Tuesday, September 30, 2008

Branding Directions

September 29, 2008 5:59 PM PDT

Microsoft updates Live Hotmail and Maps

On Monday, Microsoft updated two of its Live services: Windows Live Hotmail and Live Maps. Of the two, the changes to Hotmail are not yet available to everyone. The company began rolling it out to some of its users this weekend, with everyone else getting their hands on it in the next few weeks. It's the newer, faster version of the service that brings in gains of up to 70 percent compared with older versions of Hotmail. (Read more about that here.)

Meanwhile, Live Search Maps, Microsoft's online mapping tool has a really neat new way to get directions using local landmarks and local businesses. If the service picks up on one of these landmarks as part of your route, it will use it in addition to the street name. Oftentimes this comes in handy where a business has better signage than the city, which in the case of car dealerships and fast food restaurants is almost always true.

(Credit: CNET Networks)

Chris Pendleton, Microsoft Virtual Earth's Tech Evangelist, says these landmarks are currently limited to these six categories:

  • Gas Stations
  • Major National Chains of Hotels
  • Restaurants
  • Convenience Stores
  • Grocery Stores
  • Car Dealerships

To help get you there, there's a new multistop trip planner--a feature Google Maps has had since late 2006. This means you can add other addresses between the point A and point B of your trip, then print it out to stick in your car.

The service is also now instantly indexing community maps. Maps that users have created will now be able to be searched by everyone immediately. The user-created items will also be mixed in with business results, which means you or someone else could enter in a business' address and phone number before it's been officially added and have it show up in regular searches. Neat.

Monday, September 29, 2008

iPhone location-based social networks

The State of Location-Based Social Networking On The iPhone

Posted at Techcrunch: 28 Sep 2008 10:18 AM PDT

We've been bullish about location-based social networks for quite awhile now, especially since Apple announced that it would open up the iPhone to developers. And with two significant developments in this space just this week (more on that below), we thought it would be a good time to take a step back and look at the options currently available through the Apple App Store.

What makes a "location-based" social network different than a normal one? At least as things stand today, location-based social networks run primarily on smartphones that have the ability to determine a user's current location, usually by leveraging GPS or cellular tower triangulation. The social network then uses your location to reveal nearby friends and places of interest. See our Location Technologies Primer for additional information.

Currently there are six major location-based social networks available for the iPhone (click on the comparison chart to the right). All of them tell you how far away other members are from you, with most focused on helping you find your friends but some designed primarily for discovering strangers. A few of them chart the location of your friends' on an interactive map (something I actually think all of them should do). They provide a wide range of privacy settings, but all will stop reporting your location when you simply close the application (Apple has yet to release its push notification system that will let these apps constantly report your location in the background). They also vary widely in how precisely they identify the locations of other members, although all but one of them work anywhere in the United States.

After testing this entire batch, I've come to the conclusion that none of them is quite ready to achieve mainstream usage. I believe most, if not all, of the following things must happen before location-based social networking becomes the new "killer app":

  • They need powerful notification systems that actively inform you when someone of interest is nearby. Such a system could be set up manually by individually indicating which friends are "of interest". But it would be even better for the system to learn from your interactions (messages, pokes, wall posts, etc) and affiliations (profile information, common friends, groups) and automatically identify certain people you'd like to meet up with.
  • These applications absolutely need to update your location while the phone is sitting in your pocket. Right now it demands too much from users to open the application whenever they want to inform friends where they are. Serendipitous encounters would be far more common with a fully foolproof and automated location-updating system.
  • When inviting friends to a service, you need the ability to determine which of your friends actually have a supported phone. Otherwise you're just spamming a large number of people who matter to you and with very little yield.
  • These apps need to get more stable; they crash way too much.
  • We need more hooks into web applications so we can share our location and location-based activities not only with other mobile users but with the web at large.
  • Those apps that let you see and meet strangers nearby need to highlight both friends of friends and those who share common interests and affiliations.

These are weaknesses shared by all of the current iPhone location-based social networking apps, each of which we cover briefly below.

The Veteran - Loopt

Perhaps the most well-known of these companies, Loopt has been working for years to get its technology on a variety of phones (the iPhone being just the latest and most functional of them). It is also perhaps the most developed of the batch, and the most generic. Use it primarily to see on a map where your friends are located nearby. Restaurant and other local reviews are secondary, having been brought into the app through a partnership with Yelp. Get directions to other users, view their latest status updates (which are often accommodated with photos taken on-location), and ping them when they haven't updated their location for awhile.

The Mountain View-based company has ventured into the matchmaking business this week by adding a new feature called "Mix" that shows you, for the first time on Loopt, strangers in your vicinity. You can see all of the people nearby who have turned on the Mix feature, and you can filter by types (age, gender, tags, dating status, community) as well. This is Loopt's attempt to help people hook up at bars (an idea that gets thrown around by many entrepreneurs and has always puzzled me). But if it takes off, it may have even greater sociological effects than Loopt's core friend-finding capabilities.

The New Kid On The Block - Moximity

Launching into private beta just this week, Moximity is a new location-based social network out of Austin, Texas that wants to help you find both your friends and local establishments. Taking Paul Bragiel's marketing advice, Moximity is rolling out one geographical region at a time, starting with Austin itself. Everything is local - the restaurant listings, the users, and even the advertisements (yes, this is the only one of these networks actually monetizing on the iPhone right now).

One major quality that sets Moximity apart is the way it handles user accounts. When you join and start configuring, you don't make "Moximity friends". Rather, the service pulls in your contacts from Facebook (and later, other sites as well) and lets you track those of your existing friends who also use Moximity. When you post a status message, it also gets pushed out to your Facebook and Twitter accounts.

Moximity would benefit from an interactive map that uses pins to show where your friends are located. However, unlike Loopt, which gives you the precise street address of your friends, Moximity always matches you with particular places (restaurants, stores, etc) so individual pins for users might not be appropriate. Co-founder Bryan Jones says some breed of mapping functionality will be included in the next release.

If you live in Austin, you can get into the service immediately by emailing your name and zip code here.

The Bezos, T-Mobile and iFund-Backed Contender - Whrrl

The best-funded of the bunch is a Seattle startup named Pelago with an app called Whrrl that centers around identifying and reviewing nearby establishments of all types. Locating friends takes a bit of a back seat to the idea that you should share Yelp-like reviews with the people you know.

The information about places is comprehensive. You can find cuisine types, prices, hours, phone numbers, websites, street addresses, ratings and reviews. While you can view the (5-star) ratings and reviews from every member, you're encouraged to focus on those of your friends. When you view a friend's profile, for example, their reviews are displayed prominently. That said, you can "fan" strangers if you like their tastes (although apparently only through Whrrl's thoroughly developed web app).

Whrrl also identifies events that are going on in your area. The combination of event and place information is great but I get the feeling that this app will have to depart a bit from its "reviews" roots to become a widely embraced service. More generic social features (such as walls and notifications) are needed to get me to use Whrll when not looking to share or gather opinions.

Pelago has raised its funds from the iFund, Jeff Bezos, and T-Mobile (among others).

The Schmorgesborg - uLocate's "Where"

Where is an iPhone app developed by a Boston-based startup called uLocate that has received a considerable amount of funding (at least $15.5 million) over the last several years. It has everything but the kitchen sink. Along the bottom of the app is a dock-like menu that shows a variety of sub-applications, each meant to help you find something in your area:

  • Buddy Beacon: find nearby friends
  • GasBuddy: find nearby gas stations with low prices
  • Starbucks: find nearby Starbucks franchises
  • Quibblo: see location-based poll results in your area
  • HeyWhatsThat: identify mountain peaks in your vicinity
  • The Skymap: learn about the stars and constellations in the sky above you
  • Zipcar: find pickup points for Zipcar rentals
  • Yelp: find nearby places listed and reviewed on Yelp
  • Eventful: learn about nearby events and their venues

The UI needs a bit of work (too many popups) but regardless, this app is handy for quickly finding the nearest of some particular thing on an interactive map (coffee, friendship, wheels, etc).

Sunday, September 21, 2008

curious and curiouser

PlanetEye Applies Pack Rat Mentality to Travel Planning

Posted: 20 Sep 2008 01:13 PM PDT

PlanetEye is a Microsoft-backed travel planning site that launched earlier this year and received its first major upgrade a couple days ago.

Like other travel sites, Planeteye helps you discover activities, restaurants, and accommodations in unfamiliar destinations. And it helps to organize your favorite places and activities so you'll know where to go and what to do on your trip.

PlanetEye's central concept is the "Travel Pack". Each pack corresponds to a trip, and as you browse the site you can click on the numerous "Add to Travel Pack" buttons to add cities, photos, hotels, bars, attractions, and more to your packs. It's kind of like putting all the goods that look interesting to you in a shopping cart, except that you can go back and easily put them back on the shelf with one click of the "remove" link.

Travel packs can be kept private or shared with other PlanetEye members. The site will also recommend packs to you as you view certain cities, such as the Esquire Magazine's Best New Restaurants, 2007 travel pack when looking at San Francisco. You can choose to take individual items from these packs and add them to your own, or claim the entire pack.

As a result of this week's site upgrade, PlanetEye will now recommend travel items to you based on those you've already put in your packs. The integrated maps functionality has been improved for viewing photos, lodging, dining, activities, and attractions from a particular region all at once. And an improved search box provides suggestions in a dropdown menu for more effective results.

PlanetEye has also picked up Venere.com as a hotel booking partner. Through its various means of aggregation, the site now provides information about 111,000+ hotels, 242,000+ restaurants, and 36,000+ attractions.

Monday, September 15, 2008

Respecting Origin

Travel search culturally diverse activity


The results from Oban and EyeforTravel's online travel competition show that international internet surfers are expanding their search horizons to sites that give them more international usability, more options, ease of use, and of course, traveller reviews.

The Face of Global Search competition had entrants play a flash game in which they answered questions about their online travel search behaviour before advancing to the next level.

Questions sought to discover the entrant's next holiday destination, important qualities in a travel site and frequency of holiday tickets booked online per year.

What the results clearly show is that travel search is a very culturally diverse activity and that search plays a huge part in both the research and purchase of holidays for global travellers. The growth in Chinese on the web has been phenomenal and reflects the fact that over 900 million people on the web don't speak English (around 70%).

Get the full story at Oban

Thursday, September 11, 2008

Seeing Results

Hotels.com introduces visual hotel search


The Hotels.com Visualiser, termed as a first for the travel industry, will ask customers to select from a range of images in order to generate hotel suggestions.

- An easy-to-use slider bar to refine searches even further – users can choose to narrow the selection of hotels returned towards the no frills or luxury end, or to make the selection more modern or traditional.

Nigel Pocklington, Managing Director of Hotels.com, says: "We are always looking for new and innovative ways to improve our customer experience and help our users to choose a hotel that perfectly matches their requirements. This is the first time that travellers have been able to make their hotel selection based solely on their visual responses. The speed and functionality of the Visualiser coupled with the vast array of hotel accommodation on Hotels.com means that we are able to make the user experience faster and more efficient than ever before."

Imagini Founder and CEO, Alex Willcock, says: "We're thrilled that Hotels.com is using our VisualDNA technology to further develop its search experience. Together we've created a really great new way to find the perfect hotel."

Related Link: Hotels.com VisualDNA


Smart stuff


TC50: GoPlanit Generates Your Travel Itinerary With One Click

Posted: 10 Sep 2008 06:47 PM PDT

There are countless travel sites available on the web that detail the best things to do in every major city on the planet. But with so many options, actually booking a trip is a major hassle: attractions may close on seemingly random days, or may require reservations weeks in advance.

GoPlanit is a travel site that aims to simplify this process by generating your schedule for you. The site features a database of attractions that includes their operating hours as well as an estimate for how much time each will consume.

After specifying a city, users simply click "Plan It!", and the site will present an iCal-esque calendar filled to the brim with activities, taking operating hours and durations into account. Users are free to customize these schedules by deleting or resizing them, and can click "Plan It" again to have the gaps filled with new activities. The calendar also includes links to reservation and ticketing systems when possible, further streamlining the process (part of the company's monetization model relies on fees generated from these affiliates).

After planning the trip, the site produces a basic travel guide with information on each activity, which can also be accessed through a mobile iPhone app. It can also generate a photo blog on the fly, tagging each photo with your location (since it knows where you'll be during your trip).

Other sites in the travel space that offer some similar functionality include Dave Sifry's OffBeat Guides, which generates travel guides on the fly, and Zicasso.

Panel

Loic - I like the idea. What's the business model?

GoPlanIt - We've got 3 revenue streams. Hyper-targeted advertising since we know interests, where you will be at time and date. Also affiliate programs, any time someone books, we get a portion of the revenue. Third, we're working on whitelabel solutions for some small and medium businesses.

Crunch NetworkCrunchBoard because it's time for you to find a new Job2.0

Tuesday, September 09, 2008

TravelMuse unveils social trip planner

According to the company, the planner makes organizing trips a breeze by giving individuals and groups of travelers the ability to research, store and share travel information in one centralized location on the Web.

TravelMuse, Inc., a online destination for finding inspiration, planning trips and booking travel, announced the launch of the TravelMuse Planner with social trip planning tools. The Planner is the first travel solution to harness social networking and enable co-travelers to connect and collaborate on trips. The Planner makes organizing trips a breeze by giving individuals and groups of travelers the ability to research, store and share travel information in one centralized location on the Web.

"At TravelMuse, we believe that social trip planning—collaboration between family and friends to plan a trip and share experiences—is an essential aspect of the travel planning process," said Kevin Fliess, CEO of TravelMuse. "By easily enabling people to network together online through a centralized, shared environment, the TravelMuse Planner further streamlines and revolutionizes how travelers plan trips." 
Start Planning Today!

Using the TravelMuse Planner, travelers can now manage all their travel information in one place and share their travel research with the rest of their social network—eliminating the need to email links and itineraries back and forth. With the Planner, people can:

-- Create Trips. The Planner acts as a personalized NetFlix queue for travel. People can build a running list of all the trips they are actively planning as well as those dream trips they hope to take some day. 
-- Manage and Save Research. Planning a trip often means conducting a volume of online research and getting advice from friends and family. Using the TravelMuse Planner, travelers can combine information found on TravelMuse with additional research found anywhere on the Web and store it all directly into designated trips within the Planner. 
-- Connect and Collaborate. Friends and family can plan trips together and reuse travel research already collected by trusted individuals in their social networks—making it easier and more convenient to create the perfect vacation plan. 
-- Organize schedules and update itineraries. Building day-by-day plans for each trip is as simple as dragging and dropping research into the appropriate days. If activities change, move items around within the schedule. 
-- Share planning activities. The Planner streamlines the process of exchanging travel research and ideas—allowing everyone to have input into a trip and immediate access to itineraries and trip suggestions. 
"TravelMuse has created a very innovative solution to help travelers navigate the entire process from deciding where to go to planning and booking a trip," said Chris Shipley, executive producer of DEMOfall 08. "The new TravelMuse Planner takes collaboration to a new level, delivering a more personalized travel planning experience." 
Travel Planning Starts with: "Where?" 
TravelMuse is the first online travel destination to combine comprehensive travel content with powerful planning tools to provide travelers with a single, complete solution for all of their trip-planning needs. 
-- Not sure where to go? The TravelMuse Inspiration FinderTM is the first solution that helps individuals discover destinations that match their personal travel preferences and needs. In addition, TravelMuse provides comprehensive destination guides covering more than 100,000 points of interest, 90,000 hotels and hundreds of city guides worldwide along with original editorial written by experienced travel writers. 
-- Traveling with friends or family? The TravelMuse Planner makes collaborating with others easier than ever. Everyone on the trip can research potential activities and trip ideas and save them in one centralized location. Itineraries can be easily modified, and ideas and suggestions can even be pulled from other people's trip plans within an individual's social network. 
-- Ready to book your trip? TravelMuse has a comprehensive booking engine to help complete the vacation planning process. Once an itinerary is finalized, travelers can make air, hotel, cruise, and package vacation reservations directly on TravelMuse (through WorldChoice Travel, a division of Travelocity).

Related Link: Travelmuse

Thursday, September 04, 2008

The other side of Internet Travel

YTB NETWORK MARKETING (MLM) - CAN REGULAR FOLKS MAKE MONEY?

I still have a travel plan in the works but for now, an article on YTB. One statistic that stood out was that YTB has gotten "130,000 people to pay money to YTB for the ability to sell airline tickets and cruises."

Most of those people don't make any money. They pay $450 = $50/month. This allows a few people to make fortunes but for most people there is no money:

YTB's 45,000 entry-level sales reps — the people who sell new travel agencies — on average earned $90.32 last year. And of the more than 200,000 people who paid the company as much as $1,000 to run a travel website in 2007, nearly 125,000 didn't earn a penny in commissions, according to Brown's lawsuit. Half of the rest earned less than $39. And while YTB took in $103 million last year from selling and maintaining websites, it paid out just $13.4 million in commissions for selling travel.
Clearly the company is making money - 100 million in income and 13 million in commission? Someone is getting screwed.

California Attorney General Jerry Brown says YTB is a scam. The fact that so few people make money means it must be a pyramid scheme. I don't think it proves this at all. It proves that some people don't understand network marketing. The whole point is that it allows you to start a business with a minimum investment. $450 + $50/month is more than other network marketing companies (at least the few I've heard of).

It also shows that joining YTB doesn't make someone a travel agent so it's still very difficult for YTB people to sell travel. Most of them don't make money because they don't sell travel and they don't recruit more 'agents'.

I'm not here to tell you what to do, but I will offer some advice. Unless you're confident that you can sell travel and recruit more people into YTB then it is not the business for you. You would need to be convinced that the YTB website is the best place to buy or sell travel. And that makes no sense because there are thousands of identical YTB 'travel agency' websites online... I have thousands of people who want to travel reading this blog, but I am not joining YTB. I don't want to try to sell you all travel.


It's been a while, but some of you will remember that we've talked about YTB and other 'card mills' before. Here, if you read the comments some YTB tool repeated calls me a liar - you still in business Earl? Here I mention another problem with GTI and YTB - since anyone can join you'll end up being in business with some real losers. In the comments Earl claimed that bad travel agents wouldn't last a day in YTB. I think he's full of crap. Here's the October, 2007 post when I first became aware of the issue.

A related post is that untrained travel agents are less likely to provide the kind of consulting many of us expect.

Triping out

A Web company's singular journey

Unlike others scooped up by big firms, TripAdvisor has thrived here at home

TripAdvisor employees - (from left) Eddie Taub, Aaron Kovalcsik, Claire Dienhart, and Hubert Hwang - play a video game during lunch at the Web company's new home office in Newton.TripAdvisor employees - (from left) Eddie Taub, Aaron Kovalcsik, Claire Dienhart, and Hubert Hwang - play a video game during lunch at the Web company's new home office in Newton. (Josh Reynolds for The Boston Globe)
By Robert Weisman
Globe Staff / September 4, 2008

NEWTON - When it was snapped up for $210 million in 2004, some feared out-of-state ownership would diminish TripAdvisor LLC, a Needham start-up that created a compelling travel website featuring user-generated reviews of hotels and tourist attractions.

Instead, TripAdvisor has become one of New England's largest Internet companies, buying nine other travel properties in niche markets such as cruises and airplane seating. It drew 25.5 million visitors to its network of a dozen websites in July, ranking TripAdvisor tops in online travel information, according to research firm comScore Media Metrix.

With its parent company, Expedia Inc., investing about $400 million over the past four years, TripAdvisor has boosted its payroll from fewer than 50 employees when it was acquired to 434, including more than 200 in the Boston area. The company recently moved its home office into a former Polaroid Corp. complex in Newton Highlands, rolled out applications for Facebook and other social networking sites, and is in the process of hiring another 50 engineers and sales people to expand the brand into Europe, India, and China.

"There's no limit to demand for information by people planning a trip," said Stephen Kaufer, TripAdvisor's co founder and chief executive, who estimated half the company's traffic now comes from abroad. "We expect to grow year by year in every dimension."

TripAdvisor's journey contrasts with the bumpier paths of other high-tech standouts in recent state history - from Polaroid to Digital Equipment Corp. to Lycos Inc. - that reduced workforces and lost their local identity after being gobbled up by outsiders. Among many Massachusetts business leaders, the loss of corporate headquarters has become a sensitive issue.

Where other buyers have snatched the brands and shifted management control out of state, starving the local office of resources, Expedia, based in Bellevue, Wash., has provided financial support but allowed TripAdvisor to operate autonomously from Massachusetts - a practice that TripAdvisor, in turn, has extended to its own acquisitions, such as VirtualTourist, Cruise Critic, SmarterTravel, and SeatGuru.

TripAdvisor makes the bulk of its money through advertising from travel destinations and booking sites such as Expedia, as well as its rivals Orbitz and Travelocity, to which visitors can link from TripAdvisor's site. The company posted profits of $129 million on $260 million in revenue for the 12 months ended June 30, parent Expedia reported.

"We're absolutely committed to growing TripAdvisor as fast as we can and, frankly, to throwing as much capital at TripAdvisor as we can," said Dara Khosrowshahi, chief executive of Expedia. "Very early on, when we invested in the company, they beat everything they told us they were going to do, in terms of finance and operating goals."

Through its acquisitions and organic growth, TripAdvisor has built a lead as a destination over its closest competitor, Yahoo Travel. That site attracted 20.3 million unique visitors in July, according to comScore Media Metrix. But by tapping into the resources of its parent company, and tightly integrating reviews and booking, Yahoo Travel is betting TripAdvisor's lead is not insurmountable.

"TripAdvisor doesn't have a very easy way for you to book a flight or a hotel," said Pablo O'Brien, director of product management for Yahoo Travel in Sunnyvale, Calif. "You have to go to another site."

In 2004, when TripAdvisor was purchased by Interactive Corp., the New York conglomerate run by media mogul Barry Diller, it was placed under the umbrella of Expedia, which Diller bought from Microsoft Corp. three years earlier. In 2005, Expedia was spun out as a stand-alone company with Khosrowshahi at the helm, a move that set the stage for TripAdvisor's expansion.

But the growth hasn't been without friction. In July, Deirdre Kiely, a former Web content editor for TripAdvisor, filed a complaint on behalf of herself and other content providers alleging the company violates Massachusetts law by classifying them as independent contractors rather than employees. The plaintiffs write articles and edit reviews of hotels and restaurants for the website, according to the complaint.

TripAdvisor executives declined to discuss the case, which is pending in US District Court in Boston. If it is certified as a class-action lawsuit, as the plaintiffs are seeking, it would be a setback not only for TripAdvisor but for other Internet companies that hire contractors to generate the editorial content displayed on their websites.

Regardless of the outcome, TripAdvisor's blueprint of giving travelers a way to share their experiences is continuing to gain traction as online spending on leisure travel increases. The market is projected to grow from $86 billion in 2007 to $98.1 billion this year and $110 billion in 2009, according to Forrester Research of Cambridge.

At the same time, TripAdvisor is building its brand and harvesting traveler reviews through software applications it has developed for social networking sites, like Facebook, that let members swap travel tips and stories, and map places they have visited.

"TripAdvisor is to travel reviews what Kleenex is to facial tissues," said Henry Harteveldt, a Forrester vice president and principal analyst. "They define the category. This is a company that was ahead of its time but now they're in the sweet spot. And as social computing becomes big, they're posed to capitalize on that."

But rivals, ranging from Yahoo Travel to IgoUgo in New York, are building up their own sites and see plenty of running room in the burgeoning market.

"There's definitely opportunity," said Robert Albert, vice president of media for Travelocity, whose IgoUgo site specializes in online trip planning tools. "TripAdvisor is big, for sure. But there are so many ideas in online travel, and so much hasn't been done yet. When you consider all the online organizing, sharing, and planning that needs to be done, TripAdvisor hasn't cornered the market."

Robert Weisman can be reached at weisman@globe.com.

Yup

TripAdvisor thriving at home

September 04, 2008 | Online Travel

When it was snapped up for $210 million in 2004, some feared out-of-state ownership would diminish TripAdvisor. Instead, TripAdvisor has become one of New England's largest Internet companies, buying nine other travel properties, writes The Boston Globe.

With its parent company, Expedia Inc., investing about $400 million over the past four years, TripAdvisor has boosted its payroll from fewer than 50 employees when it was acquired to 434, including more than 200 in the Boston area. The company recently moved its home office into a former Polaroid Corp. complex in Newton Highlands, rolled out applications for Facebook and other social networking sites, and is in the process of hiring another 50 engineers and sales people to expand the brand into Europe, India, and China.

"There's no limit to demand for information by people planning a trip," said Stephen Kaufer, TripAdvisor's co founder and chief executive, who estimated half the company's traffic now comes from abroad. "We expect to grow year by year in every dimension."

Get the full story at The Boston Globe


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