Archive for August 3rd, 2008

Meet The TechCrunch Summer Interns

Written by on Sunday, August 3rd, 2008 in Uncategorized.

Summer is a great time at TechCrunch - a flood of smart, enthusiastic and, best of all, cheap labor flows into our office (my house in Atherton), and stuff just starts getting done. And since my house is overrun with these bright and cheery young faces who are just so ridiculously enthusiastic about everything, I bail for most of the summer to the San Juan islands in Washington.

We use interns all year, and started a full time summer program in 2007. Two of last year’s interns are now full time with us (Mark Hendrickson and Dan Kimerling).

This summer, we welcomed Cameron Christoffers (Stanford), Rob Olson (UC Irvine), Peter Sauer (Grand Valley State) and Matthew Schulz (Indiana) to TechCrunch.

These guys are absolutely amazing - they happily do anything we ask them to do, from research and writing to getting Chipotle for the office. The only hard part is saying goodbye to them at the end of the summer. Or watching Facebook pick them off as they hire everyone in sight.

Crunch Network: CrunchGear drool over the sexiest new gadgets and hardware.

Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/-znyDnemy7Y/


Sized at an estimated $5.6 billion in 2007, Japan boasts one of the biggest online advertising markets in the world – a huge potential just waiting to be tapped by foreign social networks. The world’s two largest social networks, MySpace and Facebook, barely register in Japan. As the Google Trends for Websites chart above shows, local social network Mixi is outpacing both in Japan. On Alexa, Mixi is ranked the No. 6 most popular site in Japan, compared to No. 95 for MySpace (Facebook doesn’t even make it into the top 100). MySpace and Facebook are trying - but why are they failing?

Complacency and failure to adopt to cultural differences

Social networks have become integrative elements of modern American youth culture over the last years, shaping social patterns and changing the ways that people communicate. When taken abroad, these services have to deal with a large number of cross-cultural peculiarities by their very nature.

Societal and cultural gaps are particularly evident in the case of Japan. Market entry in this country with a “What works in the US must also work over there”-attitude is going awry for both Facebook and MySpace. It’s not a stereotype that communication tends to be nonverbal in Japan. The society generally puts more emphasis on the community rather than on the individual. Also, security plays a major role in many aspects of Japanese life.

These cultural distinctions largely explain why social networks from abroad have a hard time winning over Japan’s 90 million web users. Mixi, the country’s biggest social network, positioned itself as a tool for communicating at a distance through diaries and communities to meet like-minded members. It doesn’t primarily exist to make new friends (poking is restricted) or as a platform for public self-presentation.

A perfect example of a cultural misconception: Mark Zuckerberg recently said in Tokyo one of Facebook’s unique selling points is the usage of real names and photos in profiles. This may be true but it’s exactly what Japanese web users usually try to avoid. And they already have a high-trust, invitation-based social network anyway: Mixi.

Lost in Translation (Without Mobile, You’re Dead)

MySpace opened a Tokyo office in 2006, three years after launch in the US. It took Facebook four years to initiate a user-generated translation of their site. Too late – in the meantime Mixi developed into a $1 billion-listed company without the slightest competition from abroad.

Facebook’s hands-off approach especially leaves a lot to be desired. The quality of the site’s translation is amateurish in parts (at least in the initial version), a challenge MySpace’s local team was at least able to master. In addition, due to relatively weak English skills, most of the Facebook applications are pointless in the eyes of Japanese users. Without apps that make sense, Facebook is crippled. Facebook is also missing the function Japanese consumers deem fundamental in a social network: blogging. This paradox may be the site’s biggest drawback in blog-crazy Japan.

Perhaps an even bigger problem is that both Facebook and MySpace fail to offer an optimized version for Japanese handsets. Millions of Japanese are accustomed to using one thumb, a dialpad and a jog dial on their phones when accessing the web during their commutes to school and work. In this country, the mobile web is bigger than the PC web.

Success factors in Japan: Get in fast, show some respect, and find a local partner

Offering a country-specific version before a local copycat beats you to it is an obvious key factor for success, and not only in Japan. But being relatively complex entities, social networks face a trade-off between additional risks and potential gains in the course of localization. Overdoing the adoption to local tastes might compromise the big idea and infrastructure of the site (i.e. in the form of cluttered interfaces or fragmentation into culturally and linguistically walled “mini-networks”).

Practical experience from the Japanese web industry has shown that partnering up with a local company is the best way to diminish these dangers (see Yahoo Japan, the No. 1 site in the country, which is a joint venture run by Softbank). Japan has embraced just five American web brands which decided to go solo and none of them is a social network: Wikipedia, Google, YouTube, Twitter and Amazon.

MySpace’s establishing of a physical presence in Japan was received as a sign of long-term commitment, a move which melds with the local mentality. But in Japan, maintaining your autonomy comes with a price: It’s no secret that it usually takes foreign companies years to build up brand identity, trust, industry connections and general market knowledge.

The same is true for complex web products such as a social network – if the company behind it really means it. Currently it seems Facebook and (to a lesser degree) MySpace chose to start working the Japanese market with a minimum of resources. But in most cases, remote management is perceived in insular Japan as second-rate treatment. Apart from M&As, cooperating with an established local partner seems to be the best shortcut option conceivable. It’s almost impossible to win in Japan without close interaction with end users, press, developers, potential employees and advertisers.

But the Japanese market isn’t lost yet for MySpace and Facebook, despite Mixi’s dominance. If millions of Americans don’t mind registering to multiple social networks, why should the Japanese? Growth potential, especially for Facebook, also exists in the realm of connecting professionals online, which may be the reason why LinkedIn is currently pondering a market entry in Japan. In that specific field, they and designated partner Digital Garage (which helped Twitter build traction and earn money in Japan), see practically no competition in this country.

(Editor’s Note: Serkan Toto is a TechCrunch contributor based in Japan).

Crunch Network: CrunchBoard because it’s time for you to find a new Job2.0

Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/eGtQvuONpzY/

Female Bloggers

Written by on Sunday, August 3rd, 2008 in Uncategorized.

I wanted to take a moment and thank the following bloggers and sites for including me in their recent lists of top/favorite female bloggers. I don’t tend to pay the most attention to lists and rankings. There’s always deserving people that don’t get included and the general nature of lists is subjective. That said, I’m honored to be included among many of my own favorite female bloggers. It’s a nice reminder of what blogging is all about - sharing your own voice and ideas, whether it’s to an audience of ten or ten million.

Source: Emily Chang
Original Article: http://www.emilychang.com/go/weblog/comments/female-bloggers/

How Close Were Glam And Revolution Health To Merging?

Written by on Sunday, August 3rd, 2008 in Uncategorized.

Women’s focused advertising network Glam Media, which raised $85 million in a combined debt and equity financing in February 2008 (they have raised a total of $115 million since 2004), was rumored to be mulling over a $1.3 billion acquisition offer just a couple of months later in May.

It’s a safe bet to assume that the merger discussions were leaked directly by CEO Samir Arora or his advisors at the AllThingsD conference he was attending when the story broke.

We now believe that there was indeed some sort of discussion taking place that may have valued Glam at over $1 billion. Sort of. And those discussions, say multiple sources, were with AOL founder Steve Case’s Revolution Health, a health portal that launched in January 2007. Revolution Health’s board of directors includes Jim Barksdale (former CEO Netscape), Carly Fiorina (former CEO HP) and Colin Powell (former Secretary of State and Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff).

The merger sounds absurd on its face - the marriage of a womens blogging network with a health portal. But both companies are essentially in the business of selling ads, and there is significant overlap in their demographics if not in their actual users. Revolution Health is in trouble, and has reportedly gone through a number of layoffs and hired Morgan Stanley to represent them in a sale. Certainly their traffic has taken a nosedive, from a high of nearly 4 million monthly visitors to just 1.6 million last month (Google Trends doesn’t show this same decline, although Compete.com does).

The deal may not have made sense for Glam, but it was a heck of a story to leak to the press.

Crunch Network: CrunchBoard because it’s time for you to find a new Job2.0

Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/OiNW4nkKLMI/



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