Tag Archives: Yahoo

Caveats for Newspapers; Clues For A Stand Out Website

Image representing Robert Scoble as depicted i...
Image via CrunchBase

Robert Scoble, Scobleizer, wrote what, to me, was a really amazingly insightful article on how the newspaper industry has let the Net take away bits and pieces of its franchise until there’s almost nothing left. But he does  go on to mention a few remaining pieces worth saving and pursuing on or off line. ( The newspaper industry just gave away another free meal, er Twitter: do they have any left?).  Examples of the giveaways:

“Free meal #1. Giving away classified advertising to Craig’s List.
Free meal #2. Giving away photography to Flickr (look at the photos from the Chinese Earthquake, why didn’t this happen on a newspaper branded site?).
Free meal #3. Giving away front page news to blogs like Huffington Post.
Free meal #4. Giving away “small” community news like births, deaths, birthdays, etc to Facebook.
Free meal #5. Giving away real-time news to Twitter.
Free meal #6. Giving away news distribution to Google News and Amazon Kindle, among others. With new sites like Kosmix coming on strong (hundreds of percent of growth month over month).
Free meal #7. Giving away restaurant reviews to Yelp.
Free meal #8. Giving away traffic information to Google Maps.
Free meal #9. Giving away celebrity news to Facebook and Twitter. (Why is Oprah on both of those, and why didn’t the newspaper industry lock up Oprah and keep her on a newspaper brand?)
Free meal #10. Giving away local news to Topix (at least that was funded by a newspaper brand).
Free meal #11. Giving away business news to Yahoo Finance and Google Finance (and something new that will get announced tomorrow).
Free meal #12. Giving away news ranking to Memeorandum.
Free meal #13. Giving away astrology to Astrology.com.
Free meal #14. Giving away comics to Comics.com.

What is their latest giveaway? Crowd-sourced news. I visit Twitter Search every day to find out what is “hot news.” That’s something I used to look at newspapers and older media for (radio, TV) but Twitter is just plain better at telling me what is trending.”

Scoble goes on to discuss what the newspapers haven’t given away yet, and that gives us lots of clues to which areas might produce a useful path for a website or blog wanting to stand out from the crowd.

You really need to read Scoble’s article.  But a few of his ideas are developing and displaying a deeper understanding of a local scene.  Also, focusing to the extent you have and present a much deeper understanding of a narrower topic.

Few in the world of Twitter, make the investment of time to understand in great depth, a particular subject they twitter on. Twitter requires speed.  Understanding in depth requires time and reflection.  It’s possible to do both.  Twitter with speed on many topics but also send out the occasional Tweet linked to a blog or website with a post about a topic which reflects your thinking and your brand, something you’re researched and thought about in depth. That, I think, is one successful way forward.  One where we citizen journalists and bloggers can bring a lot to the table.

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Evolution Of A Website – Birth Of A Business

Some time back, I wrote about Business On The Net: The Morphing Imperative and that set me to thinking about my own morphing on the Net . There is a saying “you make the path by walking on it.” Perhaps on the Net, you make the path by morphing on it. And I have certainly done that. For those of you who are interested, this is my story, so far, on the Net:

The Gold Rush To The Net

It was in December of 1994, that Netscape introduced the browser and the Net opened up the rush beyond the engineers, scientists and government workers who were on the Net before. Now the pioneers who saw the possibilities came, the entrepreneurs and techies and just plain people in remote places who longed for communication with the rest of the world.

At the same time,  in December of 1994, my inspiration for a website was a study I was asked to do for the University of Texas at San Antonio business department.  They had a lot of very rough, raw material ( like clippings or tear outs from newspapers) which suggested men make more money than women, even when women own their own business. The term “glass ceiling” had only recently become part of America’s vocabulary, when The Wall Street Journal’s “Corporate Woman” column identified “a puzzling new phenomenon. There seemed to be an invisible—but impenetrable—barrier between women and the executive suite, preventing them from reaching the highest levels of the business world regardless of their accomplishments and merits.”The Federal government’s Report on the Glass Ceiling Initiative in 1991 was still somewhat virgin territory for the public at large.  It certainly came as somewhat of a shock to me. I thought, Wow, this is pretty interesting stuff, I bet more people would like to know about it.

I spent 1995 learning more about the Glass Ceiling and the Net, as the two converged in my mind as an interesting topic and a new technology platform to present it. I had to learn HTML coding, as in those early days there was no “What you see is what you get ” software, much less content  management systems. It was challenging for many reasons and on many levels ( see Match Your Entrepreneur Story about one of the early Internet conferences in 1995 where I was one of 5 women and about 5,000 men).  When AdvancingWomen.com finally launched, we got about a million and a half page views in a month, melting down our server 3 times. ( But that’s another story).  Remember, back then, the Net was relatively small with little competition.  There were no large corporations.  No Hearst, no iVillage, although I later worked with both of them.

So, I got in on the ground floor with my niche, the first women’s website to focus on leveling the playing field for women, although we’ve continued to evolve and, as we’ve increased our offerings on business and technology we’ve also increased our male audience. Our concept morphed as well.  In the vein of “it’s better to light a candle than curse the darkness”, we decided, years ago, it was more effective to give both women and men the tools and strategies to succeed with pocket book and voting booth issues, the pivotal levers, than to keep noting the gap between genders. Consequently, as well as connecting with professional women and business owners, we are one of the leading websites among business men in China and Saudi Arabia, and business and technology experts in the U.S. and globally .We have built a diverse community of both women and businessmen on the web.  And we have moved on to produce other websites and  other business models.  But, back to the beginning:

First Revenue – From Advertising

The first revenue I remember having came from Doubleclick, which invented the targeted ad system. DoubleClick was founded in 1996.  My site, AdvancingWomen.com was selected for the initial women’s demographic and I went to their opening launch party in New York. It was a heady, champagne toasting  moment. I learned a lot about targeting my demographics and managing my website from DoubleClick until we went our separate ways. For one thing, despite the hype and the potential which always seemed just out of reach,  I never really made that much revenue from DoubleClick.  So , trading glamour and glory for actual revenue, I struck out on my own. In the beginning, without large competitive corporate websites, I would typically make $5,000 per month from each large corporation which wanted to advertise site wide with AdvancingWomen.com. This was when web sites were rising like hot air balloons.

About that time I was courted by a New York Stock Exchange company, led by a  rather ideosyncratic mogul, who wanted to create a web portal by pulling together about a dozen sites in different niches. He boasted he could beat Yahoo, the giant du jour, because they were doing everything wrong.  AdvancingWomen.com was selected as the women’s niche and it looked like we were headed for a very big pay day, while getting all the money we would ever need to operate and maintaining a lot of control on top of it.  For a moment or two it appeared Utopia was on the horizon.

Or, as the Cole Porter song goes, was it merely Asbury Park? Despite the mogul’s billions that vision evaporated in the dot com crash, as did the money I was making from syndicating AdvancingWomen’s content. Remember IsyndicateOne month I was at a huge, plush and glamorous ISyndiate bash in Hollywood, mingling with tech celebs, sipping champagne and sorting through the lavish giveaways.  A month or so later they were toast. ( There’s a lesson in there someplace about applying the bootstrapping wisdom of using ingenuity and elbow grease instead of cash. Fortunately, I have always been into using elbow grease instead of cash so I survived, with the sure knowledge that we were still in the very beginning of the infancy of the Internet.  DoubleClick also survived the dot com crash, perhaps because of its market leading technology and constant adaptation to ever changing market conditions. It was formally acquired by Google in March 2008. )

The next big uptick came from the advent of Google adsense.

I can’t begin to tell you how many things I’ve tested.  I’ve tested travel, which I thought might be convenient for business customers: zero.  I’ve tested business ebooks: nothing ( although this could be the time for that tide to turn with the Kindle and ebooks apps on mobile devices).  I’ve tested many, many products, all of which came to nada, nothing. Even in  the two core revenue producers on the AdvancingWomen.com site, advertising and employment recruiting, I’ve been through a dozen morphing and transfiguration experiments, starting with Doubleclick Ads, from the day they were born, to some new European ad company that sweet talked me into believing they were going to take the Net by storm, but all they did was produce truly anemic revenues and give me one more learning experience.  All this was before I morphed my way into a successful combination of Google ads and ads sold from my site. I also made a decision to increasingly lessen dependence on ad revenue because of its extreme volatility. As hard as it may be to believe, I’ve had 2000% swings in ad revenue.  And that was not ok with me, even on the high side.  I’m a risk taker not a kamikaze pilot.  I needed to put a little dramamine into my site to calm the effects of the choppy waters in advertising.

One product which helped me do that was  a Job Board or the employment recruiting facet of our site at Careers.AdvancingWomen.com. From day one, recognizing job boards were an “evergreen” in the business, not subject to the cardiac arrest of a fad, I determined to have a job board.  I was a part of every one of what seemed like a half dozen permutations of what eventually became CareerBuilder.com. That was ok for pocket change. What I began to realize was that big job boards who wanted you as an affiliate wanted the demographic you had captured but in no way wanted to promote your site. Why should they, as they would be creating their own competition?  Basically they were getting the benefit of your traffic and assuring that you didn’t compete with them or join another competing job board like Monster.com. It worked pretty well  for them, but not necessarily so well for you. Ultimately, I was able to start Careers.AdvancingWomen.com , our own job board which guaranteed a.) I would be building my own brand and therefore an asset I could invest in and  b.) I would not be giving up 50% of the revenue up front.

It just took a lot of testing to arrive at a successful combination of revenue streams to support the business.

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Time To Ramp Up and Scale Up: Next Step – GGwebGroup

Less than a year after I started I began helping other sites set up and ramp up on the Net.

Today I operate AdvancingWomen.com, Careers.AdvancingWomen.com, AW Career & Biz Blog, Advancing Women in Leadership Journal,
NewEnergyResearch.net, the first of several planned “green business” websites, and a number of diverse websites for clients.

I have recently formalized what I have been doing for some time now: consulting about, creating and overseeing websites for clients, particularly from a web business perspective.

Tina Forsyth crystalized this concept in her book, Becoming an Online Business Manager.

Tina describes a situation in which business owners “already have teams of virtual assistants, webmasters, designers and other contractors, but what they really need is someone to manage all of this; to play a bigger role in their business so that they can grow to the next level.”
Now, as online businesses have grown and increased in complexity, with more sophisticated online tools available, Tina says she is “seeing more business owners who are ready to hire at the management level.”

When I started reading Tina’s writing, it was with a mild shock of recognition I realized I had been doing what she described for a number of clients for some time. Since I had operated a major website since 1996, I had ample experience on the web, so a number of businesses and organizations I had come into the same orbit with had asked for me to help them set up shop online.  What happened, in every case, was that I was not just setting up or overseeing the set up of a website and collaborative and marketing tools, but helping them think through the business processes they would need to succeed and grow their businesses. It was a collaboration where I implemented their vision, more like a doctor collaborating with a patient, to diagnose the state of his or her health, determine the level he or she really aspired to reach, then prescribing a regimen for increased fitness to ultimately reach that goal.  The actual construction of the website was more like being the pharmacist dispensing the medicine. But, in every case, we’ve worked together to reach the right diagnosis, and we’ve constructed websites which support clients in reaching their goals.  Often I not only implement them, I continue to oversee them, so clients can focus on building their business or organization. As we’ve formalized this process we’ve given it it’s own website GGwebGroup and also formalized a team with differing specialties so we can help businesses not only focus, but ramp up fast to seize opportunities.

This is where we are today but the Net continues to morph and I’m sure we will too so………to be continued.  Sometime in the future.

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A Tip Of The Hat To New Yahoo CEO Carol Bartz, Tech Veteran

Yahoo CEO Carol Bartz

Former Autodesk Chief Executive Carol Bartz, 60, will be the new CEO at Yahoo.  And that’s a Yahoo! for a woman playing with the big boys in the hallowed tech preserve.  And another kudo for not backing down when the pundits start sharpening their knives for her.

Bartz has a long string of successes so she is well equipped for the job:

Tons of awards, but who’s counting?  The point is Bartz has smarts, experience and moxy.

Some of the pundits have quibbled that she’s a manager and operating person not a Mergers and Acquisition guy.  Did anyone here see Wall Street?

We thought the goal was to run a company, not necessarily sell it or break it up and sell the pieces.

In an online conference call today, Bartz confronted the pundits head on and came out swinging:

“Let’s not put ourselves in some crazy timeline. Let’s give this company some frigging breathing room. Everybody on the outside deciding what Yahoo should or shouldn’t do–that’s going to stop,” she said. Her first meeting with Yahoo’s managers was set for 10 minutes later, she also said. Another moment came when asked about how her background at a company selling software to companies would serve her at an Internet company selling ads and serving a large consumer audience. Bartz was quick to slap down the doubts about her expertise as nonsense.”
“I didn’t know CAD (computer-aided design) when I joined Autodesk, I didn’t know hardware when I joined Sun,” she said. “I have brain power to understand what it takes.”

Now there’s a woman who knows who she is and is about to show us all.  A tip of the hat to Bartz and our hearty congratulations

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Biz On The Net: Find Your Passion & Sell That

Selling on the Internet definitely is a growth trend. The key is simply finding something you like to do – preferably something you have a passion for – that is suitable for an online business, and then transfer all your skills and industry contacts to the net.

Many women and men as well have found their passion selling what they love on the Net.

In 1999, Sarah Davis started selling women’s consignment designer clothing and purses on the Internet while attending law school.  Today, she works out of her house in San Antonio selling more than $25,000 worth of Louis Vuitton handbags each month as a platinum seller on auction site eBay.

In August of 2000, In Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, Lynne Bingham, who owned a children’s clothing story called Lullaby Landing decided she wanted to reach more customers.  So, Lynne sold her brick and mortar store, and built a web site with the assistance of Yahoo! Small Business. In January 2001, she launched The Stork Delivers — an online boutique specializing in chic baby gift baskets and other baby accessories.

Her web site’s sales tripled in just over two years, and she received several prestigious awards, including Yahoo! Top Merchant Award, Forbes Magazine Award, and the Golden Web Award. She quickly built up an impressive corporate client list, comprised of numerous Fortune 500 companies. Lynne is now able to work entirely from home. “Being able to have a career/profession from home gives me even more of a chance to successfully tackle the juggling act,” says Lynne, who has a son and daughter.

Joan Shelley, founder of the Oconomowoc, Wisconsin-based KnobGallery — an online retailer of kitchen cabinet hardware, door hardware, and bathroom accessories is the mother of 8 children, ages 9 to 23, all of whom play an integral role in the business which features over 150,000 unique knobs, drawer pulls and other decorative hardware items. KnobGallery’s sales grew by over 600 percent in the three years to about $1.5 million and have continued to soar.

You don’t even have to have a business or an area of expertise if you have a passion for something or someplace and want to share it with others.

Nori Evoy, at the age of 15 tapped into her love of Aruba to create Anguilla Beaches, a site she uses to generate substantial referral and finder’s fees by steering visitors to favorite spots or books to tell them more about  this island.  Now almost 19, Nori has generated more than her college tuition in income from the site. And Nori, incidentally, is not a techie.  She relied on a pre- designed program to create her site and monetize it.

Patience and attention to detail are definitely part of this game. The good news is that if there are chores you don’t like and just don’t want to do – like managing your mailing list – you can hire a college student or even a high school student to do it for you once a month.  At some point you may be able to get an intern to do it for nothing, just to learn the business.

Be prepared to take some time to develop a following of people who are attracted to what you are offering. To do this and to develop an income stream from your own business you may have to test many tools and products for your site and gradually build on your base. This could take six months to a year or more, depending on your energy and focus, the state of the economy and your specific industry and some other variables. In the end, however, if you stick with it, you can create your own successful personal business which can support you and your family.  It will be an asset you own and someday can sell if you choose, although, as a steady source of income, it certainly might beat a rent house, in that it won’t need plumbing or repairs and you don’t have to get up in the middle of the night to take care of a tenant whose water line has broken or heat has gone off in the middle of a January snow storm.

Perks – You get to work from the comfort of your home, be your own boss and decide when you need to take off to put family first. The asset you are building  will work for you, even when you’re sleeping, taking your kids to school, running errands or on vacation. In fact, you can work from anywhere.  You can decide to winter in the sun and summer in the mountains if you want.  More important, you are building your nest egg for a secure future

Potential – Like the global growth of the Internet the potential for growing your online business is huge.

How about you?  Ever sold on the Net?  Would you like to?  Tell us about it. We’d like to hear from you.

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Start Your Own Small Business Using More Ingenuity, Less Cash

Image representing Yahoo! as depicted in Crunc...

Image via CrunchBase

Starting one’s own business is always an invigorating but somewhat anxiety provoking experience. You are about to leave the comfort zone of college, your home, a big corporation or even a non-profit or any other type of salaried employment. In exchange you have independence and the chance to pursue your dream. The flip side is you no longer have large resources –money, manpower, credit, expertise, contacts, name recognition– all you have is …. you. You also have the rent or the telephone, the travel , marketing , research , direct mail and whatever else to pay for. If you have a payroll or even someone to come in and water the plants every two weeks, that’s your responsibility, too. No wonder it’s an anxiety provoking experience.

The thought that keeps most entrepreneurs motivated at those first insecure moments is the firm knowledge that great risk can reap great rewards.

How do you get started?

I was reading this advice by Mark Cuban, Owner of Dallas Mavericks, entrepreneur with a $2.5 billion net worth who made his fortune  starting Audionet with a partner in 1995, combining their mutual interest in college basketball and webcasting. Audionet launched with a single server and ISDN line, went on to become Broadcast.com and, in 1999, during the Dot-com boom, Broadcast.com was acquired by Yahoo! for $5.9 billion in Yahoo! stock. ( Parenthetically, Mark was booted off “Dancing with the Stars” in almost no time flat, proving that being a billionaire does not give you smooth co-ordination, much less allow you to glide across the dance floor like Fred Astaire.)

Mark’s blog is blog maverick.  He wrote a blog about How to Get Rich which starts out advising us to be  obsessive about saving our money.  He goes on to say:

“The 2nd rule for getting rich is getting smart. Investing your time in yourself and becoming knowledgeable about the business of something you really love to do

It doesn’t matter what it is. Whatever your hobbies, interests, passions are. Find the one you love the best and GET A JOB in the business that supports it.

It could be as a clerk, a salesperson, whatever you can find. You have to start learning the business somewhere.  Instead of paying to go to school somewhere, you are getting paid to learn.  It may not be the perfect job, but there is no perfect path to getting rich.

Before or after work and on weekends, every single day, read everything there is to read about the business. Go to trade shows, read the trade magazines, spend a lot of time talking to the people you do business with about their business and the people they buy from.

This is not a short term project. We aren’t talking days. We aren’t talking months. We are talking years. Lots of years and maybe decades. I didn’t say this was a get rich quick scheme. This is a get rich path.”

Cuban goes on to talk about times of uncertainty in business, that there will always be booms and busts and one has to take advantage of them: “Booms are when the smart people sell. Busts are when rich people started on their path to wealth.”

That, of course, is easier said than done since no one really knows when there will be a boom or, more ominously, a bust.  One has to wonder if, when Cuban sold to Yahoo he knew he was in the middle of the boom.

AdvancingWomen.com believes, whether boom or bust, in order to have staying power, one needs to operate their business on lean, mean principles so you can ride out the busts and be ready for the boom times, whether you choose to sell or not:

Watch Your Pennies; They’re Coming Out of Your Pocket Now

Starting your own business, whether home-based, in a loft , strip mall , business incubator, or at a seriously impressive office space, requires some serious thinking about whether you are ready to accept certain realities. Very probably, if you are leaving a large well- financed corporation , organization, university or government agency, you are going to have to work harder and make do with less.

For some, it is a wrenching adjustment to scale down and have to balance decisions about spending money to save time, or working longer hours to save cash and increase cash flow. Necessities, like receptionists and clerks in large offices become luxuries in small offices. If you can do it yourself , it costs nothing. Yes, your time may be worth $100 an hour, but is anyone paying you that between 8 pm and midnight.?

As humbling at it may be, you may realize, not only can you not afford to have someone else water and fertilize the plants in your office, you can’t even afford the plants. The good news is that professional business analysts like Peter Lynch who ran the Magellen Fund and studied thousands of businesses, didn’t like seeing a ficus in an office…. or a mahogany desk, or good art or fine china. Lynch only felt good about start up companies on the second floors of strip centers with metal desks and linoleum flooring… or something comparable… because that made a statement the people running the company were serious about making and saving money. So, often, Lynch invested Magellan’s money in their company’s stocks and that cash infusion got them roaring. If you watch your pennies and forego the ficus and the palms, this could happen to you.

One always has to make tough choices to cut costs. Here are some suggestions from experienced start up entrepreneurs:

  • Keep overhead costs to a minimum. Rent a modest office. Or work out of your home. Many entrepreneurs today keep costs low with “virtual offices” and outsourced workers across the city or the globe.
  • Keep your desks and equipment functional not “showy”. ( The impression you make with showy equipment might not be what you intend… too much money spent on decor spells “inexperience” to the battle scarred.)
  • Buy second hand. Do you think any good antique dealers either buy retail or shop at Office City? That’s not where the bargains are or the best looking furniture either.
  • Forget support staff…. call don’t write… use your email…avoid paper. If you are really cheap, or don’t have $100 bucks for a copier/scanner, you can email it over to Fedex-Kinko’s every evening and pick it up in the morning.
  • Answer your own phone and dispense with calls in a few minutes… or spend $30 have a “virtual receptionist” like One Box, routing your calls to any phone number or associate, forwarding email, voice mail, fax notifications to your inbox where you can handle them at your leisure.
  • Work until seven and eat a little later. You can do all your “support” chores after regular office hours. Tell people you were raised in Europe or Latin America and are accustomed to later evening hours.
  • Don’t skimp on a professional logo, business cards or letterhead stationary. They are part of your direct dealing with the public and come under the category of marketing, which should always be first rate. But with today’s software programs you should be able to stick to simple design, with a professional logo and just send it out to be printed.
  • And don’t forget to market. No matter how small or how thrifty you are, you can’t afford not to have a budget for this. Just be sure you make the effort to learn what really works and is effective in your field before you actually spend money marketing. You have to make every dollar and every penny count. The journey to success is long and full of unexpected pot holes… you never want to run out of cash along the way.
  • Remember how and where you do your work isn’t as important as what you do. If working in your small business is giving you the opportunity to do interesting and useful work, that’s more important and more gratifying than having either a ficus or a $5,000 copier.
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