The kind folks at Indian Express put yours truly on the cover page of their INDULGE! edition
The kind folks at Indian Express put yours truly on the cover page of their INDULGE! edition
1) AdHome.com to tame fragmented out-of-home advertising marketplace
2) DoubleSpring introduces online platform AdHome to facilitate OOH media planning, buying
3) Indian firm promises global OOH planning platform
Looking forward to FEB 2011
AdHome.com – Global Marketplace for Outdoor Advertising
Planning and Managing Outdoor Advertising Campaigns will now be as simple as GOOGLE ADWORDS
Coming Soon – FEB 2011
Another Venture of DoubleSpring
This week, I had to ask a colleague to Quit
This person (lets call him/her “X”) was one of nicest I’ve met … positive energy, full of ideas and very friendly. “X” has been with us for nearly two years, infact was one of the early employees; somebody who believed in what we were doing … at a time when nobody took us seriously.
There’s more: In the first year, “X” was very passionate about the work and quite enterprising as well. I promoted “X” to leadership role and everything seemed good. Colleagues loved “X” and were very happy to be a part of “X’s” team.
The fall:
The second year was a huge disappointment. “X’s” performance went downhill every quarter. There was a noticeable lack of passion and focus. Most importantly there was a lack of professionalism. Its almost like I choose absolutely the wrong person in a leadership role. It seemed that “X’s” only goal was to get to a leadership position … and that was the end of it!
Tasks that could have been done in a day or two took weeks and sometimes months. The quality of work was consistently inconsistent.
I’ve had several closed door meetings with “X” in the past year, on some ocassions asking the person to QUIT but for some reason (that I cannot explain) “X” stayed on. In hindsight I think it was a BIG mistake… and I’ve had to pay a price for it: Slowdown in the Organization’s growth.
Now that this person has QUIT, I have mixed feelings; for very obvious reasons, I’ll keep them to myself
Our entire team is SAD … they cant believe that they will no longer
see the lovable “X” at the workplace. It is as if a sibling has moved out of the house. “X” will be missed.
And it sucks to know that I’m responsible for this decision.
I hope they’ll understand that my options are limited. When you lead a startup: Very few decisions are easy.
In hindsight I think that if “X” was not promoted to a leadership position and instead was reporting to somebody, it would have been better for everybody.
I’ve learnt something here the hard way: Leaders are born, not made
DNA covered MyBangalore.com in its 08-Nov-2010 issue. Story:
http://epaper.dnaindia.com/dnabangalore/
Don Valentine, Sequoia Capital: “Target Big Markets”
We’ve added a new section to MyBangalore.com
Premium Residential Properties in Bangalore: Apartments, Homes & Villas. For Sale or Rent.
Its in BETA, we’re fixing issues and adding features.
LocalEngine – A platform for building local (city) portals.
We’re launching MyHyderabad.com soon!
At this time we are looking for strategic partners in Hyderabad. Interested parties can connect with us here:
http://doublespring.com/contact/
Follow us on FaceBook and Twitter:
http://www.facebook.com/myhyderabad
http://twitter.com/myhyderabad
In the first part of this series, I’ve touched upon why the current geodomain development model is flawed and doesn’t really maximize the returns on high quality geodomains.
Before suggesting a better model, let us first understand who our target audience in a geodomain business is: I’d say it’s primarily the residents of the city.
Reason:
Take the example of Denver.com. Who do you think cares more about the city … tourists / travellers OR Denverites? Who needs regular updates on stuff happening in and around the city … tourists / travelers OR Denverites? Who has the ALL important: emotional connect with the city … tourists / travellers OR Denverites?
Clearly, it makes business sense to focus on local residents, because it’s easier to engage them on a long term basis … the emotional connect is difficult to achieve with anybody else.
Local residents are looking for commercial content on city portals. They’re looking to discover & explore local businesses online. Don’t believe it? Check this:
“Research shows that consumers typically spend about 80 percent of their income within 50 miles of their homes, and that about 30 percent of all Internet searches are commercial in nature. In fact, fully one quarter of all searches on the Internet are for both local and commercial content. These consumers are the crown jewel of search because they typically convert into buyers at a higher rate than any other type of online search traffic. As a result, advertisers often pay a premium to place their ads in front of consumers conducting local searches. Researchers forecast that a growing number of local businesses will begin to advertise their products and services through online search in order to reach these highly valuable consumers.”
– Source: Local.com
Next, we need to understand the needs & content consumption patterns of local residents. What do they expect from their local city portal? What will bring them back every day? How do you differentiate your offering from the BIG boys: Yahoo!, Yelp, AOL OR the city’s local newspaper website? How do you monetize?
One can categorize Local CONTENT into TWO types:
1) Content for everyday / frequent consumption
Local News, Reviews, Events, Alerts, Weather, Photos & Videos.
2) Content for Need-based consumption
Local Classifieds, Real Estate, Movie Listings, City Offers, Jobs, Yellow Pages, Online Shopping, Forums, Flight Status, etc.
It is important that content on a geodomain / city portal is highly localized. By including national or international content you will end up competing for eyeballs with Yahoo!, AOL, etc. By all means that is a losing proposition! Stick to your niche: LOCAL
Monetization:
Geodomains need out-of-the-box thinking. Slapping together Adsense & generic banners (credit cards, insurance, web hosting, etc.) doesn’t help (unless you get millions of impressions each day) Considering that the traffic to geodomains may be significant but not gigantic, generic CPC/CPM advertising is generally a bad idea.
In the next part of this series, I will share some monetization ideas and divulge the secret of building high quality content on geodomains at very low costs.
PLUG! – Platform for building local (city) portals: http://doublespring.com/localengine/