Tag Archives: IDG Ventures LLP

Upstarts: MP3

Tunes on the Web A Little Net Music The way we listen to music is about to change. Again. But as usual, where there’s change, there’s start-up opportunity. Before 1997, MP3 was a little-known technology that computer geeks used to download compressed music files free off the Internet. But Internet time moves fast — so fast that by 1998 large pockets of the general public and the mainstream media were talking about MP3, not to mention taking advantage of it. At first the music moguls were afraid of MP3. Protecting copyrights was hard enough without easily accessible Web files enabling any old joes to access — and copy — their favorite music. But when the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) started filing lawsuits against the Web sites and technology companies responsible for providing that capability, it was clear the industry had started to take MP3 seriously. Music on the Web was going to be big. Today on the Internet, only the word sex generates more searches than the term MP3 does. Musically inclined Web surfers can purchase their favorite CDs and listen to the radio online, download their favorite songs, and even custom design CDs. And wouldn’t you know it, start-ups have begun springing up in a variety of niches to capitalize on the digital-music revolution. Hey, kids — what’s that song? During that rare block of commercial- and chat-free music on your favorite radio station, you hear that song. You know, that song, the one you hum all day during work. The one you just have to own. If only the DJ would stop the music long enough to tell you the name of that song. But alas, the music continues without interruption, and you’re left with a void in your CD library, and the record company with a void in its sales. That happened to Robert Goldman just often enough for him to identify a gap in the retail music market. Goldman, who has a degree in psychology, studied impulse buying — specifically, what drives consumers to purchase CDs. His findings suggest that the radio generates 95% of the impulse for buying music. “You listen to the radio, and if you like what you hear, you’re going to buy it,” Goldman says. That is, of course, if you know what you’re listening to. And that’s where GetMedia Inc., Goldman’s start-up, based in San Jose, Calif., comes in. Noting the emergence of Internet music sites and the popularity of E-commerce, Goldman saw the Web as the perfect environment to track radio-station play lists in. In 1997 he gathered a development team to create technology that would help radio listeners follow what their favorite stations were playing in real time. Further, he embedded a commerce option in it so listeners could purchase music directly from their trusted radio stations, bringing the point of purchase directly to the point of impulse. GetMedia launched its Web service in May 1999 and went live on a handful of stations, including Mix 93.3, the CBS/Infinity Broadcasting station in Kansas City, Mo., which started using the service in November. Now when Mix 93.3 FM broadcasts, say, “Learn to Fly,” a popular single from the band Foo Fighters, listeners can tune their Internet browsers to www.Mix93.com, click on the “Now Playing” link, and find a list of recently played songs, with their album titles and the time Mix 93.3 played them. Play lists also feature “info” icons next to each listing, where, for instance, Foo Fighters fans can get in-depth information about the band’s latest album, There Is Nothing Left to Lose. Site visitors can even sample songs from the CD. Of course, the real key to this application is the “Buy” icon. After just a few clicks and a credit-card number, GetMedia will ship There Is Nothing Left to Lose to a Mix 93.3 listener, and the station will pick up some extra cash. “This lets the radio station make money on music they already play for free,” Goldman says. GetMedia takes a percentage of each sale — a revenue model similar to that of major credit-card companies. And unlike online music retailers, GetMedia taps into established radio-station audiences and doesn’t need to spend millions on driving traffic to its own site. So far, 35 radio stations throughout the country have gone live with the service. Some 2,200 stations are on GetMedia’s waiting list, but Goldman doesn’t have the resources to set them up as fast as he’d like. Last September, GetMedia got some help to the tune of $10 million in venture capital from IDG Ventures, Menlo Ventures, and the Rosewood Stone Group. Goldman plans to use that cash to beef up his 60-person staff and outfit those stations awaiting the service. Record label goes digital There’s a part of the music industry that thrives on rock-and-roll renegades that lead the way to sweeping change. The current indie darling of the Internet music scene is Al Teller, who a few years ago was anything but independent. Since receiving two engineering degrees from Columbia and an M.B.A. from Harvard, Teller has had a 30-year career that includes stints as the head of MCA Music Entertainment Group and president of CBS Records. In February 1999, Teller took the plunge with his own capital and launched Atomic Pop, a fusion of music, radio, video games, and television that all comes together at www.atomicpop.com in what looks to be a model for the record label of the future. Teller’s label offers artists a better deal than they can get from the major record labels. Artists can use the site for promotion and distribution, and to supplement traditional retail channels with online sales. “The basic deal is a 50-50 split of the profits,” Teller says. “Majors’ star royalty is roughly 20% of retail price. Per unit, with us, artists can make twice what they’re making at the major labels.” By cutting the multilayered fat of giant marketing and promotions divisions, the 30-employee Atomic Pop hopes it can enjoy heftier margins than the majors do. This new way of doing business was music to the ears of rap giants Public Enemy, the first group that signed with Atomic Pop. Last May, Atomic Pop promoted Public Enemy’s new album, There’s a Poison Goin’ On, and sold it on the site for $10 before it was available in stores. Teller also sold digital downloads of the record for $8, a price that would be tough for majors and retailers to match. The real buzz for the album came with the prerelease single, which some 300,000 fans downloaded — free. Although Atomic Pop doesn’t have the marketing strength that major labels use to get new singles on the radio and on MTV, Teller notes that fans at his site have actively sought the song out instead of simply hearing it passively. “You have to proactively download a single,” he says. So far, There’s a Poison Goin’ On has sold about 90,000 copies — 10,000 of which were sold on the Internet. “And that ratio is going to change,” Teller promises. Still, those numbers represent about half the sales of Public Enemy’s previous albums. Teller blames the shortfall on a less extensive concert tour surrounding the new release. But he remains optimistic about future sales. Typically, he says, record sales fall off after promotional efforts cease. “We will continue to market and promote the record for months to come. The traditional labels will walk away from records after a short period of time.” For its first full year of business Atomic Pop saw revenues of about $2 million. The company has yet to turn a profit, but Teller anticipates one soon. By signing new groups such as the Gas Giants and creating a robust list of releases, Atomic Pop hopes to be aggressive in 2000. The company has also acquired the digital rights to 4AD — the British indie superlabel that boasts such 1980s punk stars as the Pixies and Bauhaus. Add that to its $10-million capital infusion from New Valley Corp. and a recent partnership with Microsoft, and Atomic Pop isn’t looking so indie anymore. The MP3 piracy police The RIAA is getting serious about piracy. It recently filed numerous lawsuits against music-related upstarts, claiming they’ve created a black market for illegal copies of digital music. But not everyone online is on the RIAA’s bad side. A handful of savvy start-ups have joined the antipiracy brigade by offering secure online distribution and easy-to-use licensing as a legal alternative to the MP3 free-for-all. Reciprocal Inc., headquartered in Buffalo, N.Y., operates on a simple principle: all music, whether it’s on CD, the Internet, or the Paleolithic eight-track tape, comes with an implicit license agreement. “You can’t legally make 1,000 CD copies and sell them on the street,” says Reciprocal senior vice-president Howard Singer. But online, it’s a different story. Music is far too easy to copy and distribute illegally, and sometimes consumers are entirely unaware of their own illegal activity. “You can buy a song from Emusic.com, put it on your computer, post it on a Web page, and send it to your friends,” says Singer. “There’s no technology in place to put any speed bumps in the way of doing that. And the major record labels don’t find that satisfactory.” Think of Reciprocal as a speed bump. It enables record labels to attach conditions to downloading and distributing protected intellectual property. Reciprocal handles the creation, storage, and issuing of licenses for digital property such as songs and research reports. Reciprocal then reports back to the content owners (record companies or publishing houses) on those transactions. The content owners in turn pay the recording artists any royalties due. Reciprocal started out as part of Softbank Corp., a Japanese holding company with interest in more than 120 Internet companies. It spun out in 1997 and has diversified its offerings to include services for the text- and software-publishing communities. But with the proliferation of digital music distribution, the market for such a service in music alone is huge. The concept has been a hit with the investment community. Last November, Reciprocal completed a $35-million round of mezzanine financing that included technology- and music-industry heavyweights like Hewlett-Packard, Xerox, and TVT Records. Microsoft had even made its own investment of $15 million in March 1999. Singer believes that although music currently represents the lion’s share of Reciprocal’s transaction-based revenues, its text-publishing division may ultimately become the company’s biggest moneymaker. And that’s just a simple matter of price point. Textbooks and research reports can cost buyers anywhere from $80 to $4,000. Even if consumers make a practice of downloading entire albums, Singer reminds us, “you’re still looking at a $10 to $15 item.” What the Heck Is MP3? Unless you’re a techie or a teen, you may not be familiar with MP3, the hot new method of music distribution. With MP3 the artist records his or her music in digital form and uploads the file for that music onto the Web. Consumers can then download files for their favorite tunes onto their computers and enjoy the music through their home sound systems. They can even store the files on special MP3 listening devices for their mobile listening pleasure. Q& A Music to Your Ears? To help sift through the hype surrounding MP3 technology and music on the Internet, Inc. enlisted Joanne Marino, CEO and editor-in-chief of Webnoize, a research company and news outlet based in Stoneham, Mass., that focuses on digital entertainment. Inc.: What are the basic challenges in the MP3 marketplace? Marino: The fundamental problem is that it’s hard to create a viable business in an environment where music is being given away for free. Young consumers are active shoppers and are easily swapping files. It makes it a tough environment to break into and actually make money. There are a lot of hot new music start-ups, and I don’t know if a lot of them will make it through the end of the year. Inc.: So who’s going to last? Marino: The businesses that are the most exciting in the long term are the ones that are able to build more meaningful relationships with the creators and consumers. They might offer higher royalties or increased market reach to the artist and maybe give consumers the ability to share music and information with other listeners. I’d be very wary of the so-called MP3 portals that are aggregating all these artists in one place but are not adding anything to the users’ experience. Inc.: Will we see a lot of acquisitions? Marino: A lot of these companies will have no choice but to sell. They don’t have viable business models. Right now, it’s a race. If you have the money and the means to make it through the full marathon, then you’ll do all right. A lot of these companies don’t have any revenues coming in, and they’ll either get bought or go bankrupt. You can’t give everything away just to get people to pay attention to you. Inc.: Do you think we’ll be listening to CDs in 10 years? Marino: No. We’re going to be wearing our music like our clothing. Our experience is going to be mobile, it’s going to be personal, and it’s going to be intimate. But for us to get these kinds of services, we’re going to have to put up with a lot more marketing and advertising. That’s the catch-22. Please e-mail your comments to editors@inc.com.

Cheap Talk

Money What your phone company won’t tell you: these new Web sites promise to shrink your long-distance and wireless bills Dr. JoAnne Duffy knows how to scout out a bargain. She finds 10-foot Christmas trees for $35, bargain-basement prices on designer suits, and two-for-one airfare deals to Ireland. This Baltimore-based clinical psychologist honed her shopping skills in the 1980s when she was a cash-strapped graduate student. But today, when it comes to buying cell-phone service, she’s mystified. Duffy, who racks up monthly phone bills of about $150, says she’d like to investigate which cellular plan is best but that as a private practitioner she’s pressed for time. Case in point: she recently spent 40 minutes on the phone with Bell Atlantic Mobile — almost as much time as she spends with a client — regarding a $25 charge on her bill that she didn’t recognize. Needless to say, Duffy can’t afford many more 40-minute bill problems. “My Ph.D. didn’t cover cellular science,” says Duffy. When she shops for other items, Duffy knows what she’s looking for and can determine if she’s getting a good deal. With cell-phone service, though, she’s not sure if she should be comparing monthly rates or price per minute. It shouldn’t take a Ph.D. to figure out a telephone bill. Yet Duffy and countless business owners find themselves lost in a maze of roaming charges, peak and off-peak rates, and activation fees. Long-distance plans are no better. The recent onslaught of long-distance price wars has left most people confused about whether to choose Sprint Nickel Nights or AT&T’s One Rate 7¢ Plan — or service from a less well known long-distance reseller. A new breed of Web sites wants to help small-business owners ascertain how to get the best deals on everything from wireless to long distance to calling cards. Point.com, Decide.com, eSpoke.com, LetsTalk.com, Telezoo.com, Telstreet.com, Simplexity.com, and others that are popping up as fast as you can say “venture capital” provide free search engines into which customers enter information about their monthly calling habits. The sites then recommend wireless or long-distance plans that should suit a customer’s specific needs. Customers can order many of the recommended plans right on the sites. And they may well want to do so to cut down on one of the biggest expenses small businesses incur. The Yankee Group reports that businesses employing from 2 to 99 people spend an average of $220 a month for phone service; businesses with 100 to 499 employees spend about $2,800. Larger companies can spend less per employee, since they can negotiate better deals directly with carriers. Smaller businesses don’t have that luxury. “By just being on the wrong plan, you could end up leaving literally hundreds of dollars on the table,” says Roy Prasad, president and CEO of Decide.com. When Carol Newton visited eSpoke.com, she discovered she was leaving more than $500 on the table every month. The CEO of Priority Search Partners, a $2-million Redondo Beach, Calif., company that matches IS professionals with contract and permanent work, Newton was spending about $700 a month on long-distance calls. For only $165 she could get the same service from UniDial, a carrier that eSpoke.com identified. Newton had never heard of UniDial, but the eSpoke site informed her that the service provider, which has 230,000 customers and $215 million in revenues, resells service from MCI, Sprint, and others. “We figured, they’re solid; they’re not going to be disappearing tomorrow,” Newton says. She estimates that by switching carriers, Priority Search Partners will save from $5,000 to $6,000 yearly. She’ll use some of the savings to get a toll-free number. We chose to test the best of the dozen-plus sites that purport to help customers make informed telecom choices. With assistance from Michael Lauricella, an analyst at the Yankee Group, we first compiled an extensive list of sites. We narrowed the list by choosing only those sites that were already up and running and through which customers can purchase some services. We eliminated all sites backed by telecom companies, because those sites typically sell plans from only one or two carriers. Finally, we eliminated any site through which we could not contact a human being, figuring that if the site didn’t return our E-mail messages or phone calls, it probably wouldn’t return yours either. To test the sites, we ran the phone bills from a variety of growing businesses through the sites’ search engines and came up with recommendations for economical calling plans. The wireless sites that made the cut are Point.com, Decide.com, LetsTalk.com, Simplexity.com, Telstreet.com, and Telezoo.com. Similarly, Decide.com, Simplexity.com, eSpoke.com, and Telezoo.com made the cut for long-distance service. Some of the sites also compare Internet services and calling cards. (See “The Players,” below.) To provide services free to Internet surfers, the sites charge some or all of the carriers listed in their search engines. When a customer signs up with a carrier at a particular site, the carrier pays the site a one-time referral fee or 5% to 20% of the customer’s monthly bill. Execs running these sites are quick to point out that even though the sites make money from service providers, they remain unbiased. (The execs make that claim despite the fact that some carriers pay higher commissions than others, making it tempting for a site to recommend one carrier’s offerings over those of its competitors.) And some sites, in an effort to be completely neutral, list a huge gamut of offerings, regardless of whether the carriers are paying clients or not. ESpoke.com, Simplexity.com, Telezoo.com, LetsTalk.com, and Telstreet.com carry only service providers with whom they’ve negotiated agreements. Decide.com and Point.com, on the other hand, carry plans from a wide range of service providers, whether or not they take commissions from them. “We have the largest database of all the available plans, whether we have a business relationship or not,” says Decide.com’s Prasad. (Decide.com’s claims of neutrality were true: in our tests, both Decide.com and Point.com recommended some providers that don’t pay any commissions to their sites.) Another variation among the sites is ease of use. All the wireless sites examine how many minutes a customer requires and how much he or she wants to spend. Telstreet.com and Simplexity.com pull up plans based on those two factors and the customer’s location, but it’s up to customers to discern which plan best fits their needs. In addition to using minutes and price as criteria, Point.com also asks customers to choose between analog or digital service and to select features such as prepaid plans, no cancellation fees, or a one-year service contract. At LetsTalk.com, customers can sort by features such as voice mail, caller ID, text messaging, and E-mail services. Decide.com was the easiest site to use. It poses a series of questions including what percentage of calls are long-distance and what percentage of calls the customer places outside the home-service area. Then it recommends up to 10 plans, listing its top recommendation first. Decide.com and eSpoke.com allow for quick comparisons or detailed comparisons of individual calls on long-distance bills. The easiest and most accurate way to evaluate long-distance bills is to plug in the number of interstate, intrastate, off-peak, and peak minutes from a recent phone bill. Plugging in individual phone calls at both sites is time-consuming, however, and in our trials turned out to be a less accurate method of evaluating total cost. ESpoke.com seems to understand that this process can be cumbersome. To make the process easier, it offers a service through which customers can fax or mail in their most recent long-distance bill; eSpoke.com will analyze the bill within an hour of receiving it and send its results out by E-mail. While most of the sites let customers figure out how much they can save on wireless or long-distance phone bills immediately, Telezoo.com and Simplexity.com offer “request a quote” services. To use those programs, submit your phone bill or your calling requirements to the site and request bids from a variety of carriers. Such a service can be ideal for companies with complex and costly telecom needs. Elias Shams, Telezoo.com’s chief zookeeper (yep, that’s what this company calls its CEO), says companies that spend more than $1,000 per month are most likely to benefit from requesting quotes. Take Timothy Wierbinski, for example. When the communications engineer needed to order a T1 line from Hawaii to Alexandria, Va., he didn’t know whom to call. Wierbinski, who works for Science Applications International Corp., in Tyson’s Corner, Va., turned to Telezoo.com and entered his request. “Within an hour somebody from Telezoo had called me back to get more details,” he says. The carriers, unfortunately, didn’t respond as rapidly as the Web site had; it took a couple of weeks for Wierbinski to receive a few bids. In the interim, he found Hawaiian carriers listed on Telezoo.com and called them himself. Regardless of which services they offer, all the sites provide easy-to-reach customer service. Telstreet.com, LetsTalk.com, Simplexity.com, Point.com, and Decide.com have toll-free numbers. The two sites we tested that don’t have toll-free numbers offer cyberservice: Telezoo.com provides online support through LivePerson.com — a real-time chat application. Customers click an on-screen button and choose a customer-service rep. It took less than a minute for the rep to join the online chat; he answered our question (about the request-a-quote service) immediately. ESpoke.com provides support only by E-mail but answered our question within an hour and a half. Both Telezoo.com and eSpoke.com list the phone numbers of corporate headquarters so customers can call (albeit for a fee) if need be. To take these sites for a test-drive, Inc. Technology asked three growing companies — MBA FreeAgents.com, WebCT, and eOriginal — each to submit one month’s long-distance phone bill. We plugged the information from those bills into eSpoke.com and Decide.com. (Simplexity.com’s long-distance portion wasn’t yet operating at press time, and we didn’t use Telezoo.com since it doesn’t offer any immediate price-comparison tools.) In addition, we entered information from one of eOriginal’s cellular-service bills into Simplexity.com, Telstreet.com, Decide.com, Point.com, and LetsTalk.com. (See the charts below.) MBA FreeAgents.com places experienced MBAs with start-up and other companies that need high-level employees. MBA FreeAgents.com is a fast-growing company with three full-time employees and seven part-timers. CEO Rob Steir works from his home in New York City and spends about $235 a month on long-distance calls with MCI WorldCom. When Steir first signed up with MCI WorldCom, he snagged a 12-cent-per-minute rate. At the time, Steir recalls, the provider promised 10,000 airline miles along with a 20% rebate if he stuck with the plan for a year. Steir knew there were cheaper per-minute rates available, but he resisted the advances of other carriers because he figured he was getting a good deal with the rebate and the miles. At year-end, however, MCI gave him only the airline miles, saying that he had chosen that option over the rebate. Steir says he feels misled by MCI, especially since his 20% rebate would have amounted to about $250 — more than a month’s long-distance bill. As a result, Steir was more than ready to dump MCI for another provider — if he could find a better deal. (An MCI spokesperson says that Steir’s account is being credited to correct the error.) And did he ever find a deal. ESpoke.com pulled up the lowest-priced plan — $102.24 per month, through a carrier called RSL Communications. Decide.com came in slightly higher, with a total estimated monthly cost at TTI National Inc. of $114.01. Those sites take usage patterns into account and occasionally turn up surprisingly useful information. For example, Decide.com also lists MCI WorldCom’s 5¢ Everyday plan — which might seem like a bargain. But after analyzing Steir’s calling pattern, Decide.com estimated that MBA FreeAgents.com would spend $283.13 per month with MCI WorldCom — no bargain at all. A larger company like WebCT, which builds systems that colleges use to create online classes, has more complex telecom needs. The company more than tripled in size, from 60 employees last fall (split between offices in Peabody, Mass., and Vancouver, British Columbia) to more than 200 today. The company counts millions of student users in 100,000 courses at 1,100-plus colleges and universities in more than 40 countries. “From a sales perspective, we need to make a high volume of calls around the world, 24 hours a day,” says Peter Segall, vice-president for sales and strategic partnerships at WebCT. “We need a plan that’s flexible enough so that as we see patterns about time of day emerge, or we see patterns about regions emerge, we can minimize our expenses by getting discounts in those categories.” In addition, because it’s growing so quickly, WebCT doesn’t want to get locked into any long-term contracts. Currently, WebCT uses Bell Atlantic for its in-state toll calls and American Long Lines for its state-to-state and international calls. The company spends about $1,347 a month on in-state, state-to-state, and international calls for its headquarters in Peabody. ESpoke.com came up with the cheapest deal — RSL’s Alliance plan, which would cost WebCT $986.38. Still, that may not be the best that WebCT can do. Bobby Martyna, president and CEO of eSpoke, says its site is optimized for companies with fewer than 20 employees. (Decide.com says it can handle phone bills from companies with up to 100 employees.) Since WebCT receives complicated 70-plus-page telephone bills each month, it might benefit from the customized bids that Telezoo.com and Simplexity.com offer. EOriginal Inc. is a four-year-old company that has developed a patented process for creating what it calls “electronic source documents” — digital versions of birth certificates, driver’s licenses, and so on. At the end of last year, eOriginal had 25 employees. This year the company expects to grow to more than 60 employees and about $12 million in sales. Doug Trotter, eOriginal’s CEO, says his company looks for the cheapest long-distance service possible for its headquarters, in Baltimore. Last fall eOriginal spent about $133 a month on direct-dial long distance with AT&T and used its teleconference service once, for a cost of $90. Again, eSpoke.com found the cheapest plan: RSL came in at $81.16 per month. Both eSpoke.com and Decide.com also pulled up TTI’s Month-to-Month plan, but eSpoke.com estimated the monthly cost would be $83.76 while Decide.com estimated that same plan would cost eOriginal $96.13. Unfortunately, neither site compares teleconferencing services. Simplexity.com promises to do so later this year. Ultimately, Trotter feels his cellular service is more important than his long-distance plan. He’s looking for high-quality cellular service for his senior executives, general managers, and sales force. All senior staffers at eOriginal are converting to one-rate national plans. “We’re getting really large telecommunications bills from hotels when we’re traveling,” says Trotter, adding that, as more and more employees download E-mail on the road, the bills are mounting. “Normal direct dial on a computer without an 800 number can run you up to a couple hundred dollars an hour in a hotel room,” he says. EOriginal founder and executive VP Stephen Bisbee already uses AT&T One Rate service from AT&T Wireless Services and pays $149 for 1,400 minutes a month. But Bisbee, who used the phone for only 300 minutes in December 1999 (the bill we used), is obviously overpaying for a plan he doesn’t need. Simplexity.com, Telstreet.com, Decide.com, and Point.com all recommended AT&T’s Digital One Rate plan, through which Bisbee could get 300 minutes for $59.99 a month. LetsTalk.com recommended Sprint PCS’s Free & Clear 500 plan, which would give Bisbee 500 minutes for $50. Even the pros admit that comparing wireless plans is no simple task. Without a Web site to help buyers navigate roaming charges and off-peak bundles, it’s next to impossible. “My guess is that the majority of the people in the wireless area are on the wrong plan, just because it’s hard to understand,” says Decide. com’s Roy Prasad. But by investing about half an hour — and a little patience — in these sites, most consumers should be able to turn the odds in their favor. Even those customers with a Ph.D. Rachael King is a freelance writer based in Hoboken, N.J. Test-Drive: Long-Distance Here are the plans currently in use by our three companies compared with the Web experts’ recommendations: COMPANY DECIDE.COM ESPOKE.COM MBA FreeAgents.com MCI WorldCom MCI One for Small Business Extra $235.35 per month TTI National Term plan $.069 per minute $114.01 RSL, Alliance plan $.069 per minute $102.24 WebCT Bell Atlantic/In-state American Long Lines/Interstate, Intl. $1,346.90 per month TTI National MTM promo $.069 per minute $1,201.89 RSL, Alliance plan $.069 per minute $986.38 eOriginal AT&T $133.35 per month TTI National MTM promo $.069 per minute $96.13 RSL, Alliance plan $.069 per minute $81.16 Test-Drive: Wireless We put the wireless plan used by eOriginal’s Stephen Bisbee to the test at five different Web sites. Here are their recommendations: WIRELESS CUSTOMER WIRELESS PLANS Stephen Bisbee AT&T One Rate plan is 1,400 mins./$149 currently uses 300 mins. Simplexity.com AT&T Digital One Rate 300 mins./$59.99 Telstreet.com AT&T Digital One Rate 300/$59.99 Decide.com AT&T Digital One Rate 300/$59.99 Point.com AT&T Digital One Rate 300 /$59.99 LetsTalk.com Sprint PCS Free & Clear 500 500/$50 The Players DECIDE.COM What it compares: Wireless, long-distance, prepaid calling cards Site launched: September 1999 Funding: $20.5 million in 1999 from Advanced Technology Ventures (ATV), Morgenthaler, Information Technology Ventures (ITV), and J.F. Shea & Co. Customer service: 800-792-3890, M – F, 6 a.m. – 11 p.m. Pacific time; Weekends, 9 a.m. – 6 p.m. Pacific time LETSTALK.COM What it compares: Wireless Site launched: December 1999 Funding: $20 million in 1999 from Brentwood Venture Capital, Accel Partners, HIG Capital Management, and Goldman Sachs Customer service: 877-825-5460, M – F, 6 a.m. – 9 p.m. Pacific time POINT.COM What it compares: Wireless Site launched: May 1998 Funding: $18 million to date from private angel investors, Oak Investment Partners, IDG Ventures, and Kirlan Venture Capital; and $3.5 million from Staples Customer service: 888-764-6877, M – F, 6 a.m – 7 p.m. Pacific time; Saturdays, 8 a.m. – 4:30 p.m. Pacific time SIMPLEXITY.COM What it compares: Wireless, long-distance, calling cards, and 800 service Site launched: January 2000 Funding: $28.5 million from ABS Capital, Best Buy, and Novak Biddle Venture Partners Customer service: 24-hour service, 800-321-8552; 877-868-2652 (fax); customerservice@simplexity.com ESPOKE.COM What it compares: Long-distance. Internet service providers and digital subscriber line (DSL) to begin this month Site launched: November 1999 Funding: At press time, the founders had bootstrapped $500,000 and were closing their first round of financing. Customer service: customer-service@espoke.com TELEZOO.COM What it compares: Long-distance, wireless, local, teleconferencing, DSL, Internet service providers, ATM, frame relay, Web hosting, and more Site launched: March 1999 Funding: $3 million from Lazard Technology Partners Customer service: Online chat, M – F, 9 a.m. – 6 p.m. Eastern time TELSTREET.COM What it compares: Wireless Site launched: September 1999 Funding: $17 million Customer service: 877-947-3537, M – F, 8 a.m. – 11 p.m.; Saturdays, 9 a.m. – 5 p.m. Eastern time