Work has been quite hectic the past few weeks so I've gotten behind on
checking out the sexy new startups coming out of Silicon Valley. The
startup that has recently caught my interest is Edgeio, the brain child of Mike Arrington of TechCrunch.
The most succint post I've found on the company is Edgeio - Mike’s Little eBay Killer by Pete Cashmore where he writes
Essentially, Edgeio is an aggregator for classified listings. You can write a
classified ad on your blog, tag it with "listing" and let Edgeio pick it up from
your feed. Add a few more tags to describe your ad and Edgeio will grab those
too. The service will pick up anything tagged with "listing" and obviously that
raises the question of spam. But after speaking to Mike, I’m pretty sure he’s on
top of it. For instance, you can claim your blog on Edgeio, just like on Technorati. Claiming your
blog means that you are now a "member" and your listings are considered more
trustworthy. There are also automated ways to remove the worst of the spam. And
then there are the user-powered methods - "report spam" buttons and the like.
...
Last of all: the business model. Unlike about 90% of the stuff that gets
labelled (tagged?) Web 2.0, Edgeio actually has one. Actually it has a few, but
the main monetization method appears to be sponsored listings - pay 25 cents a
day to get your listing bumped up to the top. I would have been tempted to
pursue a transaction-based model (ie. you take a cut from every sale), but I can
see why Edgeio isn’t taking that path for now - handling transactions is a huge
job and requires a reputation system, among other things. (And if Edgeio did
build a reputation system, I’m pretty sure it would be portable).
Calling Edgeio an eBay killer is probably a bit hyperbolic, but I do think it
points the way to how decentralization will undermine the centralized business
models of old. Your little walled garden will never be as large, rich and varied
as the content that exists out on the open web.
As you can expect from a "
Web 2.0 blog", Pete
Cashmore's post is full of hyperbole and leaps of faith but there are
some interesting ideas here nonetheless. From a technology perspective
I assume that
Edgeio depends on
microformats just like other
metadata-in-your-blog-post initiatives such as
Structured
Blogging.
This indicates to me that there now seems to be general consensus
amongst the Silicon Valley startup crowd that building a company based
on searching blogs and
screen scraping their HTML such as
PubSub and
Technorati have done is the new hotness.
The more interesting thing to me is that the folks at Edgeio
are implying that there is a market for a 'Make this blog post a
classified listing' checkbox in traditional blog posting tools. From my
perspective as someone who works closely with the MSN Spaces and Windows Live Expo
teams this sounds very interesting. There is already some integration
planned between both services but I'm not sure this is one of the
options that was considered. I wonder how much user validation of this
beilief Mike Arrington and company did before going ahead with
launching their startup?
As far as business models go, I find it hard to imagine why anyone
would consider this an eBay killer. I'm not going to claim that people
posting things for sale on their blog and then having that picked up by
classified listing services is inferior to eBay's model. However, I
wonder why anyone thinks that services like eBay, Craig's List and Windows Live Expo
wouldn't jump into this market if it turned out to be profitable. Since
there doesn't seem to be any barrier to entry, ability to write a Web
crawler and minor HTML parsing is all that is required, I wouldn't
start eulogizing eBay just yet.