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Online Video Ads: How to Use Them

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You’re browsing the Internet and you see a link to an article or video that interests you. So you click on it, but instead of getting the content you wanted, the site begins loading a video ad. What do you do? Chances are you immediately start looking for the link that reads “Click here to skip this ad.” More than half the respondents in a BurstMedia survey say they stop watching an online video if they encounter an ad, and 15 percent say they immediately navigate away from the site altogether. The message is clear: users don’t like “pre-roll” video ads. Why do so many big companies continue using them? Fifteen and 30-second pre-rolls are a holdover from television advertising, according to Glenn Pingul, vice president of marketing at the online video advertising company Mixpo. “That was taken from broadcast, where ads originally were 60 seconds, but then were cut down to 30 and 15 seconds to make them more affordable.” But whether or not these ads are effective on television, they rarely are on the Internet, Pingul says. “Just taking a 15-second commercial and repurposing it for the Internet doesn’t take advantage of the benefits online video can offer.” Smarter than the big guys The fact that so many big companies are stuck on 15 or 30 second pre-rolls means there’s an opportunity for smaller and smarter companies to use online video more effectively than their larger competitors, even if their budgets are tiny by comparison. What’s the best way to take advantage of this opportunity? Begin by creating ads that are low on glitz and high on content, offering real information about your product or your company rather than high production values. That’s what Li Read did when she needed to use the Internet to reach potential customers who were mostly very far away. Read is managing broker of RE/MAX Salt Spring on Salt Spring Island near Vancouver, but 80 percent of the home buyers there come from outside Canada. “My buyers for the last seven or eight years have been 100 percent non-local,” she says. Advertising in local papers and radio stations is obviously useless, so instead she uses online video ads both to create a slide show “walk-through” of homes for sale, and to help customers get to know her. Read also uses a video ad in which she talks about herself and her home-buying philosophy. “It’s my signature to the world,” she explains. “Ninety percent of people start their property search on the Internet, but does that mean the old values of loyalty and connecting with customers have no value? If you’re displaying who you are, that you know the inventory and you love what you do, I do think that can make them see you’re trustworthy.” The video ads are fairly new, and Read can’t say for sure whether they’ve led to any specific sales. However, 0.58 percent of people who see an ad for her properties click on it to play the video, and 1.69 percent of those who see the ad about herself do so. This compares with a traditional online advertising conversion rate of 0.1 percent, according to Pingul. Give the user control Another way to beat out the big guys is to give the user control over the video ad experience, and thus avoid the resentment that pre-rolls often inspire. With this in mind, Pingul favors “in-banner” video ads that run in one section of the page, rather than taking the user away to another page. “In our platform, advertisers can set video ads to auto-play when a page is loaded,” Pingul says. “They can play video and audio, video only, or they can be click-to-play,” Pingul says. “We test all three options, and we don’t recommend autoplay with audio on. Users shouldn’t be forced to consume something unless they’ve asked for it.” Giving the user options also allows you to test many aspects of your ad’s performance — something every successful online video advertiser must do, according to Pingul. Ideally, you should be able to measure everything, including how many people click to play the ad (if click-to-play) or deliberately turn on the audio, how much of the ad they watch, how many of them share the ad by sending a link to someone else, and how many take an action suggested in the ad, such as clicking a link to send an email requesting more information. Ask them to do something That call to action should be an element of every online video ad, according to Pingul. “That’s the most important point about online video advertising,” he says. “The key is to determine what you want the video to accomplish — to drive leads or create actual sales. Whatever it is should be front and center in the video.” What if you just want to build visibility for your company or your brand? “You can do that too,” he says. But he still thinks it’s important to have a specific idea of what you want your ad to accomplish, and specific actions you want your viewers to take. “There should always be some direct response you’re asking for,” he says. “Don’t create an ad that doesn’t have a goal.”

Operating Systems: You Do Have Choice

In the wake of a bit of negative feedback and press, some small and mid-sized business leaders are understandably reluctant to move to upgrade to what Microsoft calls its “next logical step,” the latest version of its popular Windows operating system software, Windows Vista. The reports have raised concerns about incompatibilities with existing software, lack of drivers for existing hardware, and confusion for employees. As a result, some businesses are opting to stay with the last version, Windows XP, or find alternatives. The trouble with staying put with XP is that Microsoft has a reputation for eventually forcing users to migrate to the newest edition of its software. Windows XP will continue to be supported by Microsoft for only a few years. All versions of Windows XP will receive free security patches as well as non-security related updates, but only until April 2009. After that, they will receive security related patches only, until April 2014 when they stop supporting XP completely. So the pressure is for small and mid-sized businesses to make a choice. While some may decide to stay with XP and switch to Vista only when they buy new machines, others feel that simply sitting still just isn’t an appropriate plan for the future. The new Intel-based family of Mac computers is an attractive alternative for home computer users, but ultimately there are simply too many PC-specific needs in the business realm, at least at the enterprise level. Decisions, decisions “You have to live in this world as it exists,” says Richard Giroux, IT Manager at Whitelaw Twining Law Corp. of Vancouver, B.C. “but sometimes you get to choose alternatives. Deciding not to upgrade to Windows Vista was one of those times.” Last year, Giroux moved all the desktops in Whitelaw Twining Law, more than 40 workstations, away from Microsoft to Novell Linux Desktop and SUSE Linux. The firm is planning to bring all the laptops over to Linux as well later this year. Just in operating system (OS) licenses alone, he figures Whitelaw Twining has saved between $10,000 and $15,000. “And that’s not counting the amount of time it used to take for Windows maintenance on each desktop,” Giroux says. “Updates, patches, virus, and spyware problems, it was a never-ending treadmill. Now? Hardly any, almost none. Some desktops now running Linux I haven’t touched in a year.” For the most part, Windows users don’t have to give up their preferred software to move to Linux. Giroux says the firm still uses a few Windows proprietary apps, but using Wine (an Open Source Windows emulator) on Linux to deal with it does the trick. Linux has often been considered too “geeky” for the average desktop user, but that’s no longer true. Some Linux distributions have been crafted specifically for Windows users seeking an alternative. Xandros Linux is one of the easiest desktop systems to make the Windows-to-Linux cross-over. So easy, in fact, that Xandros was the company chosen by AsusTek Computer to build an operating system for it’s highly regarded Eee PC. The tiny ground-breaking laptops run a customized OEM version of Xandros. “Xandros Linux was created just for this purpose, to be an alternative choice that just works,” says Steven Harris, vice president of communications at Xandros. “Xandros Desktop works as well as any Microsoft based system in a Windows-centric environment. And while Xandros comes with loads of productivity tools like OpenOffice, most Windows specific applications, like Microsoft Office, will easily run on Xandros Linux as well.” Windows replacements Novell SUSE and Xandros aren’t the only potential replacements for Microsoft Windows. Some other excellent alternatives to Windows Vista — but by no means all — include PCLinuxOS, MEPIS, Linspire, openSUSE, Fedora, Mandriva, CentOS, Ubuntu and more. Probably the best place to begin your search through potential Linux versions is Distrowatch.com, a website devoted to listing all the different Linux distros. You can find these and more at Distrowatch, as well as links to all webpages relevant to each, including reviews and community sites, both excellent resources to help make that important decision. “Linux has proven to be rock solid, with no need for retraining staff. No one here has ever had a problem working with this OS, it takes no more than 10 minutes training to set someone up on one of our desktops,” says Giroux. “Linux works just like Vista, only without the pain.”

Slouching? Measure Your Security Posture

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Security posture isn’t just posturing. In fact, this bearing may be the most important aspect of your business’ approach to security. What is security posture? It’s your overall security plan, which protects from internal and external threats, says Jon Clay of Trend Micro, a content security service provider in Cupertino, Calif. Evidence of security posture can be found in the way you deal with customer receipts, control employee social security numbers, or how often you update the anti-virus software.  In other words, security posture is comprised of technical and non-technical policies, procedures and controls. Security posture is what results from “the strategy you take toward managing your risks,” says Mike Murray, director of Neohapsis Labs, a security-focused consulting firm in Chicago, Ill. And ignorance can cost. A stolen credit card number — whether resulting from a dumpster-diver’s dig through your garbage can or a hacker’s mischief — can result in a large fine from the issuing company. A three-step approach to security It’s a balancing act for small businesses. “They have to determine how much risk they are willing to accept,” Clay says, “to determine what level of security they implement.” Analyze compliance requirements and business partners’ mandates. “This will allow them to build out a security posture that minimizes risk while still allowing them to run their business efficiently and profitably,” Clay says. Murray suggests a three-step approach to security posture assessment and resolution: Determine all the data your competitors, thieves, and other no-gooders want to steal from the business, or from partner businesses. These could include credit card numbers, social security numbers, corporate assets, or even your business strategies for the next six months. Figure out how thieves might acquire the data. Murray says that this step may require a consultant or an in-house expert in risk management.  A high-quality assessment will provide details on slack approaches to data, whether in the IT or physical world.  “We aptly call it information security,” Murray says, not just technology security. Install controls to prevent theft, at a “palatable” cost, Murray says. Your response may depend upon variables such as your business’ financial situation and the actual likelihood of compromised data.  Few businesses are too small Trent Dyrsmid, CEO of IT service provider Dyrand Systems, Inc., based in Vancouver, B.C., says he often hears businesses claim, “My company’s too small. No one will hack us. We don’t have anything.” However, “anybody is fair game,” says Dyrsmid, and he points out that many threats can come from within, “like disgruntled employees marching out the door with company data on USB stick or CD.” Small businesses aren’t immune to simple errors or carelessness, either.  “Employees need to know how they should handle sensitive data, as they may not know they could be compromising security,” Clay says. Proactive policy can prevent customer addresses from falling into the wrong hands. Assessing security posture is one milestone on a company’s path to maturity and healthy growth. Executing change is the nets, and then repeating the assessment six months later will be the next step. So straighten up and look around — your business’ posture may be telling you something.

Slouching? Measure Your Security Posture

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Security posture isn’t just posturing. In fact, this bearing may be the most important aspect of your business’ approach to security. What is security posture? It’s your overall security plan, which protects from internal and external threats, says Jon Clay of Trend Micro, a content security service provider in Cupertino, Calif. Evidence of security posture can be found in the way you deal with customer receipts, control employee social security numbers, or how often you update the anti-virus software.  In other words, security posture is comprised of technical and non-technical policies, procedures and controls. Security posture is what results from “the strategy you take toward managing your risks,” says Mike Murray, director of Neohapsis Labs, a security-focused consulting firm in Chicago, Ill. And ignorance can cost. A stolen credit card number — whether resulting from a dumpster-diver’s dig through your garbage can or a hacker’s mischief — can result in a large fine from the issuing company. A three-step approach to security It’s a balancing act for small businesses. “They have to determine how much risk they are willing to accept,” Clay says, “to determine what level of security they implement.” Analyze compliance requirements and business partners’ mandates. “This will allow them to build out a security posture that minimizes risk while still allowing them to run their business efficiently and profitably,” Clay says. Murray suggests a three-step approach to security posture assessment and resolution: Determine all the data your competitors, thieves, and other no-gooders want to steal from the business, or from partner businesses. These could include credit card numbers, social security numbers, corporate assets, or even your business strategies for the next six months. Figure out how thieves might acquire the data. Murray says that this step may require a consultant or an in-house expert in risk management.  A high-quality assessment will provide details on slack approaches to data, whether in the IT or physical world.  “We aptly call it information security,” Murray says, not just technology security. Install controls to prevent theft, at a “palatable” cost, Murray says. Your response may depend upon variables such as your business’ financial situation and the actual likelihood of compromised data.  Few businesses are too small Trent Dyrsmid, CEO of IT service provider Dyrand Systems, Inc., based in Vancouver, B.C., says he often hears businesses claim, “My company’s too small. No one will hack us. We don’t have anything.” However, “anybody is fair game,” says Dyrsmid, and he points out that many threats can come from within, “like disgruntled employees marching out the door with company data on USB stick or CD.” Small businesses aren’t immune to simple errors or carelessness, either.  “Employees need to know how they should handle sensitive data, as they may not know they could be compromising security,” Clay says. Proactive policy can prevent customer addresses from falling into the wrong hands. Assessing security posture is one milestone on a company’s path to maturity and healthy growth. Executing change is the nets, and then repeating the assessment six months later will be the next step. So straighten up and look around — your business’ posture may be telling you something.

The Survey Says…

Don’t trust online polls. That’s what traditional-minded researchers have been telling business owners for years. The Internet isn’t diverse enough to be a valid testing ground, they argue, so data gathered online is bound to be skewed. If that argument was ever valid, it no longer is. Consumers of all stripes are giving feedback to businesses online. One out of every four American Internet users–about 33 million people–has rated a product, service, or person online, according to a recent study by the Pew Internet & American Life Project, an initiative of the Washington, D.C.-based Pew Research Center. That number is expected to grow as consumers become accustomed to having more interactive relationships with companies, says Lee Rainie, director of Pew Internet. “We’re well past the time when this was an activity of early adopters,” he says. “This is how consumers want and expect to communicate with businesses.” At the same time, new technology offered by companies such as SurveyMonkey, based in Portland, Oreg., and WebSurveyor, based in Herndon, Va., is making it easier for companies to conduct online polls. The polling software aggregates hundreds of responses to multiple-choice questions into easy-to-read documents, complete with graphs and charts, that can be mined for information on everything from customer satisfaction to product development. Online polls have been a boon for Michael Kahn, senior director of consumer and trade marketing for Chicago-based Socrates, which sells do-it-yourself legal forms to business owners. Kahn regularly surveys customers to figure out what new products would appeal to them. One evening this past January, he sent out an e-mail inviting customers to fill out a poll consisting of 34 multiple-choice questions. By the next morning, he had received hundreds of replies. The response to one question in particular piqued his interest: A majority of property owners said they were likely to rent or lease an apartment without any assistance. Armed with the poll results, Kahn pitched a new product to his managers: a do-it-yourself background-check kit for landlords. Six months later, the kit hit the market. “I am in love with this tactic,” Kahn says. Web surveys are the quickest way to find out if a product or service is up to par once it’s unveiled. Open-ended surveys can also turn up suggestions on everything from cost cutting to marketing. Cameron Herold, chief operating officer of 1-800-Got-Junk?, a trash-removal company based in Vancouver, British Columbia, frequently sends surveys to his company’s customers and franchisees. He’s often surprised by the results. A recent poll revealed that franchisees thought a newly designed box for the back of the trash-removal trucks was a waste of money. “We thought it was amazing,” he says. “They told us it was terrible.” Another poll revealed that many customers were concerned about recycling, so Herold added information about 1-800-Got-Junk?’s ecofriendly initiatives in the company’s marketing materials. “We want to tell people up-front that we’re already doing something they care about,” he says. Besides getting feedback from existing customers, online polls can help attract new ones. Elizabeth Morley, director of corporate marketing at Books24x7, an online library of technical and business books based in Norwood, Mass., offers companies free access to her site on a trial basis. Before the trial period ends, Morley asks users to fill out an online survey rating the library and explaining how often they used it and for what reasons. Then she incorporates the data into a customized sales pitch. Being able to present concrete examples of how the online library helped a company’s employees during the trial period goes a long way toward convincing decision makers to sign up, Morley says. Web surveys can encourage employees to open up as well. Herold regularly polls his employees, encouraging them to be forthright by promising anonymity and by wording the surveys in such a way that prompts the “most brutal feedback.” He recently asked the members of his own work group to suggest three things he should be doing differently. Their answer: Go on vacation. “Not them, me,” he says. Employees are likely to jump at the chance to tell you what they’re thinking. But some customers may bristle at the notion of filling out a survey. Employees are likely to jump at the chance to tell you what they’re thinking, especially if they’re given anonymity. But some customers may bristle at the notion of filling out a survey, online or off. To sweeten the pot, DigitalMailer, a company based in Herndon, Va., that provides e-business services to credit unions, enters respondents into drawings for prizes such as iPod Minis and $50 gift certificates to Best Buy. Keeping people interested is the other half of the battle. Avoid asking too many questions related to demographics in the beginning of the survey–save those for the end. Also, keep the surveys as brief as possible. There’s no magic number, but, in general, the longer you’ve had a relationship with a customer, the more questions he or she will be willing to answer. Finally, be sure to provide a space where customers can make additional comments and suggestions. You may not always like what they have to say, but at least you’ll be informed. Resources To read the Pew Center’s research on Internet usage, which includes demographic information and analysis, go to www.pewinternet.org. QuestionPro.com offers tips on creating online surveys and provides a variety of free samples. Related Content The Skinny on Survey Software With more than 100 online polling software packages to choose from, picking the right one can be tricky. Here, three options to suit various needs.

Special Technology Report: Inside Story

Special Technology Report The Internet promised to drastically change your business. Now state-of-the-art small-company intranets are actually delivering on that promise. Instant word-association test: What comes to mind when you hear the terms intranet and extranet? Chances are, it’s something like this: Big-company stuff. Internal Web sites with multimillion-dollar price tags at places like Hewlett-Packard and GE and Charles Schwab. Hotshot technology that my small business wouldn’t use and doesn’t need. And even if we did need it, we couldn’t afford it. Right? Guess again. True, intranets come to the party with a big-company, big-bucks reputation — and deservedly so. The earliest private Web-based networks began at Fortune 500 giants like Ford Motor Co. and Sun Microsystems. The best, in some cases, save more money than many small businesses make in a year. And true, they’ve typically involved large-scale initiatives, such as linking thousands of workers worldwide or putting millions of documents online. But here’s some news that is just as true: private Web sites are changing small business, big time. Small and midsize companies are turning to intranets (and their external cousins, extranets) in much the same way they turned to the public Web a few years ago. And in some cases, they’re getting far more favorable results with the private sites. Many are using them to fundamentally change some aspect of their business. A pioneering few are using the sites to drive their company’s entire strategy. And they’re doing it using technology once viewed as strictly a big-company tool. We’re not talking about companies’ using internal networks as electronic filing cabinets for human-resources forms or bulletin boards where Joe in accounting can advertise a used Jeep for sale. We’re talking about entrepreneurs’ strategically using a broad range of intranet-extranet efforts to gain a competitive foothold in a tight economy, typically by nurturing existing relationships or creating conduits for new ones. On one end of that spectrum are the rare companies run primarily, or entirely, on private Web sites that let them easily connect with employees, partners, or customers. One of those companies is 1-800-GOT-JUNK, a Vancouver, B.C., trash-removal business whose intranet for its franchisees, called JunkNet, helped to fuel the company’s growth from $2 million in revenues in 1999 to $10 million last year. Another is Boston-based SeniorLink, a fledgling company that will launch an extranet later this year to help baby-boomer customers nationwide find care-management services for their aging parents. On the opposite end are traditional companies that are using intranets to transform one practice, with effects that ripple through the rest of their culture. A sterling example: Extreme Logic Inc., an Atlanta-based technology consulting firm. Like many growing companies, Extreme Logic handles job-performance reviews online. What’s unusual is that the company encourages its corporate clients to log on and evaluate the employees who serve them. As a result, company officials say, Extreme Logic has deepened relationships with customers by letting them know they’re trusted partners whose opinions count. In the middle of the spectrum are companies with the most intriguing stories: those whose private sites create unprecedented opportunities. At TemPositions Group, a New York City-based staffing company, an intranet instantly matches customers’ requests for temporary employees with contractors who best fit the bill, allowing the 125-employee business to successfully bid against giant national staffing companies for major contracts. Eckert Seamans Cherin & Mellott, a Pittsburgh-based law firm, now coordinates hundreds of product-liability claims filed nationwide against one of its major clients, thanks to sophisticated technology that makes it possible for the firm’s lawyers to share court documents with other lawyers in 50 states, Puerto Rico, and the U.S. Virgin Islands. And Eminent Research Systems, in Minneapolis, uses an intranet to dramatically speed up its ability to coordinate protocol documents for medical-device tests, thereby helping the company to increase its business capacity tenfold. It’s impossible to find hard numbers on how many companies are jumping onto the private Web. The few studies done to date confirm only that a growing number of small companies have either launched a private network or expect to do so soon. Most, it appears, still use the technology for pedestrian purposes: storing documents, sharing files, ordering supplies. But we’ve found a handful of cutting-edge entrepreneurs who are using intranets and extranets to transform their business strategies, in most cases by helping their companies forge new relationships. OPEN BOOK: Dennis L. Veraldi says that his law firm’s extranet improves services for clients. What’s propelling this small-business intranet revolution? Experts tick off a number of drivers: the migration of big-business practices to small-business scale, recession-driven pressure to find new ways to get new customers or better serve existing ones, and increased comfort with doing business online. “All the things that the major corporations were doing two or three years ago are trickling down to the small-business realm,” says Ryan Bernard, president of Wordmark Associates Inc., a Houston consulting firm, and author of The Corporate Intranet. “The larger corporations were the proving ground.” Web-usability consultant Jakob Nielsen, whose Nielsen Norman Group, in Fremont, Calif., annually honors 10 outstanding intranets, has recently noticed that more small companies are making the list. Says Nielsen, “That proves it’s possible to get good effect out of an intranet without being a huge corporation.” Other experts call the trend evolutionary, saying that it is picking up speed as companies conduct more and more business online. Nearly everyone can use a Web browser, which means that nearly everyone can adapt almost instantly to a Web-based network. And small companies can now choose from a broad range of intranet options, from cut-rate do-it-yourself models to cutting-edge, custom-designed systems. Admittedly, the trend’s leaders tend to spend freely to launch, staff, and maintain their private Web sites. Initial five- or six-figure investments aren’t unusual, and some ambitious companies may well spend more. But there are plenty of less pricey options, ranging from having a savvy staffer do the job in-house to renting the service. (See ” Spin Your Own,” below.) Perhaps the most remarkable cultural change is how many entrepreneurs are overcoming their natural reticence to share information, inside the company or out. Brian Chavis, CEO of ARGroup, a Web and intranet developer based in Leesburg, Va., says that he used to have to pitch the idea of private networks to his customers. “I don’t have to do that anymore,” he says. “Our clients are telling me that they want this.” What they want, as the leading examples show, are new and better ways to connect with customers, employees, and partners. Rather than blindly following the late-1990s mantra to endlessly hurl money at their public Web sites in hopes of expanding their reach, many companies now look inward for ways to better serve customers they’ve already got. “Companies are saying, ‘Let’s really strengthen those relationships as much as possible,” says Ray Boggs, vice-president of small-business and home-office research at IDC, in Framingham, Mass. Randy J. Hinrichs couldn’t agree more. Hinrichs, group research manager in learning sciences and technology for Microsoft Research and author of Intranets: What’s the Bottom Line?, says intranets and extranets provide the perfect environment for small companies to create and nurture the partnerships they need to thrive. He makes the goal sound almost romantic. “You make long-term, meaningful relationships by saying, ‘We can share each other’s data,’ and knowing that it’s going to be consistent and trustworthy,” he says. Executives at Atlanta IT-consulting firm Extreme Logic consider it critical to forge long-term commitments with both employees and customers. So the company sends both to its combo intranet-extranet for performance reviews. The system hasn’t directly affected Extreme Logic’s revenues, which topped $30 million last year. But it’s improved the company’s own showing in two top-priority areas: retaining star performers and nurturing all employees. When workers leave — whether they’re hired away by competitors or fired for poor performance — the company spends as much as three times an employee’s annual salary to find and train a replacement. Getting quick online feedback directly from customers lets Extreme Logic reward its stars and provide specific improvement goals for everyone else. The approach seems to work. Mike Williams, who oversees human resources, says the company’s turnover rate is 5% to 10% lower than the IT industry standard. And since the company added the performance-evaluation feature to its intranet, 18 months ago, about 80% of its employees and managers feel that they’re working toward the same goals, compared with 52% before, according to an internal study. For TemPositions, making connections quickly is what counts. The company, one of 350 temporary-staffing agencies in New York City, has begun bidding against the big boys — including $4.1-billion Kelly Services — for major contracts. To compete against the industry giants, TemPositions focuses on what CEO and president James Essey calls its core strength: delivering the perfect worker faster. And to do that, TemPositions relies on an intranet that, much like a dating service, instantly matches customer requests with the best available contract employees. If, for instance, a client company needs a registered nurse with pediatric experience, the TemPositions intranet automatically E-mails the job offer to the best-qualified candidates. The system excludes temps who are already on assignments or unavailable because of vacation or illness. When contractors accept gigs, the intranet automatically E-mails them a link to their own personal job bank sites, where they find assignment sheets with dates, prices, a map, and supervisor contact information. When temps reject offers or don’t respond, the intranet solicits the next person in line. Corporate customers can even make their own temp requests online. Essey says the do-it-yourself convenience “cements us to the customer in a big way because once they get into the system and see all the information there, they’re less likely to go to a competitor.” That’s a far cry from the traditional temp-placement process, which typically requires hours of telephone tag. (Customers call the agency with a personnel request, and then agency employees dig through paper files, call candidates, and wait for return calls.) And the streamlined process, in turn, has allowed the 40-year-old company to go after huge long-term contracts it couldn’t even have considered before. At press time, TemPositions was competing for a contract to supply the New York City schools with more than 1,000 temps in a variety of areas, including curriculum and course development and counseling. “We couldn’t bid on it if we didn’t have these tools,” says Essey. “We’d need enough employees to fill a football-field-size call center.” TemPositions, which had about $30 million in revenues in 2001, spent $250,000 building its intranet in 1998 — primarily, Essey says, on Web design and for the salaries of a chief information officer, a programmer, and a technology troubleshooter — and it continues to spend liberally on salaries, equipment upgrades, and maintenance. “It’s not free,” he acknowledges. At the same time, he expects the intranet to reduce the company’s head count — eliminating, for instance, the need for data-entry staffers. Essey says those savings are well worth the investment. GRAND SCALE: James Parks credits his firm’s extranet for letting Eckert Seamans go national. Speed was the issue at Eminent Research Systems, in Minneapolis, where clogged procedural arteries were stunting the company’s growth. The $7-million, 22-employee company specializes in coordinating trials for heart and blood-vessel devices such as stents — products that typically have a market life span of only 18 months before they’re replaced by newer models. Previously, Eminent sent 150- to 500-page study-protocol documents to participating physicians and regulators, who marked them up and mailed them back. Sometimes the hefty hard copies made several round trips before everybody agreed on protocols — a process that typically took at least two months. The lengthy procedure caused some customers to forgo putting their devices on the market altogether, which meant less work for Eminent. “Turnaround time is key,” says Linda Laak, vice-president and chief operating officer. “Our competition is not necessarily another company but whether or not the client will do the study at all.” That changed in February 2001, when Eminent launched an extranet that allows doctors nationwide to collaborate on protocols electronically. The system sliced the approval process from two months to two weeks. Meanwhile, although Eminent spent $50,000 to launch its private Web site, Laak estimates that the company saves 10 times that amount by eliminating the “heavy lifting”: shipping, storage, and paying the salaries of two administrative people who handled all the documents. And the company can handle 10 times as many projects at once as it could before, resulting in a 40% increase in revenues. At Eckert Seamans Cherin & Mellott, the Pittsburgh law firm, an extranet became the key to going national without opening any additional offices. The 44-year-old firm wanted to serve as the national coordinator for thousands of product-liability claims against a major client. But the firm couldn’t possibly set up shop in all the affected jurisdictions: 50 states, Puerto Rico, and the Virgin Islands. Instead, the firm’s executive team decided it needed two things: a network of partners and a network connecting them. Those partners were, and are, “local counsel” — dozens of far-flung law firms that Eckert Seamans hired to handle claims in their own states. The network that connects them is Eckert Seamans’s extranet, which contains all related documents, including briefs, transcripts, interviews, research, medical and scientific information, and correspondence. Obviously, storing paperwork in one location helps everybody access documents faster. But Eckert Seamans argues that the extranet provides two more important benefits. First, it’s an unprecedented way to provide clients with a consistent nationwide defense by making sure that all the lawyers are literally on the same page. In addition, it saves time and money by providing those far-flung partners with research to strengthen the cases in their states. And the extranet lets the firm’s 215 lawyers coordinate cases in a way they couldn’t have before. “There is no way we could have managed and provided oversight to claims in Texas or California,” says the firm’s executive director, James Parks, citing the time and cost of constant travel, telephone calls, and shipping tons of hard copies cross-country. The system, part of a firmwide technology overhaul, didn’t come cheap: Parks estimates that Eckert Seamans has invested nearly $1.3 million so far, including construction costs to create a separate technology center. But chief operating officer Dennis L. Veraldi is philosophical about the cost. “Sophisticated, larger clients just expect that you’re going to be able to do those things, that you have the capability to service them,” he says. The firm doesn’t even worry much about tracking the system’s return on investment. “It’s part of the infrastructure, part of the overhead,” Parks says. “You have to manage it the same way you manage supplies or telephones or receptionists or libraries or anything else.” But he credits the technology with cutting legal-work costs by 6% to 7% annually and allowing the firm to take on more clients. But Eckert Seamans does worry about security breaches — and not just those involving hackers. The firm must also protect itself against possible security breaches involving the very partners for whom it established the intranet: those local-counsel firms. “Yes, we’re working with them, but they’re still competitors,” Veraldi says. So the firm relies on a combination of firewalls, multiple passwords, and encryption to make sure those faraway lawyers get access only to the appropriate cases — and only for the length of their contracts. For Eckert Seamans and other early adopters, the challenge now is staying ahead of the curve while not getting too far out in front. As Parks puts it: “We’re going to be very judicious about what we implement. We have to ask, ‘Are we letting the technology drag us? Or are we dragging the technology in a way that’s beneficial to us and our clients?’ “ But intranet evangelists believe the potential drawbacks — security concerns, cost, and the constant challenge of keeping current — pale when compared with the rewards gained from creating new partnerships and strengthening existing ones. Especially in a tough economy, the ability to forge new and stronger links offers small companies the best kind of competitive advantage. Anne Stuart is a senior writer at Inc. Jill Hecht Maxwell is a staff writer. Send your comments to editors@inc.com. Spin Your Own Why not? It’s getting cheaper. The companies mentioned here got transformational results from their intranets, but they spent a bundle. You don’t have to pay your way into intranet nirvana. There are less costly ways to get a little closer to the light. As more small businesses have started using private Web sites, software vendors and application service providers (ASPs) have found ways to reduce the pain of building them. Their offerings range from robust software packages to cheap, basic ones that a monkey can set up online in minutes. So how do you decide which path to follow? James Parks, who led the intranet project at Eckert Seamans, offers a few suggestions. BEEF UP SECURITY. Parks won’t touch a system that doesn’t force users to pass through three electronic checkpoints to enter. But if you don’t run a law firm, you may not need security worthy of the CIA. CREATE MULTIPLE LEVELS OF USER ACCESS. Some users need to read files; others need to edit them. Only a few should be allowed to delete them. So you should be able to determine whom you’ll allow into each part of your intranet and what they can do once they get there. DO AN INVENTORY OF YOUR EXISTING DATA. Can you easily move information from your company databases onto the intranet? When Parks started his firm’s project, Eckert Seamans already had 40-plus years’ worth of data living on its systems. CONSIDER STORAGE. If you’ve got 40 dedicated databases on seven mammoth servers, as Eckert Seamans does, don’t even consider the intranets that you can rent for a few dollars per user monthly. They won’t provide anywhere near the storage space you need. So if you need high security and have lots of users and mountains of information, you should start by looking at midpriced software packages — and perhaps talking with a consultant who’s built at least a few intranets before. For less than $6,000, you’ll find software from more than a dozen vendors, like Planet Intra, in Mountain View, Calif. Planet Intra’s software lets regular nontechie people create multiple levels of security access. All employees can use it to publish Web-ready content on a site, even if they don’t know HTML from TCBY. Of course, if you have a decent techie on staff, you can build your own simple intranet with a program like Microsoft FrontPage. You won’t need a firewall if you’re not letting anyone outside your office log on. Finally, if your needs are simple — say, you want a group to share a calendar, swap documents, and hold online discussions — you can set up an intranet for practically nothing. Intranets.com, the King Kong of off-the-shelf intranet ASPs, charges between $3 and $6 per user per month. Competitor InfoStreet charges $3 per user per month. Or try Microsoft’s SharePoint Team Services, which comes free with Office XP Professional Special Edition. Intranet gurus say that no matter which method you elect, there’s at least one thing you should do to ensure that your intranet doesn’t turn into the electronic equivalent of Euro Disney. Find out what would make your employees’ lives easier. People won’t use the intranet if it doesn’t help them. “Think about human needs as opposed to technology,” says Jakob Nielsen of the Nielsen Norman Group. –Jill Hecht Maxwell Still want more information on building your private Web site? Visit www.inc.com/keyword/intranet. Please E-mail your comments to editors@inc.com. Related Links: TemPositions Intranet Make Your Intranet Click Intranet Shortfalls

Any Place, Any Times

High concept USA Today, beware! Hot-off-the-printer news from home may soon become as commonplace as minibars at hotels around the world. That, anyway, is the vision of NewspaperDirect Inc., of Vancouver. The company’s founders — CEO Miljenko Horvat, a former investment banker; and board members Anatoly Karachinsky, a Russian entrepreneur; and Esther Dyson, the new-economy guru — got the idea from personal experience. They missed reading their hometown newspapers while they were traveling and figured others must feel the same way. The question was how to sidestep the exorbitant cost of sending traditional papers across the country and overseas. The trio turned to the Internet. First they developed software that could format and print digital editions of newspapers and track the editions being accessed. Then they signed up 80 publications — from the Wall Street Journal to Spain’s El Pais — to participate. The company sells its service to high-end hotels like the Four Seasons, as well as to cruise lines and corporations interested in international news. Customers purchase NewspaperDirect software and install it on high-speed laser printers, allowing them to print any of the company’s 80 papers on demand. When, say, a guest at a participating hotel asks for a foreign paper during her stay, the hotel simply prints it out and delivers it to her room. The hotel may include the paper as a complimentary amenity, or it may charge a $2 or $3 fee for the service. NewspaperDirect pays a royalty to the paper each time an edition is printed. NewspaperDirect was offered by a few hotel chains and some corporations in early 2000, but Horvat says he’s just getting started. “The scale we’re talking about is ubiquity,” he says. “Any newsstand in the world will have a MasterCard and a Visa logo, and also a NewspaperDirect logo.” Incubator High Concept Doctor, Doctor. Give Me the News Any Place, Any Times Grind to a Halt The Fine Print Dossier All the President’s Mail Search InfoPosse Main Street God is in the Detailing Markets The Surprise Economy Seen Consecrated Commerce 60-Second Business Plan Veggie-Burger Kings Business for Sale Want a Novel Idea? Please e-mail your comments to editors@inc.com.

Logging On the Web

Cool Tools If you’re marketing to a niche or need an online forum for fresh ideas, Web logs could be the new killer app Dave Pell has a split personality. By day he’s the hard-driving managing partner of Arba Seed Investment Group of San Francisco, an angel-investment firm that funds Internet start-ups. But by night — or whenever he’s got a free hour or so — he’s posting new stuff on his Web site, acting as “chief dotconomist” and scribe of Davenetics, a daily E-mail newsletter that has become required reading for some 12,000 followers of the new economy. “I call Davenetics ‘the official newsletter of the next five minutes,” he jokes. Pell’s nether life as an online Mark Twain is just one example of a growing trend among Netheads called Web logging, or “blogging” for short. Web loggers use their Web sites to show off their insight and expertise; as a broadcast medium for customers, clients, and acquaintances; and even as a company intranet. And as entrepreneurs like Pell are discovering, Web logs can be invaluable for building their businesses and brands. At its most fundamental level, a Web log is a Web site, or a section of a Web site, whose overriding characteristic is its ever-changing list of links. But Web logs are also Internet-age gardens. Bloggers add new links — like so many new seeds — to the top of their Web page, and older, staler items drop to the bottom and are later composted in archives. Web loggers can organize their sites in threaded topic areas, bulletin-board style, and visitors can use Web-logging tools — such as those available at GrokSoup (www.groksoup.com) — to easily add their own responses to articles and ideas posted on the site. As a communications and loyalty-building tool, a Web log provides both a news filter and a freewheeling forum that can enhance a company’s reputation and encourage customers to come back to the site. Web logs can also be used as a kind of company intranet to keep employees in the loop. And because Web-logging tools are free and require no programming knowledge to operate, they might just be the hottest thing since E-mail. Fame in Internet Time Of course, news digests predate Walter Cronkite. And surfers have passed around links to one another since the birth of the Internet. Plenty of Web sites, such as Slashdot.com and the Drudge Report, are fundamentally little more than Web logs. But thanks to a slew of relatively new, free, downloadable, and look-Ma-no-programming Web-logging tools, creating a Web log is easier than ever. (See “Blog Me, Baby,” below.) Web-logging tools have already turned thousands of Netheads into self-styled news filters and critics. The vast majority of Web loggers are cyberspace hobbyists and subversives, who publish their own daily stream-of-consciousness wanderings using the Internet’s vanity press. They pick and choose articles of interest, respond to them, and invite others to contribute their own views on a continuously evolving basis. Pell, for instance, surfs dozens of Web sites — ranging from the New York Times online to a gossip site called Techdirt.com — for the latest Web-related news of interest to entrepreneurs, investors, journalists, and the merely curious. Using a set of easy-to-use Web-logging tools, he creates pithy headlines and descriptions of the articles along with links to the full articles at their original sites. Call Davenetics an electronic news service with attitude. The mix of news and views that Pell serves up shields his devoted readers from the informational tsunami of the hundreds of conventional news sources that threaten to engulf them. “In this fast-paced E-biz world, time’s not merely money, it’s survival,” says Rik Myslewski, longtime Davenetics fan and editorial director of Productopia.com, a San Francisco-based consumer-information site. ” Davenetics’ timely updates save me and my troops the precious hours it would take to sift critical news from background noise.” Pell insists that blogging doesn’t interfere with his work at Arba Seed Investment. In fact, he says, it’s really a part of his job. His newsletter has attracted the interest of publications like Forbes, which now invite Pell (who previously hesitated to approach publications through the usual front door of pitch letters) to contribute articles on seed investments and the Net in general. The publicity “has added a lot of value to my brand,” he says, squelching a smile. “I get invited to a lot of nice dinners with smart people offering new business opportunities.” Rebecca Blood, a Web developer and consultant who formerly managed a departmental site at the University of Washington, uses her Web log, www.rebeccablood.net, as an outlet for her creative expression. But her skill at Web logging also subtly promotes her skills as a Web designer and manager, and demonstrates her knowledge of the Internet itself. “A Web log offers an easy platform for self-expression, and it’s easier to set up than an elaborate Web site,” Blood says. “And it’s much more effective than setting up a mailing list where you’re just pushing out E-mail at people about the links you find.” Blood’s site is dear to the large, growing, and endlessly creative Web-logging community, the vast majority of which fiercely opposes the notion that businesses could exploit Web logs for their own capitalist purposes. “I’ve never seen a business do Web logging, and frankly, I hope I never do,” says journalist Jim Romenesko, who operates two news-filtering Web logs, www.obscurestore.com and www.medianews.org. “There’s a certain resentment among independent writers who feel businesses will try to co-opt them.” Nevertheless, it’s happening. Businesspeople like Terry Yelmene see great potential in using a Web log to tout their own expertise. Yelmene, a consultant with 3C3 Applied Research and Technology, a four-person company based in Boulder, Colo., is an expert in knowledge management. Large businesses in the Boston area hire Yelmene and his colleagues to help them find out which employees know what and to develop ways of sharing that knowledge. Yelmene’s Web site, www.3C3art.com, will soon feature a link to a personal Web log called “Knowledgeer at Large,” which will include constantly updated links to new articles of use to his company’s clients and anyone else interested in the wide world of knowledge management. “I’m taking content about knowledge management and publishing my opinions within the framework of a Web log that can be read by my clients and the knowledge-management community,” says Yelmene. “It will be great for my business, because it’s a mechanism for demonstrating what I can do.” If your Web log is successful, your electronic community will grow, which can be both good and bad. Dave Winer also uses his Web log to opine. The CEO of UserLand Software Inc., an eight-person software company in San Francisco, Winer holds forth on content-management software for the Web on UserLand’s public site. Each of the company’s development-team members keeps a public Web log — using tools the company has developed — on the UserLand site, where they share their technical knowledge with the Web-development community and ask for public feedback. Winer and his far-flung colleagues — who work in Seattle and Los Angeles and even in Germany — also use their Web logs as a corporate intranet. After entering the password-protected private site, they follow links to get information on employees, projects, sales numbers, milestones, and more. Winer is able to oversee the private site, post information to it, monitor bugs, and track project deliverables using specific software. “Our Web log is our management process,” says Winer. “It’s remarkable how much more productive we’ve become using it.” To Blog or Not to Blog Although Web logging has valid applications for many kinds of companies, it isn’t practical for every small business, says Jakob Nielsen, principal of Norman Nielsen Group, a consulting company in Mountain View, Calif., and author of Designing Web Usability: The Practice of Simplicity. “You have to be able to say something reasonably new every day about what’s happening in your field,” Nielsen says. “If you have a static site and an irregular publishing schedule, you will turn people off.” And while self-expression may be the main goal of individual Web loggers, a company’s Web log has a different raison d’être. As a marketing tool, it’s the organization’s public and professional face. Thus, anyone who regards word-mongering as more of a struggle than a pleasure should probably avoid Web logging, Nielsen says, noting that there’s nothing worse than reading someone’s bad content. (Hint: If you don’t have the requisite writing skills, find someone who does and put them on daily Web-log duty.) Stretch yourself too thin, and your lack of energy will show in the poor quality of your Web log, he says. “Companies that lack the resources to commit to a daily Web log would be better off publishing a semimonthly E-mail newsletter, containing some fresh insight and links to interesting articles,” Nielsen advises. Another key factor is commitment, veteran Web loggers say. “Doing a good Web log takes a lot of time,” says journalist Romenesko. “Some people have a hard time sitting down and working on them for a few hours a day.” And a fledgling blogger shouldn’t expect any kind of immediate return on the labor investment. “It took me months and months to develop an audience,” Romenesko notes. Even more challenging is the notion of building credibility by swallowing your pride and linking to the other guy’s site. To be a credible Web logger, “you have to have the guts to point to things that are of interest, even if they are considered competitors,” Nielsen insists. Linking to competitors’ sites poses no problem for Brent Holliday, a partner with Greenstone Venture Partners (www.greenstonevc.com), a four-person venture-capital firm in Vancouver, British Columbia. Like Terry Yelmene and Dave Pell, Holliday uses Greenstone’s Web log (the Greenstone Grok) to show off his company’s expertise. The site provides links to news items of interest to entrepreneurs and the high-tech community in the Pacific Northwest — regardless of the parties involved. “Other venture capitalists will come to me and ask, ‘Why did you put the news of our deal on your Web site?” says Holliday. “They don’t notice that people come to us first — and every day — as a source of intelligence. It increases our credibility to talk about what’s going on, no matter who’s doing the deals.” Size is a factor, too. If your Web log is successful, your electronic community will grow, which can be both good and bad. Instead of being an adjunct to your business, your Web log could threaten to consume it. You might find yourself needing to add hardware, bandwidth, and more resources, and gradually morphing into a publisher. “This is a long-term marketing tool,” says Nielsen. “You have to cost everything out and think about how you will deal with it over time.” Caveats aside, dedicated Web loggers can find themselves basking in their 15 minutes of fame, not to mention the loyalty of their customers. “Blogging is the platform for a new meritocracy,” says Pell. “It removes the barriers to creative performance. You don’t have to have the leverage of a major media corporation, but you can prove to the reader that you are smart and good at what you do.” Blog Me, Baby The cool thing about the Internet is that as soon as something becomes popular, someone’s going to find a way to make it easier to participate. And Web logging is no different. The tools listed here are free and easy to use, and help automate (and greatly accelerate) the blog publishing process. You don’t need to know how to write any code, and you don’t need to install any server software or scripts. Yet you can still fully control the look and location of your blog. To use these tools, however, you will need to have either a Web site or access to a Web server. (You can get Web-server access through your Internet service provider.) Web Site What It Does Blogger (www.blogger.com) Blogger provides a template for your page that indicates where you want your information posts to appear. When you make a new post, you’ll get “Post” and “Publish” buttons that will automatically send your new page to your Web server. No programming is required, though Blogger asks that you link your page back to its site. UserLand (http://manila.userland.com) UserLand’s downloadable software comes with “Edit This Page” buttons that let you update your Web log easily without having to worry about programming. GrokSoup (www.groksoup.com) GrokSoup is a classy, supersimple tool with a very straightforward interface for building a Web log. Registration and a password are required. 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