Analyzing the Twitter-Jaiku-Pownce Business Model and Issues

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Micro- or Nano-blogging, Presence Messengers and ways to share or send stuff are part of the same ecosystem: services that operate with a slightly different or overlapping focus. Tumblr, Dodgeball, Jaiku, Plaxo, Twitter, Pownce, … are the relevant examples, of which I touched upon Twitter, Jaiku and Pownce. Let us now analyze these services with some simple questions.

Are they useful?

Twitter I think such services are partly useful to a segment of the market but only for a short period of time. They can be addictive but that does not increase their usefulness. Of course, there is potential in such services. In many parts of the world, the mobile phone will be the first computer people will be using and so the reach is tremendous only if the mobile component is part of the picture.

Services should fulfill a genuine need and also make the customer perceive that they are useful. Companies use Technology to meet the first requirement and Marketing for the second. Getting a text message that your salary has been credited to your bank account is an example for this. Companies have to work hard to bridge the need and the perception: Say, you ‘Twitter’ that you want to brush your teeth but are out of toothpaste, and P&G pipes in with a discount coupon to help you save on any of their toothpaste brands; you use it when you shop the next time. Such a transaction could be beneficial to all parties (Twitter pockets a tiny commission).

Is there a Business Model?

PownceThis is the weakest spot. Companies like Pownce or Twitter have temporary ‘eyeballs’. Revenue models are questionable. On paper, Pownce has advertising and the premium subscription. Twitter does not even have that. In my opinion, even without competition, they will not last because of technology-shifts. What they offer are not break-throughs in technology, but utilities. So, it is easy for competition to catch up or buy them out for low valuation. As we can see, there are already lots of players on the same turf.

Can they get customers? It may seem easy to get customers since the thresholds are lower in such simple utilities. It is much easier to text out your micro-blog than labor out a regular blog. The UI is much better and Personalization is in. Multiple mobile devices are supported so you don’t need a computer to micro-blog; your cell phone will do. But, all this is just not enough for the customers to switch. Om Malik’s reaction is typical of most customers. Grabbing their attention is the challenge. Unless you generate enough ‘buzz’ at that time, making it seem like a prize to join the latest community, it will be impossible to differentiate. Focusing on a niche segment is one way to go.

Can they keep customers? Here, keeping their attention is the challenge. George Colony, the CEO of Forrester Research puts it beautifully: you have to re-earn your customer’s loyalty every day. Consumers are fickle because a new toy will grab their next fifteen seconds of attention. Factors like ‘blog fatigue’, ‘connected fatiguealso play a role. The advantage of such services is that the customer can define his/her audience and share opinions and stuff without worrying about acceptance among friends. Facebook and Myspace have so far been successful in retaining majority of users, but how long they can continue to do that remains to be seen. Most of the people stay because their friends and contacts are there. Sooner or later there are bound to be tools which will allow you export out your contacts and content from one social network to another. Plaxo Pulse is one such initiative, and if Pulse delivers what it promises, it will break the lock-in of social networking sites on the users. Such sites could offer a better value proposition for users to stay on.

Jaiku“People will bring this into work eventually and so businesses will use such services” - Jyri (of Jaiku) said in interview with Scoble. Enterprises are taking a cautious approach to social-networking in the office space. Even CIA is launching a social networking site for its spies. On one hand is the need to keep the professional separate from personal and on the other hand, to encourage the social and interaction aspects to harness the full-potential. However, there are already many reports of businesses blocking access to Facebook and schools blocking access to MySpace. Have to keep an eye on the emerging trends.

Is it all Fluff and No Substance?

Such offerings are accused of having only fluff and no substance. I see nothing wrong about it. Twitter or Jaiku do not claim their services will change the course of human history. They just enable you to Lifecast or share stuff with others. Yes, this is about Attention Economy and people have just a few seconds to dash off a text message to share or broadcast. Likewise as a receiver, you have just a few seconds to be confirm that your wife picked up the kids or that this is the right time to call Tom because he is having a coffee-break. Lee Gomes provides this relevant tidbit in his well-written post:

Some folks may lament the vaunted Information Superhighway being used to transport banalities such as what someone is eating. If it’s any consolation, the same thing happened with the telephone, says Claude S. Fischer, the UC Berkeley sociologist whose book, “America Calling,” is a social history of telephones in the U.S. “The telephone was initially conceived of for very serious purposes,” Prof. Fischer says. “But sometime during the 1920s, AT&T decided that ‘idle chatter’ would be a good way to make money. It started to encourage people to pick up the phone for any purpose they want.”
Prof. Fischer says he is as astounded as anyone, certainly as any older person, by the humdrum nature of many Internet communications. “If you look at the content, you’d have to say, ‘What is the point of them?’ But a psychologist might say that the point isn’t the content, it’s the connection.”

What about Privacy?

Usually a lot of fuss is made about Privacy issues. It is important to understand that what exactly constitutes private information can vary depending on the context. There ought to be proper tools and mechanisms to handle privacy issues appropriately. This is where most of the debate should focus. The products and services put out should be flexible enough for the consumer to define and control what he/she is willing to share. In the end, it is an act of negotiation where the consumer is willing to share a part of his private information in return for some benefit.

Micro-blogging with Jaiku

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Jaiku Jaiku is the leader of the Micro-blogging pack: ‘The Presence Messenger’. Jaiku says that its “main goal is to bring people closer together by enabling them to share their presence. Jaiku is a phone book that lets you share your real-time rich presence from the phone”. The shared short messages are called Jaikus.

Though Jaiku was the first to allow threaded comments, there are still some rough edges. As of now, you cannot comment on somebody’s Jaiku through the mobile phone. Jaiku only allows short text messages, limiting the message length to 140 characters; so the funny part is that the comments can be longer than the post.

Of the two Jaiku founders, Jyri Engestrom and Petteri Koponen, Jyri worked at Nokia as a Senior Product Manager and brings Sociology background to the team while Petteri focuses on Bizdev and core technology. High profile Jaiku converts from Twitter include celebrities like Leo Laporte.

Jaiku believes in a federated model. For example, I can import my Twitter on Jaiku. Like Facebook - Jaiku and Twitter have both opened up the API, while Pownce is working on announcing their official API.

You can find my previous post on Twitter here. More on micro blogging in my next post.

Further Reading:

Marko Ahtisaari does a great job to convince you why he uses Jaiku
Duncan Riley makes a case for switching from Twitter to Jaiku
Kristen Nicole announces the iPhone version of Jaiku on Mashable
Robert Scoble interviews the Jaiku team in this interesting video
Emily Turrettini’s announces the start of Jaiku service on her blog

Update 1:

Here is another good post comparing mini blogging solutions

Loopt With Pals? Social Mapping and Smart Presence services are the next rage

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LooptlogoConsidering that the Internet and the Cell phone are the fastest adopted technologies, it seems only logical that services and applications mushroom in these areas. In line with the expected predictions, remember what Dave Haskin said some time back: “Smart presence” is bound to come to a mobile screen near you.

Loopt is a Palo Alto based startup, providing “social mapping” service, using GPS to show you where your friends are by automatically updating maps on your Java mobile handset. Founded by Sam Altman and Nick Sivo, both Stanford students, it was known earlier by other names such as Radiate and Flipt. Launched on Boost Mobile, Sprint Nextel’s GPS-enabled iDEN teen-focused-network, this service will be available on other US carriers soon. A new version of the software was released last month, which includes a ‘journaling’ feature allows Loopt customers to photograph, write about, and geo-tag their favorite spots to share with their friends.

Dodgeballlogo_1 Although it sounds rather cool, Loopt is not the pioneer in this area. Dodgeball (now owned by Google) is the real pioneer who has been trying this out since 2000. And boy, there is competition: Jaiku, which is based in Finland and, there is Helio, powered by SK Telecom and Earthlink. But Loopt is gaining attention. Their mashup using Google maps and MySpace-like profiles seem to be paying off. At the recent ‘Under the Radar‘ event, it won the Social Messaging category, selected by both - judges and audiences.

Loopt is powered by Series A, $5 million funding (Sequoia Capital, New Enterprise Associates and others). Since it ties up with the carriers, it is bound to make money. The service is free through the end of the year. After that, it will cost $3 a month. It already claims more than 40000 users as of November 2006. It hopes to turn a profit next year.

Such services are inevitable. One can imagine a plethora of situations when such a feature could be useful or even vital. In case of a disaster, it could be life-saving. It could become a ‘cannot-be-turned-off’ feature that reassures you where your kids are all the time. A detailed version could show where a particular doctor is in a big, sprawling hospital. And of course, even though it is ‘opt-in’ with lots of safety buttons, it will throw up new privacy questions.

Further Reading:

On TechCrunch post
PCMagazine’s review of the Loopt service
Mention on Mashable
CNNMoney’s coverage of Loopt announcement available through Sprint
Loopt’s own blog