Monthly Archive for June, 2007

If you want to engage a blogger, read their blog first

How not to approach a blogger (this was sent to me on email). I have not disclosed the names involved so that – maybe – this person doesn’t lose their job, as my guess is that this is just naivety on their part:

Hi Mike,

My name is XXXXXXX and I work for XXXXXXX XXXXXXX – an agency that specialises in digital communication.

I’ve been looking at your blog and I think it is great.

We’re currently working with XXXXX XXXXX International to promote the new XXXXXXX film XXXXXXXXXXX due to be released in the UK on the Xth of October 2007 and we are working with online opinion formers to release valuable content and information about this film.

We consider you to be an online opinion former and we would like to invite you to take part in this campaign.

The content, to be released in four different communications, will only be made available to a selected group of sites – yours will be one of them.

We would also like to invite you to the press screening in London on date and venue to be confirmed (likely end of July/beginning of August), or, if it is not convenient for you to travel to London, we will give tickets for you and your family/friends to view the film.

If you value the information and content we send you for XXXXXXXX, you may want further information from us regarding other film titles. If so, we will happily include your site in future campaigns. We will contact you again when our client releases other titles we think you might be interested in. You will only receive valuable and interesting content and invitations to events and screenings.

Please email me back at XXXXXXXXXXXX to let me know if you’re interested in taking part in this campaign and receiving some unique and privileged content.

Many thanks

XXXXXX XXXXXXX

Communications Manager

Now I’m sure this person is as bemused as the next PR person about how to approach bloggers. My guess is their boss said “Get some Blog buzz” and the poor person is working through some list they found (possibly a recent edition of PR Week magazine).

But they have clearly not even read this blog, as I never blog about movies. This is the second such overture I’ve had recently and I think they are increasing.

It’s all over for the astroturfers

You’re a PR or marketing company worried about social media and blogs? Hey, why not start posing as if you are a customer, extolling the benefits of your clients product! Better still, set up a fake blog and do it there!

Wrong!

Trevor Jeffords, Associate of law firm Eversheds, writes in their latest e80 newsletter:

“Under new laws in the UK, businesses will soon be prevented from “falsely representing oneself as a consumer”, meaning that companies will no longer be able to post fake entries on blogs or message boards that imply they are made by customers. In light of the current Web 2.0 trend towards social networking sites that rely heavily on sharing of information and peer-reviews, consumer review websites (such as TripAdvisor) have increased the risk of abuse of this kind.

Such practices have previously been outlawed in the UK by the ASA in adjudications such as that involving talkSPORT radio in 2006 where a representative of the company placed a fake blog entry on a number of football club related sites. However the new law will mean that companies who continue to post fake statements risk facing both civil proceedings and criminal prosecution. The law will be enforced by the Office of Fair Trading and the Trading Standards Office who will have the power to apply for enforcement orders, orders for the disclosure of information and injunctions as well as being able to bring criminal prosecutions against an offending company.

The new law is part of the EU Directive on Unfair Business-to-Consumer Commercial Practices (2005/29/EC) aimed at obliging businesses not to mislead consumers. The exact date that this law will come into force is uncertain. The Directive states that member countries should apply measures enforcing its provisions by 12 December 2007, but the DTI has advised that Regulations implementing this Directive will come into force in the UK by April 2008. Companies should note that the Directive seems to create a strict liability because it will not be necessary to prove that there has been any actual loss or damage, that the company was negligent or that the company intended to commit an unfair commercial practice.

In the light of this new legislation, companies should ensure that they do not use fake blogs, message boards or other word-of-mouth campaigns as a marketing tool. It is important that they also inform employees not to post such statements because they could potentially be interpreted as having been made on behalf of the company.”

Who’s driving social media? Not the agencies

This is thin stuff. “There is increasing buzz around buzz.” Oh, come on. You guys need to realise that online identity in the form of a MySpace or Facebook profile is as much content as anything someone might ‘upload’. Furthermore, microblogging a la Twitter is the tip of the ice-burg. When ‘uploaders’ include those who are happy to blog in just 140 characters (many more than the blessed 8% I daresay), that’s when you will see what social media is really capable of. I expect better from Agency.com.

Videocast: Interview with Jason Calacanis

I interviewed Jason Calacanis, CEO of Mahalo.com while he was in London for the NMK Forum this week.

Broadly speaking, he covered what Mahalo will set out to achieve and how. Mahalo is to be a human powered search engine, creating better results and easier to use information than the brute force of a cold algorithm. As Calacanis said to me after the interview, “Google plus human trumps Google alone”. The human power is to be supplied by 40 “guides” sifting information, which will grow to 100 by the end of the year.

However, as I ask him, what happens if someone, who is not getting a good search result for their company out of Mahalo, decides to switch some of their SEO budget into bribing a Mahalo guide? His answer shows that Mahalo is perhaps a better thought out project than some critics have suggested…

Later on we discuss the entrepreneurial scene in Europe and the US right now.

Calacanis launches Mahalo Greenhouse at NMK Forum


BREAKING NEWS: The Internet is getting polluted, said Jason Calacanis today in his keynote speech today at NMK Forum 07. He calls it an 'environmental crisis' of bad blogging, gaming the system, SEO gone mad and "pay per post".

"The polluting SEO slime balls have destroyed our Internet and it's time to take it back" he said.

He introduced Mahalo.com to the UK internet industry, which is a new human powered search engine to filter the rubbish in search results into a comprehensible form.

He went on to make a new announcement about "Mahalo Greenhouse" – where anyone can help build the world's first search engines and users will get paid to do this.

If a user is accepted they get to start building age on, for instance, a history of the Martini.

Mahalos explains the concept more fully here:

"Today I'm thrilled to announce the Mahalo Greenhouse, a place where the public can build search results that-if accepted by our Guides-will be included in the Mahalo search index. Oh yeah, if we accept your search result we will pay you $10 to $15 per search result (the range is based on how many search results you've completed: more here). Now, if you're a disciple of Yochai and you absolutely will not work on a web-based project for money, we've got an amazing proposition for you: make the web better by writing spam-free search results and we'll donate your fees to the Wikimedia Foundation. So, you can make the world better 2x: first by making clean, spam- free search results and second by helping keep the Wikipedia running (those server bills ain't cheap!). We've earmarked up to $250,000 in donations to the Wikipedia this year."

Twitter: Talk is cheep

(First published: New Media Age, 17.05.07)

I got three points on my driving license because of Twitter. What can I say? I was driving. There was a speed camera. My phone started buzzing with the latest frenzied Twitters from the launch of the Apple iPhone. What could be my defence? “My Twitter feed made me speed, M’Lud”



Blogging never landed me in trouble with the law. So why has this new Web 2.0 service suddenly got everyone talking (and twittering) about Twitter?

First the basics. Twitter asks you to post “what you are doing” in 140 characters or less from either the site, instant message or mobile SMS and then it re-routes the “tweet” to whoever has subscribed to you. While you can limit this to just friends you know, most Twitterers make their tweets public. These range from the inane (“having a sandwich”) to the significant (“having a baby”). But the resulting deluge of often personal conversations held in public has even lead to the coining of a new term: “microblogging”. Now celebrities and even 2008 US presidential election candidate John Edwards has a Twitter page.

Twitter is apparently addictive. Drew Benvie, an early Twitter adopter and account director with Lewis PR, says: “In my first week using Twitter I was not able to walk in a straight line or make 20 yards without hitting a lamp post. I was hooked to my mobile.” His blogging social network had become cumbersome, “but Twitter had sparked it to life.”

He believes Twitter has “the potential to change the way consumers interact with one another through social networks,” with big implications for digital marketers. He thinks Twitter will take off in the UK because we’re SMS addicts and its much easier and faster than blogging.

Tom Hume, head of mobile applications developer Future Platforms, also likes Twitter’s minimalism: “It just seems to do one thing well”. Hume thinks Twitter is demonstrating the value of “expressive presence”, a concept which is likely to last longer than Twitter itself and is rapidly being added to the business plans of social media sites the world over.

Of course, there are Titter sceptics. Alfie Dennan, co-founder of MoblogUK says: “I’ve found it annoying and intrusive to instant messenger and also it’s annoying on email. The constant updates on it are complete rubbish.”

But despite those put off by the inanity of most Twitter posts, the concept has spread like wildfire. Social network Facebook recently upgraded its ‘status’ updates to do a similar thing to Twitter and now Bebo has launched a similar feature. SMS functionality for both sites can not be far off. The Europe-wide Jaiku.com, based in Helsinki, has a similar service to Twitter which is heavily mobile oriented. Germany, for one, has gone literally mad for Twitter, with at last count five startups copying Twitter’s business model. Some even now say Skype could incorporate such a service.

But Twitter is also experiencing growing pains. Julian Bond, a veteran UK social web application developer with Ecademy.com, says Twitter is having trouble deal with its growth, and: “Twitter is really pretty nasty for replies, dialogues and group conversations. It’s been quite laughable watching people try to use the “@name” convention to kludge round this.”

Twitter will also need to make money out of all this messaging at some point. According to eBiquity Research Group at the University of Maryland, there are on average over 40,000 public tweets each hour, many of them not just Instant messages SMS which needs to be paid for. Currently it is funded by its Obvious.com, owned by the wealthy founder of Blogger.com, Evan Williams. So will Twitter join the line of startups knocking on Google’s door waiting to be bought?

Biz Stone, an engineer at Obvious, and a co-founder of Twitter is nonchalant. “We’re very happy with this growth” he says. “SMS is one way that messages are sent and received via Twitter – other ways include over the web and using IM. Paying SMS fees is part of what we consider the cost of running this business.”

Stone says they are “considering options” on how to create revenues. For now the focus is is on growth and new features. When revenue model arrives it’ll be implemented with “a strong regard for what our users want,” he says.

Observers in the mobile advertising space are also wondering where Twitter will head. Richard Marshall, CEO of Rapid Mobile, which develops a mobile advertising platform, suggests that a random Twitter post about coffee “Sponsored by Starbucks” might be possible, but could well have a negative impact for the brand. He suggests that some brands will – unwisely – start to to pretend to be users and post in product related Twitters anonymously, known as ‘Astroturfing’ on the web.

Amelia Torode, head of digital strategy at VCCP, says “serving specific ads like gmail” might be a possible route, but sponsorship might be another route, where “brands *give* you free twitters for a day. Friday twitters could be brought to you in association with Coca Cola for example.”

Robin Grant, emerging media specialist at agency CMW Interactive wonders if “at this early stage, how marketers can sensibly exploit this highly personal new medium, aside from cheekily using Twitter’s API as a free SMS gateway.”

And perhaps this is a hint of what the future holds. Stone says it is essentially a “device agnostic message routing system. Mobile phones, API clients, IM, and the Web are all devices in the eyes of Twitter.” Steve Bowbrick, new media veteran and Twitter afficionado says that’s a major factor: “People are going to build businesses on top of it, just as they’re doing now on top of Google and other web 2.0 businesses.”

Certainly after Twitter released a simple open API, a plethora of applications have appeared. Twittervision.com superimposes public Twitters onto a Google map. Twitterholic.com is a site which tracks the popularity of Twitterers. TwitterVerse displays shows what Twitterers are doing today. TwitterBuzz shows what they are linking to. The list of applications is booming.

This innovation is already extending to marketing offers. “Woot.com on Twitter in the US sends people relevant deals they’ve opted in to receive, and there’s no reason eBay couldn’t do the same,” says Andy Wasef, strategist with Mediaedge:cia‘s mec:interaction division. “There’s also the location-based elements… By sharing their location to people based on GPS, targeted opt-in messages could be supplied to them.”

He thinks that if Twitter turns out to be more than “another digital fad… [then] there’ll be quite a few marketers looking at how they can utilise it. A lot of the heavy Twitter users are influencers and opt-in to receive messages relevant to them.”

In the meantime, most observers are simply sitting back and wondering at both the inane and the sometimes beguiling public Twittering going on. And the points on my license? Put it this way, I’ve served my time. Now, where was that Twitter feed…

• A Brief history of Twitter



Twitter, Inc. was born out of the offices of Obvious in March of 2006, a 10-person start-up in San Francisco called Obvious lead by Evan Williams, the well-known Silicon Valley entrepreneur who in the 1990s co-founder helped build Blogger.

How it works:



Twitter is a little like a MySpace-style community. You register your profile, but as well as posting your updates on the site, you add your instant messaging and mobile phone details. Twitter essentially asks that you post “what you are doing” in 140 characters or less. Your Twitter page includes everything posted by you and your conversations with your Twitter friends. Twitter is mainly a one-to-many medium. Although you can message people directly, most rarely do.

Key features:



You can update you Twitter page from the site itself, IM or SMS, or via a number of third party applications and widgets. Once registered you can follow anyone’s public tweets an have these sent to your prefered device. Plenty of news services now offer Twitter feeds, including the BBC and Al Jazeera News, though some more officially than others. It’s also possible to “subscribe” to service updates about the tube lines in London.

Other leading services offering similar functions



Bebo and Facebook were among the first social networks to allow people to ‘microblog’ their ‘current status’. Although Twitter is available almost globally, Germany seems to have taken it to heart as there are several clones including Frazr.com, Wamadu, Faybl, 1you, Sloggen, and Partnr.de. There are no Twitter clones in the UK, so far.

How Digital Media Screwed the Media Business

This is the text of a speech I gave at the PSFK London conference on Friday, June 1, 2007. It’s about how media owners now face some very harsh realities against both technology companies that put the power to publish in the hands of the ‘audience’ and smaller, cheaper to run media startups.

There’s a little story about the first stirring of how a new kind of cheap to produce, easy to distribute media would start to affect both the existing, traditional media and the society around it.

I’m not talking about what happened when blogs appeared on the scene in 1998/99.

Instead, let me take you back to one summer in early 19th century England, June 1817 to be precise.

At that time there was great poverty and distress created by the conflict between unplanned economic industrial expansion and the older way of artisan life.

On dozens of occasions weavers and other workers in the midlands and the north assembled with a few guns and home–made arms to attack the authorities that enforced rigid and terrible working conditions.

But nothing much came of these uprisings until a man called Jeremy Brandreth gathered 200 or 300 men from Pentridge to march on Nottingham.

The organisers connected with other groups and urged them to join the uprising.

But these other groups frequently failed to show up or were broken up by the authorities before they could get to any kind of assembly point. The distribution of the information was going out fast in some places and slowly in others.

The WEAK POINT in the organisation was always the LINKS between them.

Eventually the Pentridge group just marched on Nottingham alone. Brandreth was arrested with 36 others, imprisoned in London and hung. The event later became known as the Pentridge Uprising, and largely disappeared into obscurity afterwards.

BUT – only a few years later, with the invention of an affordable letter press, factory and farm workers were able to start affecting the course of public debate by printing and distributing weekly newsletters (including The Political Register or “The Two Penny Trash” and the Black Dwarf). These became a rallying point for insurgency, not just because they were printed and distributed, but these pamphlets – not unlike blogs – were read to the workers in ‘reading rooms’ (the RSS feed of its time).

Only two years later The Peterloo Massacre in 1819 began as a protest rally, which saw 60,000 people gathering to protest about their living standards, but was quelled by military action and saw eleven people killed and 400 wounded.

Those pamphlets had become the backbone of demonstrations that eventually led to the freedom of the press and parliamentary reform.

I’m no historian, but it would appear that this was one of the last times in history when the existing system of information distribution was undermined and radically changed by a new system. The new technology, the pamphlet, was CHEAPER, FASTER, and was not designed to support any kind of full-blown media enterprise – it was a means for social discourse and social change.

Digital media is cheaper to create, so it has the potential to undermine traditional media which, although creates a more polished product, is slower and more expensive. In the past these economic were masked because not enough people were online to consume digital media. But now they are.

We got a taste for the emergence of this trend last year when the UK Press Gazette magazine closed. It turns out that the magazine’s website, at 110,000 unique users a month, was much more popular than the printed version which only managed 4,639 in sales. Of course, all the effort went into the printed title.

Admittedly its readership – journalists – were used to getting it free so subscriptions were hard to maintain.

But it faced two key issues, which faces the media today. Firstly, a smaller, cheaper to run competitor – holdthefrontpage.co.uk – which could undercut it on classified advertising.

The second issue was a fundamental inability to realise that despite their relative success online, the high costs of a traditional media structure (sub editors, art editors, photographers, expensive offices, an MD on £133k, a finance director on £82k) could not be supported.

Anyone who has ever read an A-List blog like TechCrunch or Guido Fawkes, knows that online publishing long ago found in blogging a very low-cost, high impact model of publication – but like PG, few publishers are able to deal with the reality of this fact.

Meanwhile in the US and elsewhere, tiny blog sites are being networked together to create fascinating new media models of the future – Gawker, TechCrunch, PaidContent, GigaOm, Weblogs Inc, The Register. There remains many publishers who just don’t realise that their businesses – with parking slots for the CEO and lavish expense accounts for the ad sales staff – could one day be under threat from this “digital pamphleteering”.

But the Classified advertising world, long associated with the news media and a substantial revenue source, is not sticking around for old times sakes.

Craigslist – which has taken £60m of ad revenue a year out of the San Francisco newspaper market – and GumTree.com in the UK, are examples of how classified advertising is becoming virtually self-organising. No one needs media companies in the middle any more. In fact media companies can’t create the really smart tools for classifieds any more. That’s why over 60% of the online advertising market is in sectors like Google Adsense – a market created not by media people but by a technology company which in fact owns no media production of its own.

Craigslist is now in 192 cities, and only charges for want ads in three of them, and only $25. Craigslist competitors, like the New York Times, charge $300. Craigslist has little overheads. It employs 18 people in a run-down office in San Francisco and turns over about $10m a year. And there is no indication that he will sell his business to a “real” media company. The New York Times owns a massive building, employs around 10,000 people. You do the math.

Craigslist is not the only way people are connecting. Take for instance the growth of Freecycle on Yahoo Groups. All for free, all facilitating the exchange of goods, monetised for Yahoo! by contextual advertising.

Now, admittedly, the media business can get it right. Everyone considered it a very smart and shrewd move when Rupert Murdoch bought MySpace for $580m in 2005. Much cheaper than the $165bn Google paid for YouTube less than a year later.

And News Corp has been quick to try and monetise it put it in the service of the wider media group of which it is now part.

This April MySpace said it was joining forces with online recruitment site Simply Hired to launch what it claims will be the UK’s largest online jobs channel. The deal is expected to feed around 1m job ads to the local UK version of MySpace. IN the US Simply Hired aggregates around 5m job adverts for the social networking website.

However, the problem is, is that advertisers themselves tend not to want to pay. Advertising jobs is notoriously expensive for businesses so they typical try to route-around any obstacle, looking for a free or cheaper route.

How many people here are now getting frequent emails from their LinkedIn contacts advertising jobs? LinkedIn is a social network where in theory you have to pay to really promote a job, but people easily get around the restrictions.

Linked in is typical of social networking sites, which are simply putting buyers and sellers together.

The similar Facebook is also taking off in the UK. What are many of the groups being formed there? Ones where people can buy and sell goods and place advertising in Facebook Marketplace. All for free.

In the public sector too, Media business face increasing pressure because of the simple economics of digital publishing.

Job searches on the government’s Jobcentre Plus website have now reached a new high. The website now handles over 70m job searches a year, accounting for over 14% of the overall recruitment market in the UK.

Then there is the increasing threat from search engines.

Last month Simon Waldman, director of digital strategy for the Guardian Media Group and chairman of the Association of online publishing in the UK and group, pointed out that members had experienced 67 per cent growth in turnover of their digital businesses in 2006, with aggregate turnover for AOP organisations now standing at £575m – equivalent to the size of UK radio advertising.

However, he pointed to Google’s UK revenue of £872m (an 81 per cent increase year on year). In other words, the old media business is not in any way leading the market, it just happens to be part of it. You’ll note that Channel 4 made similar noises about Google’s increasing domination not long ago.

The old media business must now contend with technological giants, as well as nimble, low-cost start-ups on the west coast of the US and in Europe. And many of those startups are fascinated by, what? Classified-style advertising. In the US last week Trulia.com, a residential real estate search engine, closed $10m in financing. Here in the UK were have several startup equivalents, Zoomf.com, Nestoria, OneOneMap. All after the same revenues and all hungry for classified data to either upload or crawl on other sites. Rightmove has been quoted at £320m. Zubka.com, where you can advertise jobs and get a commission for recommending people is gaining in popularity. In areas like travel, startups like WAYN.com are happy to answer the need for travel coverage by allowing the users themselves to create it.

Waldman even predicted more court cases between publishers and search engines as media owners struggle to protect their intellectual property.

The trends highlighted in the US are being reflected here in the UK. The Pew Internet Foundation has shown that in the US there’s not a great appetite for reading newspapers among 18-30 years olds. Meanwhile, the existing newspaper readership is slowly dying off, newspapers are cutting expenses and sacking journalists.

The rot has even set in at the august Time magazine.

In January this year Time Inc said it would cut 289 jobs in an effort to rein in costs so it can invest more heavily in the Internet and new media. The cuts include 172 editorial employees. Last year it shed about 550 jobs. Ann Moore, Time Inc’s chief executive, told staff the world’s biggest publisher was making progress on the internet. But she added: “We need to continue to evolve to meet the cost pressures and challenges presented by our rapidly-shifting industry.” It’s also put 18 smaller magazines up for sale. The core of her strategy has been to take Time Inc’s best-known brands and move them on to the internet.

Of course, in this country newspapers and magazines are clamouring to try and make their web sites really work and earn more. Of course, if you’re Richard Desmond, owner of the Daily Express, it’s easy. He is happily upping his salary while largely ignoring the Internet. It probably won’t be around much longer as a result and will die with its readers fairly shortly no doubt.

Meanwhile the new readers, the new viewers, are going behind the back of the old media, and taking to each other. That’s what social media is, and there are plenty of technology firms – Digg, Blogger, Flickr, Vox, Facebook – which are happy to facilitate that conversation, and more importantly the real commerce that results from this. Some are even suggesting that Twitter, the very simple tool for public messaging across IM, SMS and Web could easily monetise via classifieds.

The media can of course fight back. The newspapers can make a case for being the right place to hold that conversation. Sites like The Guardian’s Comment is Free , or the Telegraph’s new “My Telegraph” blog initiative.

As Alan Rusbridger, the editor of the Guardian, said in a speech to the Royal Society of Arts last year: “This is the beginning of a complete inversion of the newspaper model. It’s not us telling you it’s us saying to you ‘why don’t you take part and we’ll give you the space.’ ” That’s Comment is Free.

The alternative is the New York Times, where comment sits behind a subscription firewall, which probably makes less than $10m dollars a year.

Now, granted, I doubt Comment is Free is making that much money either. At least it sounds like it’s on the right track.

But meanwhile, the media business still faces the problem of what to do when digital media just doesn’t bring in the same amount of money, even as more of their readers and viewers consume it.

Rusbridger has a graph he likes to trot out at speeches which plots the falling revenues of old media against the rising revenues of digital. The problem is, he points out, is that there is a black hole between the two where no one knows if the new revenues coming in will match the revenues of old, and thus maintain the old infrastructures.

In some respects all of this may be irrelevant to brands, marketing and advertising people. Who cares how the consumers get to learn about your product, right? It doesn’t have to be via a site or service run by an old media company, or one that perhaps also reports the news.

It could be via a cute campaign on a social networking site, or a clever YouTube video, which goes viral. The ‘old’ media business as was does not have a God-given right to survive, it needs to earn its keep and deliver the audience if it’s to survive.

On the cold facts, this is unarguable, but there is also the fact that for a society to work well, citizens have to be informed across a range of subjects. Politics and culture is always worse off with citizens who aren’t informed. Sure, we would try rely on ‘crowdsourcing’. We could hope that Digg.com could keep us up to date on current events in Iraq, because there are a lot of bloggers with a balanced view out in the green zone, right?

It may not be that extreme a result of course. It may be that the media business, and especially media businesses connected with news gathering, shrink to a new leaner, light-weight model propogated by the A-List bloggers of the world. Anything from less parking spaces for the board directors right down to getting rid of large offices, staff and capital outlays altogether.

Whatever happens, let’s hope the new models to come serve our democracies and our markets as well as the old model.

UK new media gears up for summer partying

UPDATE: Word on the street is that the Big Chill, the tres cool festival, will be running the club room at the event. That means some very heavyweight clubbing…

UK new media community Chinwag has announced it’s free summer party, planning to entertain more than 2,000 Web 2.0-era Internet people. It’s also signed some big name sponsors including Adobe and Channel 4, along with recruitment firm Purple, all keen no doubt to attract the UK’s digerati.

The brinks and BBQ event be at Imperial College Union in Kensington, London, and if past events are anything to go by it’s going to be a very big event for people working in the digital sector: encompassing 5 large rooms and the enclosed quadrangle, allowing a total capacity of 2,000 revellers.

Chinwag, which runs communities and events aimed at UK and European professionals in web, mobile and other interactive media, also plans to use make some innovative use of social networking tools and technologies to promote the event.

Here are the details, but note that you need to register on the site:

- Thursday 5th July 2007 @ 6.30pm (runs until 12:30am)

- Place: Imperial College Union, Beit Quad, Prince Consort Road, London, SW7 2BB

- Cost: Free.

- Includes: Summer BBQ, drinks, entertainment and lots of networking

Videocast: Interview with Sellaband.com


An interview with, first, upcoming band SecondPerson, the only UK band to win a deal via Sellaband, and then Pim Betist, Creative director, Sellaband at the first UK showcase of bands on the site.

Sellaband offers a model of free legal distribution of new music by enabling a direct relationship between developing artists and their fans. The site enables fans (�believers�) to buy $10 shares in unsigned bands to fund the professional recording and distribution of an album – including A&R, marketing and publishing. In a phrase, it’s a more overtly music-focused MySpace.

The people behind Sellaband are Pim Betist, Johan Vosmeijer and Dagmar Heijmans. Vosmeijer ran the labels Epic and Columbia for Sony Music in the Benelux region and recently launched Red Ink, a boutique label for SONY BMG. Heijmans is ex-EMI.

How does it work? Once the unsigned band has made $50,000 (or 5,000 fans pledging 10 bucks each) they get a professional CD cut. All the ad revenue from the site is shared between the bands, artists and SellaBand. Note, the band and fans’ share depends on the ‘market share’ of the band’s music, which is unspecified as yet.

The idea is that this crowd-sourcing takes away a lot of the risk associated with new music and offers a new way for bands to a) get the big record deal or b) keep their destiny in their own hands.

Videocast: Interview with Seatwave


This week tbites interviewed Joe Cohen, CEO of UK startup Seatwave, the fan-to-fan ticket exchange. You might think selling unwanted tickets to concerts and events is a market normally populated by ticket touts and those selling on eBay – and you'd be right. But Seatwave hopes to bring some order and safety to this market, estimated to be worth around £1bn a year in the UK alone. It has even given evidence to the Parliamentary Committee looking at ticket touting in the UK. This week it raised $8 million in Series B funding from Mangrove Capital Partners, Atlas Venture and Oliver Jung, one of Germany’s most successful early stage business angels. (Quicktime format)

Although it's not going to be a cake-walk. Viagogo.com, launched last year by Eric Baker of US ticket reseller StubHub, is a well funded competitor in the UK, having raised $20m from Index Ventures and others. It is also backed by lastminute.com founder Brent Hoberman and David Katz, head of Yahoo’s sports and entertainment unit.

Seatwave says it already has over 400,000 tickets for sale on the site, 20 times more than eBay. Hitwise stats put the site in the top 15 of the ticketing website category.