Monday, February 12, 2007

Limited use of VOIP


I have performed a project for a major Swedish telecommunications provider, The company was looking for distribution partners for their free VOIP service (like Skype). I approached several portals and other companies that I considered to be potential partners and succeeded in setting up a potential deal with a major European airline that wanted to offer free calling to their customers.

My partner search gave me a fresh look at VOIP and made me realise how little VOIP is used on the Internet by media owners (portals, online services, traditional companies).

Some examples where free VOIP is good, but hardly used:

- why not offer VOIP in online gaming rooms, where several people play bingo, black jack. It adds excitement and stickyness to the online experience

- VOIP can very well be used by online jobboards (e.g. Monsterboard) where people can anonimously ask their first questions about the job, or have a first quick interview.

- VOIP would be ideal in the dating services industry, first chat, than very safe VOIP to get to know the other person better, then a date and then maybe more...

- It is good for many sites that offer services to far away clients in the tourism industry, from hotels to local far away airlines. It would be soo useful to be able to talk quickly on the phone for free to a hotel in far away India, and ask them online how I get to their hotel from the airport.

- not to mention all the insurance companies, banks, transport companies, telecom and energy companies with many contacts with the end consumer.

I presume the integration of Internet and telephone has just started, I am convinced that a next step and improvement for soo many websites would be to add a free telephone address that you click on and enables you to talk immediately, not just the old info@thiscompany.com.



And by the way, something cool, a USB phone that you can take with you as a key hanger: http://www.vonage.com/device.php?type=VPHONE

Tuesday, January 16, 2007

ONLINE ART MARKET - SITE VISITORS


I currently help one of the major online visual art destination websites with business development, and have done some research into the major players in terms of visitor statistics.



The list of major Art websites and their Alexa traffic ranking:


eBay is on number 13 in Alexa, which means there are 12 sites in the world with more visitors


1. eBay.com 13
2. Allposter.com 1400
3. Art.com 1800
4. Artnet.com 11900
5. Christies.com 17300
6. Artprice.com 18000
7. Sothebys.com 19000
8. Artcyclopedia.com 21000
9. Tias.com 21000
10. Absolutearts.com 36000
11. Askart.com 51000
12. Bonhams.com 57000
13. Wwar.com 59000
14. Artfacts.com 62000
15. Findartinfo.com 71000
16. The-artist.org 73000
17. Art-perfect.de 78000
18. Artlex.com 81000
19. Fine-art.com 86000
20. Deseno-art.com 88000
21. Art.net 99000

The list excludes museums, and other major general interest websites like about.com or wikipedia with art sections.

2 basic but true conclusions:

1. The list shows that art is not a key destination on the Internet.

2. It also shows that the biggest auction houses Christies and Sothebys are high on the list, but online marketing driven sites like eBay, Artposter or Art.com are massively ahead in terms of site visitors.