Netcasting Services Inc: Dot Com 2.0

250_dotcom.jpg
Image by: Peter Holst

Touring the Burnaby operations of Interactive Netcasting Services Inc. (Insinc) is like sifting through a dot-com archeological dig. At the core of the former warehouse is a massive server barn built during the heyday of the Internet boom in the late 1990s.

Racks of hardware bask in the green glow of blinking LED lights, cooled by an intricate grid of ventilation pipes fixed to the ceiling two floors above. On the second floor is a gallery of offices overlooking the brain centre below. In one corner sit the remains of a short-lived venture: live Internet radio. A swivel chair gathers dust in the darkened cubicle before a disused turntable and long-silent microphone. ¶ Around the corner, the building comes to life in the command centre that has recently brought all those servers back to life. A technician watches over a bank of video monitors displaying signals from around the world, pulled in by dozens of rooftop satellite dishes. This morning, images of horse races flicker across the screens as the bits and bytes are routed to the servers below, then webcast to Internet subscribers through Insinc’s mediaontap.com website.

Like a lot of Vancouver Internet companies, Insinc survived the dot-com implosion of 2000-2001 and is gearing up for round two. Also like a lot of others, it has taken away some hard-earned lessons in the hope that this time around the dot-com boom will have some staying power.

Observers could be excused for thinking it all looks a lot like the party of 1999. Kids in their basements are creating websites that sell for billions. Local start-ups are pitching unlikely plans to dominate global markets. A few stunning success stories – such as Google Inc.’s November 2006 purchase of YouTube for US$1.65 billion and News Corp.’s 2005 purchase of MySpace for US$580 million – have rekindled dreams of insane wealth built upon a “new economy.”

There’s an obvious difference this time around; investors aren’t lining up with bucketfuls of money to toss at dot-com start-ups. The dreamers are on their own, eking out a meager existence on seed funding until they either strike it big or go down in flames

There’s a slight change of script this time around: it’s not e-commerce and portals that will change the world, but social networking. Web 2.0, user-generated content, crowd sourcing: all the buzzwords suggest a new magic bullet with the promise of changing the world.

There’s an obvious difference this time around, though; investors aren’t lining up with bucketfuls of money to toss at dot-com start-ups. The dreamers are on their own, eking out a meager existence on seed funding until they either strike it big or go down in flames. Meanwhile, more wary entrepreneurs – many of whom, like Insinc president and CEO Hugh Dobbie, were burned the last time – are building from the ground up, struggling to forge new business models in the uncharted world of Internet broadcasting.

During the infamous free-for-all of 1999, it was all about attracting eyeballs; slap “dot com” at the end of your name and suddenly you weren’t just a company selling stuff, but a “portal” to a universe of millions. Just attract the eyeballs, the thinking went, and the dollars would follow. Of course, there were some infamous flame-outs: Vancouver’s clipclop.com, for instance, was going to be the worldwide meeting place for horse enthusiasts. But there were also some unlikely successes. Vancouver’s Communicate.com Inc. snapped up a portfolio of domain names in the late ’90s and built a business around each one: perfume.com, boxing.com and cricket.com are just a few of the approximately 900 websites it owns and operates today. Communicate sold a few of the more valuable names to see it through the rebuilding years of the early 2000s – including makeup.com and automobile.com – but incredibly enough, the company that still bills itself as a “targeted network of B2C and B2B websites” survives as a profitable OTC company, with earnings of US$374,000 on revenue of US$5.8 million in 2005 (the most recent year reported).

Then there was Onvia Inc., the small-business portal that set the bar for lofty evaluations at the height of the boom. The online seller of office supplies began in Vancouver as Megadepot.com in 1996, before moving to Seattle to become Onvia.com. Convinced that “bricks and mortar” retailers were history, investors ponied up US$240 million for Onvia’s IPO in March 2000 then promptly sent the stock price soaring to just shy of the US$80 mark. The company’s revenues have dropped, but it survived where many others did not. In July 2001, Onvia sold its Canadian division to Bell Canada, and today shares of the Washington-based company trade around the US$6 range. Onvia has never turned a profit, and lost US$6.9 million on revenue of US$14.7 million in 2005.

Today there is no shortage of dreamers claiming to have found the key to a new world order. Proponents of “citizen journalism” in particular – news gathered by average folk with cell phones and broadband links – spin a tale eerily reminiscent of the once-vaunted “Napster revolution.” Traditional journalism is so 20th century, proponents claim; the Internet has wrested control from the corporate monolith and placed power in the hands of the multitudes. And just as e-commerce once promised to free retailers from boring old bricks-and-mortar storefronts, citizen journalism will free news and commentary from boring old newspapers and broadcast networks. At least a couple of Vancouver enterprises have moved into the citizen journalism space. NowPublic Technologies Inc. was one of the first, and co-founder Leonard Brody is what passes for a seasoned veteran of dot-com enterprise. He worked for Onvia as VP of corporate development for Onvia Canada during the company’s astronomical IPO, and then went on to found Ipreo, a simulated stock market aimed at gleaning marketing data from virtual traders. (Ipreo was sold to MarketEra Corp. for an undisclosed price in 2003.)

The 35-year-old Brody sports a stylishly gelled coif and chunky retro glasses and talks a mile a minute. His dot-com pedigree shines through as he describes NowPublic’s “B-to-B-to-C” business model and explains that in today’s market for Web supremacy, “it’s completely about the social experience.” He professes to shun such buzzwords as “citizen journalist” (“sounds like ‘citizen dentist,’’’he quips) and “Web 2.0” then proceeds to sprinkle his spiel liberally with both phrases.

“Our focus is transactional revenue for content that passes through us,” Brody
explains. Translation: NowPublic intends to set itself up as an online news agency, selling content to traditional news media – content that is supplied by a loose-knit community of thousands of contributors worldwide. The recurring theme of his pitch: traditional news agencies that aren’t plugged into the digital social fabric are history.

A visit to NowPublic’s Gastown headquarters is reminiscent of the dot-com boom era, albeit on a much smaller scale. Those in the industry today make do with Ikea, rather than the Herman Miller furniture more common during the height of the dot-com spending spree. Nevertheless, the open-office design and the work-hard, party-hard ethos of a recently bygone era prevails. Brody shows off the rooftop deck overlooking the Gastown train yards and Burrard Inlet – great for barbecues, he points out – before leading a visitor to the exposed-brick office space. A dozen employees share a 30-foot-long communal table, tapping away at laptops beneath Ikea lamps.

By the end of 2007, Brody predicts, NowPublic will be handling contributions from 150,000 citizen journalists and 10,000 “elite journalists.” “Reuters has 2,500 and shrinking,” he boasts, choosing to ignore the distinction between 100,000 untrained
amateurs with cell-phone cameras and a pool of trained journalists. And never mind that Reuters Group PLC recently teamed up with Yahoo Inc. to launch its own “citizen journalist” service.

Vancouver’s orato.com is another up-and-comer in the citizen journalism space. Editor Paul Sullivan puts a fresh spin on the new medium, preferring the term “first-person journalism.” It’s a radical departure from the 20th-century model of objective, third-person reporting, he explains. “The point is to get everybody on the planet to say their piece,” he says.

And once everyone is online, bingo: a community of billions. “The thing that will make the difference is whether or not we reach a critical mass,” Sullivan says. Orato Media Corp.’s business plan rests on advertising revenue; once orato.com becomes the
go-to site for the online literati, the advertising dollars will start to flow. Until then, the site is financed by Vancouver restaurant and hotel owner Sam Yehia and a handful of other private investors.

Marcus Frind
ONE_MAN OPERATION: BCIT grad
Marcus Frind runs a multimillion-dollar
dating website from his West End
apartment

While NowPublic and Orato continue to pursue their dream of amassing millions of viewers, a few other local proponents of online social networking have already hit pay dirt. Of course, there was flickr.com, the photo-sharing website that was snapped up by Yahoo for an undisclosed price in March 2005. Another unlikely winner in the social networking gold rush is plentyoffish.com, an online dating service founded by Markus Frind.

Related Links
Leave Your Comment
If you'd like to post a comment, please or . When submitted, your comment will be queued for approval.

Please note: If you were registered on the old BCBusiness website, your account no longer exists. Please take five seconds to create a fresh account.
poll

Do you like networking at events?

Do you like networking at events?

Choices

Quote
Brian Wong, CEO of Kiip Inc.,
on being a 21-year-old CEO
S M T W T F S
 
 
1
 
2
 
3
 
4
 
5
 
6
 
7
 
8
 
9
 
10
 
11
 
12
 
13
 
14
 
15
 
16
 
17
 
18
 
19
 
20
 
21
 
22
 
23
 
24
 
25
 
26
 
27
 
28
 
29
 
30
 
31
 
 
 
Save over 50% off the newsstand price with a subscription to BCBusiness Magazine Subscribe Now
Other BCBusiness Features
Online and in print, BCBusiness articulates the trends and issues affecting business in BC. The award-winning BCBusiness, essential companion to corporate titans and entrepreneurs alike, delivers provocative BC business news and commentary on traditional and digital platforms: videos, articles, blogs, and columns addressing all aspects of business in BC, including management, marketing, leadership, innovation, technology, careers, human resources, finance, and entrepreneurship. Vancouver small business owners, managers, CEOs, and digital entrepreneurs prize BCBusiness for its signature mix of analysis and opinion on the issues and people shaping business in BC. Join BCBusiness on Twitter, Facebook, and LinkedIn - and at the premier West Coast business networking events, like BC's Top 100 Companies, Entrepreneur of the Year, BC's Top Innovators, and Best Companies to Work for in BC.