Monday, July 30, 2007

Virtual Graveyard Holds Dead of MySpace

Somewhere deep in cyberspace, where reality blurs into fiction and the living greet the dead, there are ghosts.

They live in a virtual graveyard without tombstones or flowers. They drift among the shadows of the people they used to be, and the pieces they left behind.

Allison Bauer left rainbows: Reds, yellows and blues, festooned across her MySpace profile in a collage of color. Before her corpse was pulled from the depths of an Oregon gorge on May 9, where police say she leapt to her death, she unwittingly wrote her own epitaph.

"I love color, Pure Color in rainbow form, And I love My friends," the 20-year-old wrote under "Interests" on her profile. "And I love to Love, I care about everyone so much you have no idea."

Now her page fills a plot on MyDeathSpace.com, a Web site that archives the pages of deceased MySpace members.

Behold a community spawned from twin American obsessions: Memorializing the dead and peering into strangers' lives. Anyone with Internet access can submit a death to the site, which currently lists nearly 2,700 deaths and receives more than 100,000 hits per day.

More.

***

Social Networks: Mom finds adopted son on Facebook

VANCOUVER -- Lori Haas never thought the journey to find the baby boy she gave up in a closed adoption 20 years ago would end on Facebook.

The closed adoption meant all the relevant documents were sealed, and Haas spent a decade waiting to get her son's name through an active registry, where the names of birth parents and adopted children are revealed at both of their requests.

When she got the name but no other identifying information, the 37-year-old nurse tried Google searches to see if anything would come up.

It wasn't until June 24 that a friend suggested she try typing her son's name into the popular social networking website.

"I thought, 'Let me put his name in and see if anything comes up,'" said Haas, a Richmond resident who had been a Facebook member for less than a month.

What she got was a list of Facebook members with the same name as her son.

"There were probably about a dozen names, but when I saw one of the tiny pictures, my heart went crazy."

Haas knew deep down it was her son.

But it took her a week until she overcame uncertainty and messaged him on Facebook. "I wrote to him that I was looking for someone I might be related to and asked him if this was his date of birth and full name," she said.

"Twenty-five hours later, he messaged me back confirming it was him. I freaked out."

Haas said that when she became pregnant at 17, she never told her parents, friends, or the father that she was carrying a baby until after she gave birth a few weeks before her high school graduation.

"Just knowing that I was very young, I knew that I couldn't take very good care of him," she said.

But life went on. She eventually married and had two more children.

Her son, 11, and daughter, 9, grew up knowing that they had an older brother out there somewhere.

Little did they know, their older brother Travis Sheppard was also dreaming of some day finding his birth family.

Four months ago, Sheppard packed up his life in Winnipeg and came to Vancouver to track down the mother he knew only from adoption papers.

Sheppard grew up in Victoria before his adopted parents moved the family to Winnipeg. His adopted parents told him "as young as I could remember" that he was adopted and were supportive of his journey out to B.C.

He said that when he clicked on Haas's profile after she sent him her message, he started to shake.

"I just knew she was my mom," he said.

Since meeting in person in a Vancouver restaurant on July 3, the two have grown close.

***

Social Networks: Writer's life no longer lonely

Writing is often said to be a lonely business, as is reading. But that's not really true these days, largely due to the Internet. Thanks to book websites and various social-networking sites, the literati have no shortage of friends, or distractions.

It started with a handful of book blogs that collected links to reviews and literary news: Bookslut, The Literary Saloon, Bookninja. Some of these sites offered discussion forums, and communities of like-minded people sprang up around them.

Then came the author blogs. Writers such as Neil Gaiman and Peter Watts use their websites to promote their work, keep in touch with fans and distribute material. Others use blogging sites such as MySpace and Livejournal, which are designed to connect people quickly and easily. Most of these sites allow comments, which makes the relationship between writers and readers more interactive.

Lit-lovers are embracing the latest generation of these sites. One of the most popular new ways to connect is LibraryThing.com, where you can catalogue your book collection and browse other readers' collections.

The success of LibraryThing has already led to some competitors, such as Goodreads.com and Shelfari.com, which earned a million-

dollar investment from Amazon. The differences between them are mainly esthetic, but you can expect to see more substantial changes once the venture capital truly starts flowing.

Perhaps the most popular literary site of all, at least in Canada, wasn't even intended to be a literary site. The social-networking site Facebook is the favoured meeting place of the CanLit crowd, and almost every writer you can name has a Facebook profile -- Griffin Poetry Prize nominee Ken Babstock, small press king Stuart Ross, CanLit founding father George Bowering, Internet superstar Cory Doctorow -- and there are groups for almost all the country's publishing houses and magazines. It's a Canadian literary phenomenon.

Writers are even using the site for creative outlets. Writer Brad Kelln has been serializing a new novel on Facebook -- featuring people who have joined his Facebook group -- and other writers are sure to follow.

***

Online friends finally get to meet face-to-face


City's Facebook community invited to a picnic in a real park

EDMONTON - What will happen when a cluster of devoted Facebookers leave their computers in sleep mode for long enough to meet their "friends" in person?

Dozens of Edmontonians on the popular social-networking site will find out at Edmonton's first Reality Rally, Sunday afternoon at Rundle Park.

The Reality Rally could be described as an experiment to see how effective Facebook can be in building a real community out of an online community.

"It came out of a rant about how people seem to have a community online, but you can't get them out to anything social," explains Matthew Gardner, a graphic designer and one of the organizers.

Gardner and his friend Amanda McCrae set up a Facebook group dedicated to finding a way to get people together. More than 400 people joined the group.

From 50 to 200 people are expected to show up at the picnic. Musicians, artists, car aficionados and others are invited to bring their passions with them.

"Facebook is such a casual place," says Penny Chu, another organizer of the event. "I've been able to touch base with friends that I haven't seen forever.

"But if you're going to spend that much time in Facebook, put even half of that time outside Facebook and you're going to meet a lot of people."

www.edmontonjournal.com/ed

MORE AT ED

Read more on the Reality Rally and Facebookers' thoughts about it.

Go to www.edmontonjournal.com/ed

***

Sunday, July 29, 2007

A Social Networking Service With a Velvet Rope


JUST now, the hottest startup in Silicon Valley — minutely examined by bloggers, panted after by investors — is Pownce, but only a chosen few can try out its Web site.

Kevin Rose, the co-founder and chief architect of Digg, a hugely popular news site, announced in late June the introduction of Pownce, a social-networking service that combines messaging with file-sharing. Mr. Rose immediately endowed his latest venture with some mystique by declaring that, for the time being, only those with invitations would be permitted to test his new site.

Within days, invitations were selling on eBay for as much as $10. Mr. Rose has declined all requests to be interviewed about the service, including my own. But as a consolation, he sent me a coveted invitation. I enjoyed the rare thrill of cyberhipness — and got to experiment with the site.

I learned you can send text messages to individual friends or groups of friends on Pownce as well as post microblogs, or short announcements, to the larger Pownce community. This function is very similar to messaging services like Twitter or Jaiku, and is found on social networks like Facebook and MySpace (although Pownce’s messages cannot, at least for now, be sent to mobile phones). You can also send your friends links, invitations to events, or files like photos, music or videos. Of course, you can already do that on a multitude of file-sharing Web sites. It is the combination of private messaging and file-sharing that makes Pownce so novel.

Om Malik, the author of the technology blog GigaOm, is an enthusiast. “I love it and use it constantly, ” he said in a message sent to me on Pownce. “I like it because it lets me share a lot of different things with the networks of people I really care about.”

Pownce was initially conceived by another founder, Leah Culver, a 24-year-old programmer who developed the site as an experiment. But its glamour derives from Mr. Rose’s reputation for creating digital-media companies that evoke passionate fandom among their youthful audiences. In addition to Digg, he co-founded Revision3, a video production and hosting company opened last September.

“He is super-smart, friendly, humble and a team-builder — a perfect combination for a great entrepreneur,” said Ron Conway, who has invested in Digg and Revision3 and was an early investor in Google. (A disclosure: Mr. Conway also invested in Red Herring Communications, a magazine and Web site I once edited.)

Mr. Rose, 30, dropped out of the University of Nevada at Las Vegas, where he was studying computer science, to pursue his fortune in San Francisco during the dot-com boom. Fortune eluded him then, but he achieved minor fame when, following the collapse of the technology market in 2002, he became a nerdy host on TechTV’s “The Screen Savers.”

The audience Mr. Rose attracted at TechTV was then drawn to Digg, which he began promoting on his show and in his blog when the site was introduced in December 2004. Digg combines social networking, blogging and online syndication to create a site where news stories are ranked by popularity. Today, 17 million people visit Digg every month, according to the company.

After Mr. Rose’s contract with G4, the successor to TechTV, expired, he started Revision3. Each week, 250,000 people go to the company’s Web site to view its most popular show, “Diggnation,” where Mr. Rose and his pal Alex Albrecht lounge on couches, drink beer and discuss the most popular stories on Digg.

Something of Mr. Rose’s concept of his latest venture can be discerned in how he described Digg to me in a recent interview. “For us, it’s really about creating the platform for people to share things with their friends,” he said.

Owen Thomas, the managing editor of the Silicon Valley gossip blog Valleywag, has chronicled the excitement Pownce aroused over the last month, but doesn’t like the service himself. At 35, “I’m kind of old; I’m habituated to e-mail,” Mr. Owen wrote in just such a message.

MY own experiences with Pownce were ambiguous. As with Twitter, I felt mildly repulsed by the banality and exhibitionism of microblogs. On the other hand, I enjoyed the privacy of the closed messaging system and the ease with which I could share things with nicely calibrated groups.

What struck me most was the site’s potential to be powerfully disruptive. Most file-sharing occurs on public sites, which can be monitored by media companies; if the users violate copyrights, the sites or the users themselves can be threatened into compliance or litigated out of existence (as happened with the original Napster). File-sharing on Pownce would be difficult to police.

If I were a media executive concerned about protecting my intellectual property, I would pounce on Pownce. It’s possibly no coincidence that the name Mr. Rose chose for his new venture suggests the Internet gamer’s jargon “pwn,” which means to take control of a system by exploiting some vulnerability.

***

Friday, July 27, 2007

BBC online video service launches

The BBC's flagship online TV service is being launched, offering viewers the chance to download their favourite programmes from the last seven days.

Thursday, July 26, 2007

Microsoft and Digg Team Up in Advertising Syndication Agreement

Digg Inc. and Microsoft Corp. today announced an agreement in which the two companies will collaborate to bring relevant advertising to the more than 17 million unique monthly visitors to Digg, an innovative Web site that harnesses the collective wisdom of the world’s online audience to prioritize the overwhelming amount of content available on the Web. Microsoft’s advanced advertising technology and sales force combined with Digg’s unique and growing user community make possible the three-year collaboration, grounded in the companies’ commitment to technological innovation and user experience.

As part of the relationship, Microsoft will be the exclusive provider of display and contextual advertising on Digg. The two companies also agreed to work together on future technology and advertising initiatives.

“Our collaboration with Digg is about bringing our advertising technology and sales force to one of the fastest-growing sites on the Web and a true innovator in user-generated content,” said Steve Berkowitz, senior vice president of the Online Services Group at Microsoft. “We believe advertisers will welcome Microsoft and Digg’s combined strengths to forge more meaningful connections online.”

Microsoft and Federated Media Publishing, Digg’s current advertising partner, plan to collaborate to bring integrated programs to Digg’s users and advertisers. “Federated Media has unique advertising sales assets that dovetail with our efforts, and we look forward to working with them,” Berkowitz said.

“We’re now positioned to provide a world-class advertising solution that builds upon Digg’s philosophy of providing a great experience for users and advertisers,” said Jay Adelson, CEO of Digg. “As the Digg audience continues to grow and diversify, we believe that this initiative with Microsoft, and the resources that it provides, will enable us to focus less on developing an advertising infrastructure and more on developing new and innovative features for the site.”

“We are thrilled to work with these two world-class companies,” said John Battelle, founder and CEO of Federated Media. “Digg is truly a remarkable brand.”

The companies expect to begin execution of the agreement in the coming weeks.

***

ABC.com Launches HD Streaming (in Beta)

Ready to watch Ugly Betty in high-def? Yeah, neither am I. But if your computer screen can handle HD video (a minimum 1024 x 768 resolution is recommended), you don't need to buy an HD TV. ABC.com is experimenting with streaming shows over the Web in HD. You will need to download a new player from Move Networks (that won't let you fast-forward through the ads, sorry) and a broadband connection. (Move just hired the former CTO of the Disney Internet Group, Douglas Parrish, as a senior VP).

This is a beta, though. When I tried to install the player, nothing happened. But it shows that media companies are thinking about bringing HD to your PC as well as your TV. They just need to get it to actually work (caveat: the problem could very well be on my end).

***

Some Free Advice for Yahoo CEO Jerry Yang

Yahoo co-founder Jerry Yang is about to find out that being a CEO is a lot different than being the ceremonious Chief Yahoo, as he was called until last month. Yang, who became Yahoo's new CEO on June 18, faces a daunting to-do list that includes reinvigorating the company, closing a performance gap with Google, thwarting challenges from social media sites such as Facebook, delivering financial results that make Wall Street cheer and charting a course for the future.

His first deadline comes in about 100 days.

Meanwhile, Yang's development as CEO will be closely watched, including how he motivates employees and recruits talent. Yang took over for Yahoo CEO Terry Semel, who resigned after six years at the helm, during which Yahoo lost search market share and ad revenue to Google, failed to innovate in the display advertising business and fell behind on the delivery of a new advertising system called Panama.

One advantage Yang has is that he's an insider. He founded Yahoo along with David Filo in 1994 and has been involved with the company ever since. But he has never held the CEO position, and it's unclear whether he will be able to lead a company that has grown and changed so rapidly since its days as a startup. Yang, for his part, sounds confident. "Although I've only been in the CEO role for about a month, I co-founded this company and I've been thinking about our place in this industry for over 15 years," said Yang on the company's second quarter earnings conference call on July 17. "I may not have all the answers as of today, but I have a pretty strong idea of where I want to go. There will be no sacred cows and we need to move very quickly."

The company reported net income of $161 million, or 11 cents a share, on revenues of $1.24 billion, a sum that excludes traffic acquisition costs. Yahoo's earnings were flat compared to a year ago, but revenue was up 11%. The company also lowered its expectations for the second half of 2007. Meanwhile, Yahoo rival Google reported second quarter net income of $925 million, or $2.93 a share, on revenues of $2.72 billion. Google's revenue figure also excludes traffic acquisition costs.

"I intend to spend the next 100 days or so focused on mapping out a strategic plan for long-term success, working with our teams to put the right organization and the right people in place, and making any necessary changes," said Yang during the conference call.

Some Wall Street analysts have portrayed Yang as a caretaker for another CEO or as an interim solution ahead of a buyout -- a claim Yang vehemently denies. Others say Yang's credibility within Yahoo and his passion can reinvigorate company morale. Why the divided opinion? Yang doesn't necessarily fit the mold of founders returning to the top position. Apple founder Steve Jobs left the company and returned as CEO to create two big hits, the iPod and the iPhone. Michael Dell was CEO of his namesake company and recently returned amid the PC maker's missteps in product design and customer service. The common thread between Dell and Jobs: Both were CEOs before. Yang has no such track record.

"Yang doesn't fit the CEO mold and lacks management experience. I had expected the company to bring in an outsider," says David Hsu, management professor at Wharton.

Like Jobs and Dell, Yang is a founder, but he never led a company the size of Yahoo, which had 11,800 employees as of April 1. Yang has said his goals are to simplify Yahoo, move faster, be a vital partner for advertisers and publishers, and recruit talent.

"Being an insider is comforting to the organization as current employees see one of their own in charge," says Wharton management professor Peter Cappelli. "Insiders also know a lot, especially about the culture of the organization and what is important to preserve. Founders, in particular, have an advantage in that they remind employees of what were, in Yahoo's case, more glorious days."

As Yang embarks on this management journey, Knowledge@Wharton polled experts for some free advice.

Focus Internally First

Experts at Wharton say that Yang's biggest priorities should be boosting employee morale and finding key insiders to promote into leadership roles. Yang has said that recruiting talent -- internally or externally-- is one of his biggest goals. Since December, Yahoo has lost chief operating officer Daniel Rosensweig, chief technology officer Farzad Nazem and chief sales officer Wenda Harris Millard, among others.

Hsu says that Yang should play to his strengths, including his knowledge of Yahoo's inner workings. Since Yang already knows the internal landscape, he's in the best position to identify future leaders from within. Wharton management professor Keith Weigelt agrees. "I would look for talent internally first rather than recruiting it," he says. "If you look externally first, people inside wonder, 'What's wrong with our people?' He has to mine Yahoo and then find the most talented employees."

According to Kartik Hosanagar, Wharton professor of operations and information management, Yang should have little difficulty boosting morale. "Employees and techies will see Yang as a founder, a techie, the one with the original vision for Yahoo. All these are positive influences. So, Yang is better for employee morale than an outsider."

Hosanagar argues that Yang has to do four things to get employees excited. He needs to develop processes to identify internal employees with the most potential, create an incubator so employee ideas can become reality, and hire a few outsiders, preferably well-respected leaders in programming and research to compete with Google's technology prowess. Finally, Yahoo needs to address its compensation structure, given that stock options at the company aren't much of an incentive relative to competitors such as Google.

It's likely that Yahoo has these strategies in place but needs to execute them better, says Hosanagar.

Put Wall Street on the Back Burner

Experts at Wharton were unanimous in their opinion that Yang shouldn't lose sleep over what Wall Street thinks. "It may be hard for Yang to be taken seriously by Wall Street as a professional CEO," says Hosanagar. "The perception of being a caretaker rather than a leader is another issue. However, he can't worry about it. These [issues] are easily addressed by earnings figures. A couple of successful earnings reports will change perception." In the short term, Weigelt adds, "Yang won't satisfy Wall Street. He should avoid the short term right now and focus on the long term. He has to worry about the inside people first" -- the culture and operations -- and then the investment community.

Yang appears to be already sticking to this script. On Yahoo's earnings conference call, he noted that the company is in "investment mode" as it looks for new opportunities. These investments are likely to increase expenses and cut earnings. Weigelt also suggests that Yang should follow Google's lead and stop projecting future earnings. "He has too much on his plate. Why worry about that [Wall Street guidance] now?" Yahoo, however, still provides analysts with a future outlook. The company projected third quarter revenues of $1.17 billion to $1.2 billion, and revenues for the year of $4.89 billion to $5.19 billion.

According to Cappelli, a preoccupation with Wall Street may be why Yang indicated that his strategy will be unveiled in 100 days. The 100 day reference is often mentioned in political campaigns, but has been increasingly used by executives. "The 100 day action plan has become popular, especially when there is pressure from the financial markets to show that there is some change in direction," says Cappelli.

Indeed, Yang's strategic plan will be closely scrutinized. In a research note, Colin Gillis, an analyst at Canaccord Adams, a Vancouver-based investment bank, said his rating on Yahoo shares largely depends on Yang's vision. "A compelling and forward vision for Yahoo could rate a buy if execution appears reasonable. A rehash of existing web 2.0 technologies may cause us to move to sell, particularly if we start to sense that it's going to take a different CEO to turn Yahoo in the correct direction."

Find Yahoo's Greatest Hits

No one knows for sure what will be in Yahoo's new strategy, but Hsu says there are time-worn paths to follow when creating a new mission. "Yang has to really concentrate on surrounding himself with experienced people and be more willing to listen to new ideas. During the 100 days, he should conduct a brainstorming session and be freewheeling with different models."

More importantly, Yang has to weed out businesses that don't work and double down on the ones that do well, adds Hsu. Fortunately for Yahoo, it has a bevy of valuable assets, including some that fall into the social media category, such as Flickr, a photo sharing site, and Del.icio.us, a social book marking site. Yahoo is also the dominant player in Japan and has started new services -- such as Yahoo Answers -- that have been well received. While Yahoo doesn't break out revenue contributions for most of those properties, they contribute to buzz about the company. Flickr, which Yahoo acquired in March 2005, will replace Yahoo's previous Yahoo Photos site. Yahoo's efforts, however, haven't been able to land new audiences in the same way as Facebook and MySpace, which are drawing traffic away from traditional portals like Yahoo.

Hosanagar says Yahoo is likely to address two needs: pulling even with Google on search, and targeting social media. "I would try to match Google on basic search -- which it sort of manages to do today -- but focus more on emerging media like audio, video, mobile and local. [A lot of] growth will be there. Yahoo's biggest problem in search today is perception on the part of consumers and advertisers. On the consumer side, search quality is comparable, but Google enjoys significant brand advantages. On the advertiser side, the problem is far more than just perception. Clicks from the Google network convert to purchases at a higher rate than at Yahoo," says Hosanagar.

To build its social media standing, Yahoo is likely to pursue acquisitions. "If it focuses on social media, the good news is that it already has Flickr, Del.icio.us and Yahoo Answers. However, it should also explore options to partner or acquire [companies like] Facebook or MySpace. I'd also focus on building social media/apps for mobile and video on demand," adds Hosanagar.

Hsu suggests, however, that focusing on social media and search is not going to take Yahoo far into the future. Regarding search, the best Yahoo can hope for is parity with Google's algorithms. And social media may not be a big strategic advantage in the future. Instead, Yahoo must create a strategic plan that will enable it to leapfrog Google. And that means predicting the future, says Hsu.

Place a Few Big Bets

Yahoo's strategic plan may be fine for diagnosing ills and fixing them, but vision will be critical. Yahoo has to find "the next big source of revenue, whether it's advertising led revenue or something else. It will take some assessment and broader thinking," says Weigelt, adding that it's likely Yahoo has the kernel for these new opportunities inside its headquarters. He argues that Yahoo isn't a broken company, just a fallen giant that needs better execution.

Kendall Whitehouse, senior director of information technology at Wharton, says Yahoo's last big bet -- to become more like a media company while downplaying technology -- wasn't very successful. The current web 2.0 trends have made technology key to providing a platform where consumers can generate their own content and "mash up" existing text, audio and video in their own blogs and web sites. "For Yahoo, getting a little geekier may be better in the short run," says Whitehouse.

He contends, however, that Yahoo shouldn't completely run away from the media roots it established during the Semel years. "There are three big variables: content, platform, and the user experience. The sweet spot is all three of them." One bet Yahoo could pursue is technology that increases how long a customer stays on a Yahoo site, Whitehouse adds. On July 10, Nielsen/Netratings, a web traffic tracking firm, said it will begin measuring how long customers stay on a site instead of just counting the number of page views. The new measurements are designed to account for sites hosting rich media like video and audio and next-generation applications that don't require a new web page to load on every click.

Whitehouse notes that this form of measurement could tip the scales in Yahoo's favor. Under the new measurement of time spent, Time Warner's AOL network usurps Yahoo as the top web property. AOL users logged 25 billion minutes in May compared to Yahoo's 19.6 billion minutes. The good news for Yahoo is Microsoft's MSN is a distant third in minutes spent, with 10.6 billion. And Google users spent only 7.4 billion minutes on the search giant's sites.

Whitehouse's point: Yahoo should focus on where the web will be -- not where it is today.

Along those lines, Hsu suggests that Yang should be spending his time with the research and development team to find the next frontier. But he also has to focus on improving existing services. The result, Hsu adds, will be two types of bets -- incremental innovation applied to existing products, and brand new efforts. Improving existing products is a low risk with lower returns. The big bets on the future could deliver big returns, but carry more risks. "The goal is to do a little of both. No one knows what the future holds, but if you have done some investment in far out areas, you can capitalize."

One thing is certain: Whatever Yang cooks up will be closely scrutinized. "Yahoo still has a lot going for it, but the perception right now is all gloom and doom," says Weigelt. "To overcome that perception, the company has to take some risks to change culture and strategy. Yahoo has to place a bet here. It's at an inflection point."

***

Some Free Advice for Yahoo CEO Jerry Yang

Yahoo co-founder Jerry Yang is about to find out that being a CEO is a lot different than being the ceremonious Chief Yahoo, as he was called until last month. Yang, who became Yahoo's new CEO on June 18, faces a daunting to-do list that includes reinvigorating the company, closing a performance gap with Google, thwarting challenges from social media sites such as Facebook, delivering financial results that make Wall Street cheer and charting a course for the future.

His first deadline comes in about 100 days.

Meanwhile, Yang's development as CEO will be closely watched, including how he motivates employees and recruits talent. Yang took over for Yahoo CEO Terry Semel, who resigned after six years at the helm, during which Yahoo lost search market share and ad revenue to Google, failed to innovate in the display advertising business and fell behind on the delivery of a new advertising system called Panama.

One advantage Yang has is that he's an insider. He founded Yahoo along with David Filo in 1994 and has been involved with the company ever since. But he has never held the CEO position, and it's unclear whether he will be able to lead a company that has grown and changed so rapidly since its days as a startup. Yang, for his part, sounds confident. "Although I've only been in the CEO role for about a month, I co-founded this company and I've been thinking about our place in this industry for over 15 years," said Yang on the company's second quarter earnings conference call on July 17. "I may not have all the answers as of today, but I have a pretty strong idea of where I want to go. There will be no sacred cows and we need to move very quickly."

The company reported net income of $161 million, or 11 cents a share, on revenues of $1.24 billion, a sum that excludes traffic acquisition costs. Yahoo's earnings were flat compared to a year ago, but revenue was up 11%. The company also lowered its expectations for the second half of 2007. Meanwhile, Yahoo rival Google reported second quarter net income of $925 million, or $2.93 a share, on revenues of $2.72 billion. Google's revenue figure also excludes traffic acquisition costs.

"I intend to spend the next 100 days or so focused on mapping out a strategic plan for long-term success, working with our teams to put the right organization and the right people in place, and making any necessary changes," said Yang during the conference call.

Some Wall Street analysts have portrayed Yang as a caretaker for another CEO or as an interim solution ahead of a buyout -- a claim Yang vehemently denies. Others say Yang's credibility within Yahoo and his passion can reinvigorate company morale. Why the divided opinion? Yang doesn't necessarily fit the mold of founders returning to the top position. Apple founder Steve Jobs left the company and returned as CEO to create two big hits, the iPod and the iPhone. Michael Dell was CEO of his namesake company and recently returned amid the PC maker's missteps in product design and customer service. The common thread between Dell and Jobs: Both were CEOs before. Yang has no such track record.

"Yang doesn't fit the CEO mold and lacks management experience. I had expected the company to bring in an outsider," says David Hsu, management professor at Wharton.

Like Jobs and Dell, Yang is a founder, but he never led a company the size of Yahoo, which had 11,800 employees as of April 1. Yang has said his goals are to simplify Yahoo, move faster, be a vital partner for advertisers and publishers, and recruit talent.

"Being an insider is comforting to the organization as current employees see one of their own in charge," says Wharton management professor Peter Cappelli. "Insiders also know a lot, especially about the culture of the organization and what is important to preserve. Founders, in particular, have an advantage in that they remind employees of what were, in Yahoo's case, more glorious days."

As Yang embarks on this management journey, Knowledge@Wharton polled experts for some free advice.

Focus Internally First

Experts at Wharton say that Yang's biggest priorities should be boosting employee morale and finding key insiders to promote into leadership roles. Yang has said that recruiting talent -- internally or externally-- is one of his biggest goals. Since December, Yahoo has lost chief operating officer Daniel Rosensweig, chief technology officer Farzad Nazem and chief sales officer Wenda Harris Millard, among others.

Hsu says that Yang should play to his strengths, including his knowledge of Yahoo's inner workings. Since Yang already knows the internal landscape, he's in the best position to identify future leaders from within. Wharton management professor Keith Weigelt agrees. "I would look for talent internally first rather than recruiting it," he says. "If you look externally first, people inside wonder, 'What's wrong with our people?' He has to mine Yahoo and then find the most talented employees."

According to Kartik Hosanagar, Wharton professor of operations and information management, Yang should have little difficulty boosting morale. "Employees and techies will see Yang as a founder, a techie, the one with the original vision for Yahoo. All these are positive influences. So, Yang is better for employee morale than an outsider."

Hosanagar argues that Yang has to do four things to get employees excited. He needs to develop processes to identify internal employees with the most potential, create an incubator so employee ideas can become reality, and hire a few outsiders, preferably well-respected leaders in programming and research to compete with Google's technology prowess. Finally, Yahoo needs to address its compensation structure, given that stock options at the company aren't much of an incentive relative to competitors such as Google.

It's likely that Yahoo has these strategies in place but needs to execute them better, says Hosanagar.

Put Wall Street on the Back Burner

Experts at Wharton were unanimous in their opinion that Yang shouldn't lose sleep over what Wall Street thinks. "It may be hard for Yang to be taken seriously by Wall Street as a professional CEO," says Hosanagar. "The perception of being a caretaker rather than a leader is another issue. However, he can't worry about it. These [issues] are easily addressed by earnings figures. A couple of successful earnings reports will change perception." In the short term, Weigelt adds, "Yang won't satisfy Wall Street. He should avoid the short term right now and focus on the long term. He has to worry about the inside people first" -- the culture and operations -- and then the investment community.

Yang appears to be already sticking to this script. On Yahoo's earnings conference call, he noted that the company is in "investment mode" as it looks for new opportunities. These investments are likely to increase expenses and cut earnings. Weigelt also suggests that Yang should follow Google's lead and stop projecting future earnings. "He has too much on his plate. Why worry about that [Wall Street guidance] now?" Yahoo, however, still provides analysts with a future outlook. The company projected third quarter revenues of $1.17 billion to $1.2 billion, and revenues for the year of $4.89 billion to $5.19 billion.

According to Cappelli, a preoccupation with Wall Street may be why Yang indicated that his strategy will be unveiled in 100 days. The 100 day reference is often mentioned in political campaigns, but has been increasingly used by executives. "The 100 day action plan has become popular, especially when there is pressure from the financial markets to show that there is some change in direction," says Cappelli.

Indeed, Yang's strategic plan will be closely scrutinized. In a research note, Colin Gillis, an analyst at Canaccord Adams, a Vancouver-based investment bank, said his rating on Yahoo shares largely depends on Yang's vision. "A compelling and forward vision for Yahoo could rate a buy if execution appears reasonable. A rehash of existing web 2.0 technologies may cause us to move to sell, particularly if we start to sense that it's going to take a different CEO to turn Yahoo in the correct direction."

Find Yahoo's Greatest Hits

No one knows for sure what will be in Yahoo's new strategy, but Hsu says there are time-worn paths to follow when creating a new mission. "Yang has to really concentrate on surrounding himself with experienced people and be more willing to listen to new ideas. During the 100 days, he should conduct a brainstorming session and be freewheeling with different models."

More importantly, Yang has to weed out businesses that don't work and double down on the ones that do well, adds Hsu. Fortunately for Yahoo, it has a bevy of valuable assets, including some that fall into the social media category, such as Flickr, a photo sharing site, and Del.icio.us, a social book marking site. Yahoo is also the dominant player in Japan and has started new services -- such as Yahoo Answers -- that have been well received. While Yahoo doesn't break out revenue contributions for most of those properties, they contribute to buzz about the company. Flickr, which Yahoo acquired in March 2005, will replace Yahoo's previous Yahoo Photos site. Yahoo's efforts, however, haven't been able to land new audiences in the same way as Facebook and MySpace, which are drawing traffic away from traditional portals like Yahoo.

Hosanagar says Yahoo is likely to address two needs: pulling even with Google on search, and targeting social media. "I would try to match Google on basic search -- which it sort of manages to do today -- but focus more on emerging media like audio, video, mobile and local. [A lot of] growth will be there. Yahoo's biggest problem in search today is perception on the part of consumers and advertisers. On the consumer side, search quality is comparable, but Google enjoys significant brand advantages. On the advertiser side, the problem is far more than just perception. Clicks from the Google network convert to purchases at a higher rate than at Yahoo," says Hosanagar.

To build its social media standing, Yahoo is likely to pursue acquisitions. "If it focuses on social media, the good news is that it already has Flickr, Del.icio.us and Yahoo Answers. However, it should also explore options to partner or acquire [companies like] Facebook or MySpace. I'd also focus on building social media/apps for mobile and video on demand," adds Hosanagar.

Hsu suggests, however, that focusing on social media and search is not going to take Yahoo far into the future. Regarding search, the best Yahoo can hope for is parity with Google's algorithms. And social media may not be a big strategic advantage in the future. Instead, Yahoo must create a strategic plan that will enable it to leapfrog Google. And that means predicting the future, says Hsu.

Place a Few Big Bets

Yahoo's strategic plan may be fine for diagnosing ills and fixing them, but vision will be critical. Yahoo has to find "the next big source of revenue, whether it's advertising led revenue or something else. It will take some assessment and broader thinking," says Weigelt, adding that it's likely Yahoo has the kernel for these new opportunities inside its headquarters. He argues that Yahoo isn't a broken company, just a fallen giant that needs better execution.

Kendall Whitehouse, senior director of information technology at Wharton, says Yahoo's last big bet -- to become more like a media company while downplaying technology -- wasn't very successful. The current web 2.0 trends have made technology key to providing a platform where consumers can generate their own content and "mash up" existing text, audio and video in their own blogs and web sites. "For Yahoo, getting a little geekier may be better in the short run," says Whitehouse.

He contends, however, that Yahoo shouldn't completely run away from the media roots it established during the Semel years. "There are three big variables: content, platform, and the user experience. The sweet spot is all three of them." One bet Yahoo could pursue is technology that increases how long a customer stays on a Yahoo site, Whitehouse adds. On July 10, Nielsen/Netratings, a web traffic tracking firm, said it will begin measuring how long customers stay on a site instead of just counting the number of page views. The new measurements are designed to account for sites hosting rich media like video and audio and next-generation applications that don't require a new web page to load on every click.

Whitehouse notes that this form of measurement could tip the scales in Yahoo's favor. Under the new measurement of time spent, Time Warner's AOL network usurps Yahoo as the top web property. AOL users logged 25 billion minutes in May compared to Yahoo's 19.6 billion minutes. The good news for Yahoo is Microsoft's MSN is a distant third in minutes spent, with 10.6 billion. And Google users spent only 7.4 billion minutes on the search giant's sites.

Whitehouse's point: Yahoo should focus on where the web will be -- not where it is today.

Along those lines, Hsu suggests that Yang should be spending his time with the research and development team to find the next frontier. But he also has to focus on improving existing services. The result, Hsu adds, will be two types of bets -- incremental innovation applied to existing products, and brand new efforts. Improving existing products is a low risk with lower returns. The big bets on the future could deliver big returns, but carry more risks. "The goal is to do a little of both. No one knows what the future holds, but if you have done some investment in far out areas, you can capitalize."

One thing is certain: Whatever Yang cooks up will be closely scrutinized. "Yahoo still has a lot going for it, but the perception right now is all gloom and doom," says Weigelt. "To overcome that perception, the company has to take some risks to change culture and strategy. Yahoo has to place a bet here. It's at an inflection point."

***

7 Digital Media UberTrends

Being in the venture capital industry, I find that sometimes it is worthwhile to take a step back from the day-to-day to take a look at the large impending trends which are just beginning to affect us. With many frequent headline predictions desensitizing our understanding of their relative importance, those in the industry (including myself) sometimes forget to (or can’t) see the forest through the trees.



And so I thought it would be good to highlight what are some very important uber-trends which starting to emerge in the digital media space. To most readers, they likely may seem obvious, but perhaps serve as a reminder what’s likely in store. And where there is change there is opportunity; the following seven identified trends are perfect opportunities for startups to leverage:




Seven Coming Digital Uber-trends which Are Ripe for Startup Opportunities



1. The digitalization of transportation experience. Our cars are transforming from motorized transportation into digital immersion experiences. With in-dash devices ranging from GPS, to satellite radio, to integrated telephone controllers, the place where many Americans spend much of their day is going digital. Also, other transportation experiences, namely public transportation, is being affected by a digitalization trend – everything from digital signage in subways to infomation touchscreens in taxis is modifying what we do when going from here to there.



2. Internet’s facilitation of green lifestyle. With concern over the environment becoming a progressively more relevant issue, the web provides a natural vehicle for connecting people to resources and services which lessen impact of individuals on environment. We are at the beginning of “The Green Web” which will provide individuals within our society a leveraged way to positively affect the planet.

3. Influence and word-of-mouth marketing facilitated by online social software. Marketers are increasingly concerned about truly engaging with consumers as the effectiveness of traditional advertising erodes. Social software (in its broadest sense) coupled with the principles of word-of-mouth marketing will provide for successfully reaching potential customers via the most trusted source – people they already know.



4. Fundamental shift demographics of internet usage. The demographics of internet utilization are rapidly changing. Baby-boomers are getting older. International traffic and other languages are will be soon dwarfing that of the U.S. and English. Domestically, we have a growing population of youth who have never known life without internet and mobile phone. Couple these and other demographic shifts together and the internet audience of today looks very different in the not-so-distant future.



5. Mobile consumption of information. A day where everyone carries a powerful hand-held device (which includes GPS and significant processing power and memory on a higher-bandwidth network) will allow information to proliferate in a way setting which is just becoming available to a small segment of power-users. Location-relevant information ubiquity is dauntingly exciting.



6. Wide proliferation of video. While in the age of YouTube it may seem trivial to mention, but I believe it can’t be overstated. We’re moving to a world where every web page, every device, every screen will be have some type of video content. The long-tail of video content will be wagging.



7. Digital information becoming increasingly personalized with greater user control and choice. While search as proactive information-seeking reigns today, the notion of passive personalized discovery which is already taking hold will become ever more important with an abundance of information. User control and choice in that process is becoming integral in the content consumption process.



In hindsight, it’s easy to look back at companies that emerged on the wave of past important trends. Successful endeavors have an easier time with the wind against their backs. Fifteen years from now, I would be surprised looking back if many of these above categories don’t have enduring successful companies which were borne out of capitalizing on them.

(Note: This post was inspired by and largely based on internal discussions that entire Venrock team about megatrends in our industry.)

***

Tuesday, July 24, 2007

8apps takes social networking to the next level


Social networking sites have become an increasingly popular way for people to connect professionally but, once you've added someone to your contact list, what then? 8apps is one of the first sites we've seen that answers that question. It goes beyond just connecting people and actually gives them tools to develop whatever brainstorms happen to come up once they get to know each other.

Like other social networking sites, 8apps brings like-minded people together, but then it takes the concept a step further by offering tools to help shape the ideas that take root between members. Wikis offer the same collaborative tools as 8apps but start from the premise that all the users already know each other. 8apps puts the horse before the cart and helps you meet people, then develop a project together.

After completing the very simple sign-up process, find members by searching for groups or individuals in the Handshake section of the site. Map out your big idea in Blueprint, a virtual whiteboard that works a bit like a mind-mapping tool. Next, break down projects and assign tasks with Orchestrate. If your group decides that a face-to-face meeting is in order, use the Pinpoint map and scheduling tool to find your real-world middle ground.

While the four remaining applications are still under wraps, this new site is still useful even though it's technically under development.* It also has an outstanding, beautiful, and intuitive interface that makes navigation easy and painless.

While the world might not need Yet Another Social Networking Site, it does need a way to corral all those brainstorms between members so the ideas have a chance to grow up and become -- who knows? -- Yet Another Social Media Tool. 8apps is just the ticket.

*Note: As we were preparing this post for publication, we learned that the creators of 8apps have just put the site up for sale. Although further development has been temporarily put on hold, the site is still fully functional, and there are still private invites available. Want to know how you can score one? Stay tuned.

***

Nokia (www.nokia.com) has acquired Twango

This is an exciting moment for Twango. When we started Twango back in 2004, we set out to create a media sharing service that would embrace and build connections between people. We wanted to make it easy for people to share the media they choose (photos, videos, audio, documents, and more) in whatever way they choose. So it was thrilling to learn that a company of Nokia’s global stature and resources shared that vision. Together we will be able to deliver more quickly on our shared vision to enable people to capture and enjoy their personal media anywhere, at any time, from any connected device, in any way that you choose. Learn more about Twango.

And a sincere “thank you” to the many loyal Twango members around the world who pushed us to improve the service and helped build our member base by sharing their own great media. As Twango joins the Nokia family our service will continue to operate without any major interruptions, although there will be some minor changes to our service. Read more in frequently asked questions (FAQ).

Press release:
Nokia acquires Twango to offer a comprehensive media sharing experience

***

Thursday, July 12, 2007

Craigslist's Craig Newmark: '100% of What We Do Is Based on Community'

Jon Spector, a former Wharton vice dean and now CEO of the Conference Board, spoke with participants at the Community 2.0 conference in Las Vegas earlier this year to explore how companies are trying to harness communities to reshape their businesses. In this podcast, Spector speaks with Craig Newmark, founder and "customer service rep" of Craigslist.com. Spector is a co-author, with Barry Libert, of the forthcoming Wharton School Publishing book, We Are Smarter Than Me: How to Unleash the Power of Crowds in Your Business.

***

Tuesday, July 10, 2007

Marc Andreessen's Ning Raises Huge Round of Funding

Mike Arrington had the rumor first, and now Marc Andreessen has confirmed it: Ning, the mostly Andreessen-funded provider of services that let you create your own social-networking site, has raised a big round of $44 million, led by Legg Mason. Andreessen's calling it a series C, though I don't know how much he and his angels have put in.

Read more.+Marc's comment.

Marc's blog.

***

How businesses are using Web 2.0

A McKinsey Global Survey: By and large, executives are satisfied with their previous investments in Internet technology, and most are investing in trends that promote automation and networking online.

The rising popularity of user-driven online services, including MySpace, Wikipedia, and YouTube, has drawn attention to a group of technological developments known as Web 2.0. These technologies, which rely on user collaboration, include Web services, peer-to-peer networking, blogs, podcasts, and online social networks.

Respondents to a recent McKinsey survey show widespread but careful interest in this trend.1 Expressing satisfaction with their Internet investments so far, they say that Web 2.0 technologies are strategic and that they plan to increase these investments. But companies aren’t necessarily relying on the best-known Web 2.0 trends, such as blogs; instead, they place the greatest importance on technologies that enable automation and networking.

During an online discussion convened to dig more deeply into these results, it became clear that companies using Web 2.0 technologies have developed a new way of bringing technology into businesses. And, according to many participants, this new approach is easier to implement and more flexible than traditional top-down approaches. Discussion participants are seeing some business impact from these technologies and seem generally optimistic about their benefits, particularly in how they help a company refine its strategy.

Read more.

***

Monday, July 09, 2007

AlwaysOn: Vertical Social Networks

Tuesday, July 03, 2007

Facebook helps iLike stand out in Internet crowd

A month ago, iLike was just another online music community struggling for relevancy in an increasingly crowded market. Today, it's the fastest-growing digital music service on the Internet, registering 1 million new users per week and fielding information requests from record labels every half-hour.

DENVER (Billboard) - A month ago, iLike was just another online music community struggling for relevancy in an increasingly crowded market.

Today, it's the fastest-growing digital music service on the Internet, registering 1 million new users per week and fielding information requests from record labels every half-hour.

The difference is Facebook.

Facebook was once a niche social networking site limited to college students. Then two things happened. First, in September, Facebook opened the service to anyone. Membership doubled to 25 million, about 60 percent of whom are not college students. Then, in May, it opened its technology platform to outside developers, letting them build their own custom applications using all the tools and features of the Facebook service.

iLike was one such company taking advantage of this opportunity. The music-sharing site enables users to share music preferences, receive personalized concert and music recommendations and includes a "sidebar" for Apple's iTunes that creates automatic playlists based on one's iTunes library.

THE OLD WAY

Before teaming with Facebook, iLike required users to visit the iLike site, set up a profile and then try to match friends in their e-mail contact list to existing iLike members. New users had to sort through a massive database of artists to tell the iLike service which artists and music they prefer. Then they needed to e-mail their friends and convince them to join as well in order to share music recommendations.

iLike first went live in October; through May it attracted about 3 million users. Then the company made a version of the service for Facebook. Within three weeks, that incarnation signed up 3.7 million users, and continues to add about 1 million per week, far overshadowing the original Web site.

"iLike is actually better on Facebook than as a stand-alone application," iLike CEO Ali Partovi said. "It's a little sad to have to admit that your own Web site isn't as good as the thing you build for Facebook, (but) there's a community already there. That's impossible to re-create on your own."

The catalyst for this growth was not so much Facebook's 25 million members -- although that's part of it. Rather, it's the way Facebook provides access to that mass.

For instance, the Facebook iLike application pulls information directly from each user's Facebook profile (favorite artists, friends list, demographic info). On the other hand, iLike's widget (a graphic element that serves as an interface to another application) on the News Corp.-owned MySpace is little more than a glorified link back to the iLike Web site, where users have to re-enter all the information that already exists on their MySpace profile. As a result, only a few hundred thousand MySpace users have downloaded the widget during the last five months.

NO COMPARISON

"Comparing the Facebook platform to (MySpace) widgets is like comparing the emergence of mammals to dinosaurs," Partovi said. "iLike (on Facebook) already knows what your music tastes are, who your friends are and what their music tastes are. Facebook has completely redefined what's possible for a third party co-existing in a social networking environment."

And the music industry has taken notice. Some labels are launching their own custom Facebook applications, like the one by Warner Bros. promoting the White Stripes' new album, "Icky Thump." Many other record companies are instead developing Facebook iLike profiles to better-communicate with fans. About 100 artists, including Faith Hill, 50 Cent and Kelly Clarkson, are participating in an "invite only" trial where iLike develops custom profiles that provide streaming music and tour dates.

iLike also is working with Bon Jovi to test a tour promotion service. The company is sending targeted e-mail to iLike users living near New Jersey's Prudential Center who also list the band as a preferred artist, inviting them to participate in a presale ticket offer.

There's also the potential for actual download sales. iLike links to iTunes for digital downloads, but that may soon change as the company turns its attention to new business models.

But iLike still has some work to do. First, it needs to grow even more. With 3.7 million users, it's the second most-popular application on Facebook today, but that's still only 15 percent of Facebook's total membership -- which itself is on track to reach 50 million by the end of the year. Second, it needs to start making money. All the services offered to users and artists are free. iLike's only revenue stream is a cut of concert ticket and album sales.

The smart money says someone will acquire iLike, and soon. The company's social media discovery capabilities are a natural extension to any digital music service, particularly iTunes -- given the tight integration it already has with the service.

What's more, iLike's tour alert and recommendation feature, not to mention ticketing service, would bring a much-needed new revenue stream to many of today's struggling digital music efforts. Ticketmaster owns 25 percent of the company.

For Partovi and crew, it's still all a bit breathtaking.

"It's something we never would have contemplated just a month ago," he said. "We've had our whole world turned upside down."

***

Internet killed the radio star?


Canadians are turning out their radios in favour of MP3s and online services.

CANADA.COM: OTTAWA - Radio stations are not providing music to the ears of many young Canadians these days, according to new statistics that indicate a steady decline in radio listening among youth.

The latest 2006 numbers released Tuesday by Statistics Canada, show Canadians are devoting less time listening to their radios as a form of entertainment than in previous years - especially teenagers and young adults.

"The popularity of digital music players and online music services had the biggest impact on the radio listening habits of teens and the young-adult crowd," the study said.

On average, Canadians tuned in to their radios for 18.6 hours during a designated "measurement week" in the fall of last year.

That was down from 19.1 hours the year before and since 1999, when radio listening peaked, the average has dropped by nearly two hours, Statistics Canada found.

In 2006, much of the decline was thanks to two age groups: teenagers aged 12 to 17 and young adults aged 18 to 24.

Teenagers had the lowest average of all age groups, tuning into their radios for just 7.6 hours a week, down from 11.3 in 1996.

What hasn't changed, however, is the popularity of radio among older women.

Canadian women aged 65 and over continue to be the most loyal radio listeners, tuning in for an average of 22.7 hours per week, virtually unchanged from 2005. In comparison, senior men listened to the radio for 19.5 hours per week last year, down slightly from the previous year.

Overall, adult contemporary music was the first choice of Canadians, taking 22.3 per cent of Canadians' listening time, followed by oldies and rock at 13.9 per cent.

In third place was the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, which rebounded after dropping in the rankings in 2005 when a lockout by management coincided with the survey period. The CBC was the most popular station for senior citizens of both genders and was least popular among young adults.

Love for CBC radio is not shared equally among Canadians, the data showed.

The public broadcaster is a popular choice in British Columbia and Nova Scotia, capturing 17 per cent or so of the audience but it is the least popular in Alberta, where listeners much prefer country music and oldies rock.

Newfoundland and Labrador stood out among the Atlantic provinces for its dedication to talk radio, the survey results showed. It captured almost 30 per cent of the province's radio audience in contrast to the other East Coast provinces where its share was virtually non-existent.

The data, collected by having survey respondents keep a diary of their listening habits for one week, did not include residents of the territories.

***

Social websites expose class divide

'Soldiers are on MySpace while officers are on Facebook.'

Social networking websites are increasingly splitting along class lines, according to one prominent academic.

In recent years networking sites such as MySpace and Facebook have seen remarkable growth and become some of the most popular destinations on the internet. But Danah Boyd, a researcher at the University of California and internet sociologist, said populations of different networks were now divided on a rough class basis.

Her evidence, collected through a series of interviews with US teenagers using MySpace and Facebook over the past nine months, showed there was a clear gap between the populations of each site.

"MySpace was the cool thing for high school teens and Facebook was the cool thing for college students," she wrote in a paper available online. "The picture is now being blurred ... it seems to primarily have to do with socio-economic class."
Typical Facebook users, she said, "tend to come from families who emphasise education and going to college. They are primarily white, but not exclusively." MySpace, on the other hand, "is still home for Latino and Hispanic teens, immigrant teens" as well as "other kids who didn't play into the dominant high school popularity paradigm".

MySpace, which was founded in 2003 and bought by Rupert Murdoch two years later for $580m (£290), has enjoyed huge success, particularly among young music fans, and recently became the most visited site on the web.

But in recent months Facebook, created by the college student Mark Zuckerberg, has started gaining ground on its major rival. Figures released last month suggested it had more than 3.5 million users in Britain alone.

A number of high-profile individuals, including Prince William, have joined the service, and established companies have approached Mr Zuckerberg about buying Facebook. The dotcom pioneer Yahoo! is reputed to have offered $1.6bn for the company last year.

The class difference between the two websites could lie in their origins. Mr Zuckerberg started his service while studying at Harvard and until late last year membership was limited to university students and individuals with an email address from an academic institution. This, said Ms Boyd, had given the site higher value among aspirational teens.

In the paper she also conjectured that a recent decision by the US military to ban service personnel from using sites including MySpace showed evidence of social fissures in the forces.

"A month ago, the military banned MySpace but not Facebook. This was a very interesting move because there's a division, even in the military. Soldiers are on MySpace; officers are on Facebook."

According to Ms Boyd, Facebook is not used by young soldiers, who are generally less well-educated and from poorer backgrounds, and there is an element of social conflict in the ban.

"The military ban appears to replicate the class divisions that exist throughout the military. I can't help but wonder if the reason for this goes beyond the purported concerns that those in the military are leaking information or spending too much time online or soaking up too much bandwidth with their MySpace usage."

***

Chris de Wolfe: Looking at the bigger picture

MySpace is already the world's largest website. Now, with its expansion into television, it's gunning for YouTube. And, it might just help save the planet, too. The site's co-founder Chris DeWolfe tells Ian Burrell about the long-term revolution

Four years into the MySpace revolution and one co-founder, Tom Anderson, has amassed more than 180 million "friends" while his partner, Chris DeWolfe, has barely 200. Which you might think surprising for someone who has made a fortune, some £150m, from the concept of getting people to network and who, in so doing, has built the largest website in the world in terms of page views, some 60 billion a month.

But DeWolfe, sitting in MySpace's new European headquarters, close to London's Tottenham Court Road, is not at all perturbed by this relative unpopularity. It was right, he says, that Anderson's face and not his or anybody else's, should be the one that appeared on the pages of new MySpace users as their first friend.

"Tom's the kind of guy who's basically grown up on the internet. He's used every classified site – not every damn site – but he's just spent a lot of time online. He feels very comfortable communicating to lots of people online. So, he takes more of a consumer-facing role and I'm more concerned with expanding the business."

DeWolfe, 41, is driving the growth of MySpace across the world and is passing through London on his way back from launching the site in Spain, days ahead of a further launch in Sweden. MySpace now has indigenous sites in 16 countries, each carefully tailored to local markets and in addition to the global MySpace.com. There are MySpace users in every country and the culture is spreading rapidly in China, where a separate company has been established. In the UK, in spite of competition from rivals Facebook and Bebo, the MySpace workforce has grown from five to 100 in a year, in which time the site's membership has increased from 1 million users to 10 million.

Then last week came DeWolfe and Anderson's next big play: MySpaceTV. In what will be seen as an attempt to confront YouTube head on, in an effort to become the undisputed home of online video, MySpaceTV will be a platform for professionally-produced as well as user generated films. Deals have been struck with major media partners including Sony, the US channels Fox and NBC, National Geographic, The New York Times and Reuters. MySpace is close to clinching an agreement to show programmes made by the BBC, which already has a presence on YouTube.

DeWolfe, his slightly greying hair falling almost to his shoulders, poses for a photograph, sat beneath a lurid artwork showing an old hag alongside the words "You Looked Better On MySpace". Here in what he might call the "offline" environment, he presents himself in a sober grey shirt, jeans and black shoes.

Faced with the suggestion that all the social networking talk in London in recent weeks has been about Facebook, he is generous about his rival, up to a point. "It's interesting. They're definitely a good company. Mark [Zuckerburg], the guy who runs it, has done a really good job. Sometimes I think that, in the tech community, people like to talk about the same thing at one time. Two years ago it might have been MySpace, last year it might have been YouTube, and it seems like this year people are talking about Facebook, which is fine. I think it's probably because they've grown more in the last six months. They actually started at around the same time that MySpace did. I think they're around one third of the size of MySpace in the UK, and around one third of our size in the US as well. In the past they've been more of a niche network, and they've just recently opened up their system to people outside of the college arena."

DeWolfe's view is that this is a race that is still MySpace's to throw away. He realises, though, that there is no time to lose, which is why he is spending a lot of time on planes. "[We are] expanding as quickly as we can globally, because there's clearly a first-mover advantage in every country, and I think we've done quite a good job of that," he says. "Putting our flag down in as many countries as we can, as quickly as we can, is extremely important."

Though he might acknowledge that there is a growing buzz in the tech community around Facebook he would not accept that MySpace has stalled and is especially determined to dispel any notion that the site's association with Rupert Murdoch's media empire (following its acquisition by News Corp two years ago for £332.85m) has damaged its reputation online. In fact, he claims most users have no idea of the connection. "I think there was a definite concern prior to the acquisition, but then what we learnt was the majority of people didn't even know that we were acquired. They just want to use a great website. They don't really pay attention to who owns it or who doesn't own it."

Neither is he worried by the thought that the young, creatively-minded types who inhabit MySpace's world, (a vast showcase for every type of musician, artist, and entertainment promoter from the most obscure to the internationally famous), would baulk at embracing a site that is a sister organisation of Fox News. "Interestingly enough," he responds. "If you look at the Fox News channel, it's bigger than CNN and NBC combined, so there are a lot of closet Fox News watchers out there."

In its short lifespan, the MySpace membership has grown older and more conservative. "Obviously, the early users were early adopters, which by definition makes them pretty young. But since then, we've seen a widening of the demographic as it has become more mainstream."

The internet generation is growing steadily older too, he notes. "Those folks are now, if they were 25 [in 1994], they're 37/38 now. Those people are getting more comfortable putting their lives online, and socialising online, where in the past it may have been viewed as more of a stigma to do that." He says that in the past three years the median age of a MySpace user has increased from 19 to 25.

When DeWolfe was in school he "just wanted to get out and start working", he says, but even so his academic record includes a finance degree and an MBA in marketing, which, though taken 12 years ago, was based on "a web content site that had social networking elements to it".

He met Anderson while working for Xdrive Technologies, a company providing free online storage space for files, music and photos. The pair left to form ResponseBase, which sold lists of emails to other businesses as a marketing tool. With California introducing tough anti-spam laws, DeWolfe and Anderson looked beyond ResponseBase and in 2003 launched MySpace, the realisation of their vision for the potential of social networking.

DeWolfe says the growth of MySpace has depended not so much on marketing as on intuition and responding to the wants of the user. In international markets it relies heavily on the local knowledge of the people it hires. "In the US we could never hope to understand the UK market as well as someone who lives, eats and breaths the British culture. The same goes for any other country."

DeWolfe is also keen to develop the idea that MySpace is more than just a place to have fun, that it's somehow a force for good in the world. A series of 20 live concerts over a weekend, under the headline "Rock For Darfur", helped raise money for Oxfam's efforts in Sudan. "I think we've both been pretty impressed with how people are using MySpace for civic good, to make the world a better place."

He is not worried that users might question the motives of the site in involving itself in geopolitical and environmental issues. "There are certain causes out there that we just believe in, that may be a little bit controversial - like climate change - that we've done a lot of promotion for because we believe in those causes. The MySpace position is that we want to make everyone aware that there is climate change happening, educate them on what a carbon footprint is and how they can reduce their carbon footprint."

MySpace is heavily involved in the US political process, arguing that it is promoting democracy. "Every major presidential candidate in the United States has a MySpace page, which means that the next president will also be a MySpace member. Which is cool."

French presidential candidates Nicolas Sarkozy and Ségolène Royal both used MySpace to promote their causes. "I think one of the cool things is that politicians get into such campaign speak that they almost become dehumanised, and on MySpace there's more of a personal feel to their MySpace profiles," says DeWolfe. "We just don't promote any one politician any more than any other politician."

After returning to California, DeWolfe calls to discuss the launch of MySpaceTV. The launch is widely interpreted as an assault on YouTube and he doesn't dissent. "I think to a certain degree you could say that. We compete on a lot of different levels and video is an important one. We are getting very close to catching YouTube here in the United States on the video side."

MySpace has signed a deal with Sony to show five-minute long "minisodes" of Eighties comedies. DeWolfe anticipates MySpaceTV will also feature almost all the output of NBC and Fox, and content deals have been struck with the National Basketball Association and National Hockey League.

The site has been strengthening its ties with UK media organisations, particularly Channel 4, which allowed MySpace users to develop plot lines for its E4 drama Skins. Film4 is partnering MySpace in creating the first user-generated feature film with the MyMovie MashUp project. DeWolfe says: "We are going to be very aggressively working on a lot of content partnerships in the UK and throughout Europe." A deal with the BBC is "almost done", in spite of the corporation having its own "channels" on YouTube.

"The larger media companies are beginning to understand that the market place is really fragmented, meaning people consume content in a lot of different places. What they are realising is that they can't hoard all the content in one place, they have to distribute it to where people are spending their time, and people are spending time on sites like MySpace so it makes sense to do distribution deals with us as well as with other video sites."

The arrival online of high-quality video content will transform the advertising spend online, first through sponsorship deals and later through television style advertising spots, DeWolfe believes. "Video will be one of the key drivers in internet advertising revenue, maybe not over the next year but certainly in a year and a half or two years we think it's going to explode," he says. "It's much easier to put a 15-second spot in a 22-minute episode than in front of a one-minute clip."

MySpaceTV is "just the tip of the iceberg", one of half a dozen major upgrades to the site in coming months, including the integration of the Flektor system that will give users the tools to easily edit videos. Just as MySpace has become the essential destination for following musical trends, from new songs made by garage bands to the tour news of stadium-filling supergroups, so it may become for film, from home-made clips to prime-time TV shows. All of this will give MySpace a greater stability and long-term relevance. For in the fickle world of social networking, users can move quickly from one site to another, en masse and on little more than a whim.

Maybe that's why DeWolfe keeps his own friends close, allowing only a couple of hundred on to his profile page, where he is known by his nickname "Beez". "It's a convenient place where everyone I know, from all different parts of my life is there," he says. "I know every one of 'em."

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Websites betrayed by unfaithful users

A survey has revealed the ‘promiscuity’ of many members of social networking sites and raised doubts over surging valuations.

Social networks are spawning a generation of internet tarts, research suggests: online consumers with little brand loyalty and no qualms about keeping several sites on the go at once.

Users of social networking sites such as MySpace and Facebook are “chronically unfaithful”, a survey by Parks Associates, the analysts, has found. Half of users regularly use more than one site, most of which are free. One in six actively uses three or more.

This phenomenon of “network promiscuity” extends across web commerce. Analysts say that it is symptomatic of a new consumer scepticism over traditional branding.

Robert Jones, of Wolff Olins, the brand consultants, says: “Grand operatic brands no longer work. Think of the ultimate model ‘old brand’ – the Marlboro man, a myth selling you an item that slowly killed you. It just doesn’t work online. As people become better informed, brands become less about emotion and more about functionality.”

User infidelity in the social networking sector, made up of about 300 competing sites, is challenging once-accepted dot-com maxims, such as the importance of first-mover advantage and the strengths implicit in scale.

It also raises doubts over the surging valuations being attached to the sector’s “superbrands”, amid evidence that they will be forced to evolve constantly to retain young users determined to play the field.

Akready, warning signs have emerged: the latest figures from Nielsen//NetRatings showed that MySpace, the market leader, recently lost users in Britain.

The dip coincided with the news that News Corporation, the MySpace owner, had held early talks with Yahoo! over a possible sale of the network that could have valued MySpace at more than $10 billion (£5 billion). News Corp is the parent company of The Times.

The number of British visitors to MySpace dipped to 6.5 million in May, from 6.8 million in April. The fall, which comes as Facebook, its rival, experiences a huge surge in visitors, was the first to hit MySpace since it signed a deal with Google last summer, under which the social network stands to reap about $900 million in advertising revenues. It was only the second dip since News Corp bought MySpace for $580 million two years ago.

MySpace has achieved the traffic targets underpinning its deal with Google with ease, but, according to Nielsen, over the past six months Facebook’s audience in the UK has grown at 19 times the rate of MySpace’s, surging 523 per cent to 3.2 million.

Alex Burmaster, a Nielsen analyst, said: “MySpace is, by far, still the most popular social network. However, if last month’s growth rates were to remain consistent . . . Facebook would catch MySpace in September.”

The pattern was repeated in the United States, MySpace’s largest market, where traffic to the site fell to 56.6 million in May, from 57 million a month earlier.

MySpace has pointed out that traffic figures from different research firms differ, but admits that it will have to evolve new content and tools to remain relevant. It also takes issue with the idea that switching between free sites involves no cost to users.

“MySpace users invest huge amounts of time building up their profiles as part of our community. That means they are massively loyal,” a spokesman said.

Yet the Nielsen figures confirm that network promiscuity is a factor, showing that 444,000 Britons visited all three of the leading rivals – MySpace, Facebook and Bebo – in May.

Even the biggest internet brands – of which Google is the leader – may not be immune to the digital generation’s lack of loyalty, analysts say. The eight-year-old search engine was judged to be the fourteenth-biggest global brand last year by Interbrand, the consultants. It was the biggest riser in a top 50 of which half are more than 50 years old.

Rita Clifton, the chairman of Interbrand, said: “The internet has allowed a brand-building process that would have once taken decades to be achieved in a fraction of that. There is a downside, of course: what goes up quickly can descend just as fast.”

The dangers are illustrated by the fate of Friendster. The social network accrued more than 20 million users after its launch in 2003. Late last year that figure had fallen to less than one million as users migrated to sites with better music and video tools.

There are also suggestions that, while the internet makes the world a smaller, “flatter” place, personal online services do not suit traditional global branding campaigns.

Mr Jones said: “McDonald’s can have the same golden arches in every city, but social networking is a very personal thing and is susceptible to cultural differences. Using one of these sites does not bear comparison with eating a hamburger.” Already, Google has been forced to change its brand in China to “Gu Ge”. Despite the switch, the search engine trails local rivals by a huge margin.

Orkut, the social networking site run by Google, has gained about 50 million users, but despite its massive popularity in Brazil, it remains little known in America and Britain.

Mindful of the hurdles facing them, sites are already making moves aimed at winning and locking in users. MySpace, which has been criticised for failing to innovate, sought to reinvigorate its user base last week when it announced the launch of a new video-sharing service. MySpaceTV will compete with YouTube, owned by Google. Last month Facebook launched a new platform that allows outside developers to create free and paid-for online services that can offered to users.

Park Associates says that the mercurial behaviour of social net-workers could open opportunities for new sites and developers who build software that links different networks. User infidelity need not spell the end for social networking superbrands, it suggests.

John Barrett, who led the group’s research, said: “MySpace is a growing ecosystem and one that, ironically, now extends beyond MySpace itself.”

Social services

MySpace 6.5 million UK users, up 28 per cent in six months. Average time spent on site by user in a month: 96 minutes

Bebo 4 million UK users, up 49 per cent in six months. Average time by user in a month: 152 minutes

Facebook 3.2 million UK users, up 523 per cent in six months. Average time by user in a month: 143 minutes Source: Nielsen//NetRatings

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