achieving traffic targets. The deal was expected to be the first of many between the two companies. Last December Google agreed to pay $1 billion for a stake in AOL and form an ad partnership. FULL ARTICLE @ INFORMATION WEEK

Mark Brooks: Google is focusing on it’s future. Advertising. One day it will turn a sliver of it’s considerable brain power and attention towards online dating, perhaps. What will Google Dating look like? I’d expect it to be a far cry from traditional dating sites. The more we keep ahead of the game, and innovate, the less likely Google will enter the online dating fray, in earnest. Margins are slim these days, so that will also keep Google’s attention away. The online dating industry is still a relatively baby sized industry at ~$600 million a year.

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Caramellounge Connects Africans and Caribbeans

Posted on August 8, 2006

CarameloungePR WEB — Aug 1 — Ogunkoya and Bassey-Oden created Caramellounge.com while completing their final year exams at Imperial College London. "Unlike other sites, which are mainly African-American, this one caters to everyone from every country and really aims to put the people of Africa & the Caribbeans on the map of the world,"  said Ogunkoya.

The full article was originally published at eMedia Wire, but is no longer available.

Mark Brooks: This is a great niche choice. Blackplanet.com is their main competition.

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Mumsnet Libel Suit

Posted on August 8, 2006

MumsnetCYBERSOC.COM — Aug 8 — Gina Ford instructed her solicitors to send a letter to the ISP hosting mumsnet, threatening to sue them for libel if they didn’t cease hosting the community site for moms and expectant moms. Coverage of the story is going ballistic. Ford writes parenting books. Now her name has been in every major UK newspaper website and the story has reportedly run on TV. FULL ARTICLE @ CYBERSOC.COM

Mark Brooks: The site closed it’s doors rather than deal with the suit. Shame.

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TrueDater; True or False Profiles

Posted on August 7, 2006

STAR LEDGER — Aug 7 — People can post reviews of their dates on TrueDater.com and also plug in a prospective date to see if anyone else has posted a comment about the person. More than a half million people have used TrueDater since the site launched last year. TreuDater staffers monitor the remarks.  Mark Brooks, onlinepersonalswatch.com, said "I think it answers a definite need in the online dating market."  Brooks said Friendster allows people to write testimonials about a date, but the person being reviewed has to approve it, "so nothing negative gets in." Brooks said TrueDater is the kind of site that makes people think more about their reputation, which is a new issue in online dating. Marcus Frind, founder of plentyoffish.com said both men and women are equally guilty when it comes to fudging profiles. "With women, it's weight; for men, it's height. A third party (giving an assessment) is the simplest way to go."  "You have to be honest," said Moreno, Ph.D. student in social psychology at Rutgers University. "The picture is the hook, it gets you in. You see a cute picture and you click on it. I met one guy for dinner a couple of weeks ago and his picture resembled him, but you would not have been able to pick him out of a crowd based on his picture."  Moreno suggested singles should not upload their best shot. That way dates can be pleasantly surprised on the first meeting. Eric Straus, president of Cupid.com, said "I don't think it adds all that much to the process," he said. "People tend to exaggerate and I think that's the nature of the beast."

The full article was originally published at NJ.com, but is no longer available.

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