David Hornik and Rebecca Lynn check out Geeklist
Reuben Katz presents his achievement-based network for developers
Read more...This episode is brought to you by Liquid Scenarios. We're in the early innings of search, and there's much innovation to be done. At 10 years old, Google has defined the way people find information. Type in a keyword and receive a list of results. It's in those results that they try to convey as much information as they can, pixel by pixel. But will our children search differently? Will pictures speak louder than words? In this segment, we evaluate Searchme, a startup trying to improve our search experience by creating a visual overlay.
Who better to be our guest host, but Google's Marissa Mayer, VP of search experience and products. This is the second time Mayer was our host.
Searchme is a visual search engine that allows visitors to browse images of Web pages. The experience is like flipping through a magazine, and visually, it's similar to the scrolling interface of iTunes on an iPhone. There's also a little magnifying glass on each image that can be used to enlarge the content.
Here are some observations, suggestions and advice, Mayer and Ezra Roizen (Vator Box regular and digital media investment banker) made.
- Browsing thumbnail images of a Web site page is useful when looking though pages previously visited. It may be the case that you can find a page faster, when flipping through images of pages that are familiar vs. reading snippets of text.
- Visual search makes sense, when the UI is relevant to the problem. For instance, searching for fashion designs is likely a better experience through visual search over the typical headline/text search
- Visual search doesn't seem to serve a person's searching needs when searching for something new and unknown, and data is relevant. Seeing a picture of a Web page isn't as useful as seeing quick snippets of relevant information surfaced to the top.
- Visual search may not work well on a mobile phone. It's hard to understand or see the content in a thumbnail on a full-sized computer screen, making thumbnails on mobile phones even harder to read. As Roizen put it: "Taking a screen that’s scrunched on a regular screen and scrunching it down into a smaller screen is not going to work."
- Searchme seems to be applying a deep-content experience to what's typically a scanning type of model
- The Searchme experience is a lean-back experience
- Mark Kvamme, Sequoia Parner, was quoted saying this about Searchme, "Searchme allows you to bring brand advertising back into search." Sequoia is an investor in Searchme. Both Roizen and Mayer disagree that branded advertising is should be in search-results pages. Here's how Roizen put it: "Why would you want to put brand advertising in the search. It’s the only place, you can have act-now advertising; it’s the only place click-through maters…. Taking the CPC out of search, throwing up banner ads, you have completely train-wrecked the business model you originally set out to create." Here's how Mayer put it: "If someone typed in golf clubs, why not serve them an ad for golf clubs... Why abstract that to a broader category of sports and serve them a random sports ad…. just sell them golf clubs."
- It’s often easier to get branded advertisers to advertiser against categories rather than keywords. But if SearchMe optimizes for categories, they will lose an element of relevance. Categories are a level of abstraction that is not useful to the end-user experience
Now, for our Liquid Scenarios Minute, a time where we look at exit strategies and valuation scenarios provide by our sponsor, Liquid Scenarios.
Searchme raised a total of nearly $44 million, with one of the most successful search engine investors, Sequoia Capital, who participated in each of Searchme's five rounds since the company's inception. Both Searchme's founder, Randy Adams, who led the design team for Adobe's Acrobat, and chairman Mark Kvamme, a partner at Sequoia, invested personally in Searchme's recent round of financing.
This speaks highly of their belief in the venture. Searchme already has one million uniques going to its site, with longer average stays than typical search engines. The iPhone version became available Nov 19. Liquid Scenarios estimates it could grow to over one million users by Christmas. It's possible that growth in Searchme's mobile audience could drive users to its desktop version. Moreover, since the mobile and video search are the higher growth, hgher-margin segments today, the company should command a higher premium for each user and potentially be at a run-rate of $50 million to $75 million within the next 12 to 18 months.
At that rate, the most strategic fit might be with its development partner, Adobe. Assuming Adobe's pricing multiples return to normal, a stock deal to acquire SearchMe for $500 million would result in just over 2% dilution to Adobe holders, but potentially return five times that in appreciation within three years. Under that scenario, each of Searchme's existing investors would also receive return multiples consistent with venture-fund-return targets.
That's the Liquid Scenarios Minute.
(Note: Mayer was our guest for a Vator Box segment on Woome. Watch for upcoming episodes, where she helps us evaluate Appssavvy and Viewdle. Our next guest host will be Erik Stuart, director of corporate strategy at eBay.)
Founder and CEO of Vator, a media and research firm for entrepreneurs and investors; Managing Director of Vator Health Fund; Co-Founder of Invent Health; Author and award-winning journalist.
All author postsReuben Katz presents his achievement-based network for developers
Read more...Rebeccan Lynn and David Hornik are guests host on Vator Box
Read more...A look at an ad solutions to help publishers monetize outbound links
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WooMe is an online speed dating platorm that leverages cutting edge in-browser voip and video technology to enable users to meet new people in a fast, fun and free fashion. Meet five people in five minutes in live topical speed sessions such as "Vator.tv lovers in Los Angeles."
WooMe brings the speed dating craze online and extends it to let users meet new people live in fast, fun and free speed sessions. There are no long forms or lengthy profile descriptions, simply find a session that interests you and meet 5 people in 5 minutes. Or, create your own sessions based on your interests, such as "TechCrunch Readers in San Fran". Invite friends or strangers to play with you and immediately decide if you are woo'd by someone. WooMe's in-browser video and voice capability delivers a live interactive experience where users play for fun, to hook up, or just meet new people around shared interests. There are no tedious profiles, no software to download, and best of all it's free.
Backed by Niklas Zennström's (Skype Founder) Atomico Investments, the original investors in Skype (Mangrove Capital), and Klaus Hommels (Europe's Investor of the Year, 2006), WooMe is catapulting the $1 billion+ speed dating market into the online world. With WooMe, meeting people online is transformed into a live interactive experience that makes sifting through contrived profiles a thing of the past.
Founded in 2006, WooMe's management team has experience in bringing innovative web applications to market for companies including: AltaVista, CMGI, BT, Accenture, Qwest, Shopzilla, Trilogy. Stephen Stokols, Co-Founder/CEO, successfully sold an internet start-up and went on to become BT's youngest VP, growing their eCommerce revenues over 300% to over $1bn in his first 12 months. George Berkowski, Co-Founder/Product Director, brings extensive technical and marketing experience in the online space and in outer space (he played a role in sending the first tourist to the Space Station).
Startup/Business
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Viewdle is about capture in the moment. We’re focused on enabling consumers to manage, tag, and share their media as they create it, anywhere.
Viewdle was founded in 2007, with the vision of helping people share and tag all of their photos and videos on any media creation device - from servers to laptops to mobile phones - through visual analysis and facial recognition technology.
Startup/Business
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Searchme lets you see what you’re searching for. As you start typing, categories appear that relate to your query. Choose a category, and you’ll see pictures of web pages that answer your search. You can review these pages quickly to find just the information you’re looking for, before you click through.
We’re just getting started on our first step towards creating an entirely new way to search the Web. The quality of our results will vary as we make Searchme better and better. If you have comments or suggestions we’d love to hear from you. We love feedback.
We’re also looking for more great people to join our team, as well as ways to partner with companies to deliver more value to our users. And, of course, we’re always happy to chat with the press.
Thanks for using Searchme!
Startup/Business
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appssavvy is a mobile advertising technology company with the mission of rethinking the delivery and reception of advertising. Focused on activity, appssavvy redefines how brands reach consumers, creates native ad experiences for publishers, and most importantly, improves advertising through data and insights about real-time behavior.
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Joined Vator on
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Advisor-to and commenter-on emerging ventures