All posts tagged bebo

AOL acquiring Bebo, what you are all missing

I waited a week before writing this, why? Well I was busy, and I wanted things to settle a  bit before I kicked up the dust again. But the AOL buy of Bebo is a much bigger deal than we are all realizing or giving AOL credit for. So the $850 Million might seem like an obscene price to some (lest we forget some other large purchases of the last few years make this pale in comparison), and to others it is simply confusing. How could AOL plunk down the equivalent of $20/user on what is ultimately a 3rd place network in the US?

Why the numbers make sense.
AOL’s mostly cash deal gives them an instant boost on the social network scene where their AIM pages project died after not receiving much if any fanfare (AOL seemingly didn’t bother informing their AIM users about it).  It gives AOL a big foothold overseas, where it is still weak compared to its competitors. It also gives it a big chance to cross promote its newly acquired service via AIM, AOL.com, netscape.com and the hundreds of other content properties they own.  For AOL it might be a challenge to recoup the initial investment fast, but they have a much better ability to monetize those page views than most of the players.

Remember AOL owns advertising.com and its whole PlatformA initiative encompasses many advanced ad targeting services that were just waiting for access to billions more in page views to data mine.

What you are all missing.
So AOL now owns 40 million user profiles, now what? Well one thing that people are forgetting is that Bebo has built a fairly robust representation of the social graph on their site. This data which is a goldmine for marketers is probably the second best set of social graph data on the web behind Facebook’s.  So if you think about it, they got a data set about half the size of Facebook’s for about 1/15th the cost.

Stop looking at the battle, and focus on the war.
Folks, the issue isn’t about social networks directly, its about behavioral advertising. Understanding what people want by observing them and then serving both contextual and targeted advertising to them as they search/surf through their properties.  We as a collective whole keep forgetting this about Yahoo (don’t forget they have 400million user profiles, maybe more) being one of the kings at this, but thats another story entirely.  The behavioral battle is being waged on all fronts, but what it ultimately needs is enough  page view inventory to be truly useful to the data crunchers, and thats what a few billion page views a day will give you if you’re AOL/Bebo.

So where do we go from here?
Well I really see AOL trying to promote the heck out of Bebo, and hopefully working on improving their infrastructure substantially. But the first thing we’ll see is Bebo beating the 2008 earnings estimates they had set forth simply by having AOL up their CPM rates from $.50 to $2.  If Time Warner wasn’t such a bad fit with AOL, I would almost recommend buying AOL right now, but then again, maybe AOL + Platform A will be spun off, which would definitely change the game.

Exploring Bebo – How I’d improve it

I’ve been playing around with bebo a lot the last few days. (You can add me here, if you actually know me.)  More specifically I’ve been playing with their developer platform, which as you may or may not know is a clone of Facebook’s.

So aside from having an impressively low number of friends on the site, there are a number of usability issues and quirks I wish they would fix.  So here they are:

  • Improve your navigation – finding apps, and things to do on the site is harder than it should be. Add a subnavigation menu or something! Or a sidebar.
  • Improve the forums for apps
  • Improve the documentation for developers, seriously all your revenue growth will come from this.
  • Rework your app directory, facebook’s app directory stinks, and yours is already terrible and its been open for a few days.
  • decide what your focus is going to be, are you all about the users, the relationships, or what? Once this decision has been made, rework your homepage and personal start page to reflect that.
  • merge with virb. just to get their design.

If I had more time I would’ve posted screenshots and more. If Bebo wants me to do some ideas, they can contact me via my bebo page :-)

Where to plan your 2008 social strategy

If you’re looking at the landscape for social networks, social media, and are feeling a bit overwhelmed, don’t be worried, its easy to get lost in the mess.

First thing first, decide what countries/regions you want to grow in. You might be thinking, but Brian, why would I care to look anywhere other than english speaking regions? Well first off, you’d be missing out on billions of potential users, and you’d be missing an opportunity to beat out your competitors to these regions.

So here are my targets for each market worldwide:

  • North America
  • South America/Latin America
  • Europe
    • Bebo
    • Myspace
    • Facebook
    • Netlog
    • Hi5
  • Asia
    • Orkut (India – wow)
    • Facebook
    • Myspace
    • Hi5
    • Friendster (whaaat?)
    • Netlog (Middle east, turkey, that region)
  • Africa
    • Honestly don’t know. South Africa and Egypt are the only two viable markets to target, so I’d bet on Facebook.

You might be thinking, but Brian, where do you get this data? Well most of it is from trends I observe, and from my vast network of connections around the globe. I follow where these people are socializing. I know a lot of people in South America, and I hear them talking about Facebook alot now, so thats why I give FB a big 2008 in Latin America. Over a million users are on FB in Latin America right now according to Facebook’s Social Ads.

In a later post I’ll outline how to approach each of these markets, as each is as different culturally online as they are offline.

Bebo clones facebook platform, so facebook opens up platform.

The big news out there today is that bebo has announced their new platform will be facebook compatible. This was quickly followed by news that Facebook is opening up the architecture of their platform to everyone else.

So what does this mean? It means Bebo has some smart people working there who know a good thing when they see it. I would probably not have paid much attention to it had they not done this, even with future opensocial support.  This move also means that OpenSocial even though it was obscenely hyped, and a lot of people were salivating over it, is no where near ready and people aren’t willing to wait for it.  Its one thing for an Orkut to wait around for OpenSocial, since they are owned by google, but to the rest of the SocNets, time is of the essence.

Surprisingly Friendster in all the hubub the last few days announced their own platform, but didn’t pursue this route. I guess they didn’t think they needed to.