Google

Small businesses as targets of the SaaS market

Establishing the internet as a software platform is one of the large untapped markets. Traditional software runs on the desktop and comes shipped in packages that are often abundant in functionality that is not necessarily needed by users.

The promise here is to enter a market the is significant in terms of size and yet "undiscovered" by traditional software vendors to a large extent. Google is a copany that is on the forefront of attcking this market. The copmany has launched Google Apps, a suite of online productivity tools, with aparticular aim to gain market share from Microsoft's office suite.

Late adopters, late adopters - an example...

In one of my last posts I have talked about the importance of attracting late adopters to an online service. Late adopters are usually very loyal customers and show a high reluctance of switching to other services once a product allows them to get simple tasks done effectively. In the post, I highlighted how important it is that this audience is presented a clear use case that is ideally related to "real world" routines or activities. The best case thereof is email: Email can be very well related to traditional mail - there are inboxes, outboxes, messages, each message has a recipient and a sender. That's it.

I've just ran by a study by hitwise intelligence, a company that offers web analytics. The post looks at the question whether Yahoo! would be worth more in parts than as a single entity. This is not a new discussion but right now becomes another boost the the Microhoo negotiations. Instead of picking up the same question I'd rather highlight that this chart quite interestingly shows the late adopters service consumption behavior.

Mail is big, as explained a concept that anyone understands. Another concept that anyone understands is that of the start page: What page is loaded once you start your browser. Then there is search: enter a search keyword and receive results - easy to understand. All other properties are not the mass market champions.

Where contextual ads can go wrong

I was recently surfing for some information on Saas when it hit me again: Ads do bug me! Imagine I had Google ads on my site where I talk about serious stuff. In the exapmle below, the issues are on Saas , cost and other "clean" stuff. Suddenly, al my visitors see an add that offers me perfect russian women...

ad-sense should provide useful links, if it doesn't, choose well who you advertise with!

What can destroy valuable content more than unprecise ads? Be aware of that while choosing your advertising strategy.

Why virtual worlds should matter for executives

The following post is taken 1:1 fromGigaOm. I did so not not to claim the content my own but because I think the post is so essential that it must be reproduced in its entirety, in particular including the links contained in the post. Should this offend any copyright holders I will take this post down immediately after being contacted.

So here we go, James Wagner au on why virutal worlds matter for businesses:

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