Is 'Web 2.0' Another Bubble? 209
Carl Bialik from WSJ writes "Two tech VCs, Todd Dagres and David Hornik, debate whether there is a bubble in so-called Web 2.0 companies looking to cash in on a resurgent online ad market. In the WSJ.com debate, Hornik writes: 'Venture capitalists will rationally stop investing in ideas that don't bear fruit. Those that do bear fruit will gain traction and either be acquired or go public. Those are the traits of a rational market in my mind.' Dagres responds: 'I think the Web 2.0 space will have a higher mortality rate than other segments of the overall media and technology industries. There are far too many MySpace and YouTube genetically challenged clones. All but a few will fail. The winners are generally the ones that get in early and out before the bubble bursts. There are rare examples of bubble companies making it through the bust and going on to become successful and valuable companies. By the way, the combined cash flow of Spot Runner, LinkedIn and Facebook is less than that of one Costco store.'"
Is that a lot or a little? (Score:4, Funny)
I mean, have you seen a Costco on a Saturday before a ball game?
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Figures dont lie... (Score:5, Insightful)
Cash Flow != Profit.
Costco has a incredibly high cash flow and an absurdly minimal margin. So do grocery stores. Facebook, on the other hand, has what im willing to bet is a pretty high margin on its fundamental product. This has to be one of the most utterly stupid, biased, half truth lines ever.
Heres an equally accurate (and equally misleading and biased) half truth in the other direction:
Facebook has nearly 50 times the profit margin of a Costco, walmart, and target combined. Clearly Retail is a bubble about to burst.
Id take Reaganomics over this kind of bullshit financial analysis any day.
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Costco earns an operating margin of about 3%. The operating margin of Facebook is unlikely to be higher than about 30%.
So, whatever metric you use, your statement is almost certainly incorrect, whereas Mr. Dagres made a statement that is plausibly correct.
He's not doing bullshit financial analysis. In fact it is textbook financial analysis to use cash flow statements as a bullshit detector. The cash flow statement
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Only if there's enough of it to pay off the costs of generating the cash flow in the first place.
While no one number is sufficient to capture the financial health of an enterprise, an over-emphasis on cash-flow was one of the characteristics of the bubble investing in the late '90's. Cash flow management is critical to the success of a startup, but too often investors and managers focused on cash flow maximization at the expense of sustainabili
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As far as Facebook's profit margin is concerned, I believe it's probably negative. The reason I'd say that is that they were lining up venture financ
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You see: CASHFLOW is the incomings and ou
Re:Is that a lot or a little? (Score:4, Funny)
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The perception of value has nothing to do with a fiat economy. The original tulip craze took place on the gold standard.
There is no such thing as Web 2.0 (Score:5, Insightful)
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It's nothing more than a buzzword of sorts at this stage.
If it's surprising that the Internet would adopt new technologies and ideas, then whoever feels this way hasn't been in technology longer than a day.
But, is anything in Web 2.0 even defined? Just what is it? The ability to communicate without a postback? Surely it's much more than that, right?
I don't think this Web 2.0 thing has existed yet.
I believe some people have ideas about what the Internet could/can and will
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It means a combination of server and specialized client software. World of Warcraft, for example. Or, possibly, P2P programs like Fr
the O'reilly trademark might speed things up (Score:2)
The note about revenues compared to one Costco store is pretty sad. It makes me wonder where any of the other "blogger" "elite" sites stock up. I always deeply suspected that most of the "web 2.0" and "blogger" fad was just a giant San Francisco circle jerk by people who think far too highly of themselves [xeni.net].
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yes no fud notfud maybe (Score:2, Funny)
Federal Reserve (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Federal Reserve HEY MODERATORS! (Score:4, Interesting)
I'm sorry, but this should be modded +5 insightfull, not -1 offtopic. The fed printed up a bunch of money, used it to buy US bonds (to finance the war in Iraq), and now people are supprised that the price of every commodity across the board has doubbled in the last 5 years. Well, hint hint, they haven't - in "real" terms it's the dollar that's gone down in value far more than the commodities that have gone up. The only problem is that they loaned out so much freaking money that now society is saturated in more debt than it can pay back. By any standard, the US is bankrupt.
Well, guess what. They only have one choice: "print up money and buy stocks" and that's exactly what they've been doing. But it will fail for the same reason that any central planned economy fails, and it will be very very ugly. Forget stocks, people should buy gold and prepare for the US dollar not to be a currency anymore. It really is that bad.
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Did you live through the 80s? If so, were you awake and/or at all aware of the U.S. economy?
If so, I can only assume that you have no understanding of economics if you think we're so much worse off now.
People gripe and moan about the failure of our education system related to the hard sciences, but compared to the social sciences such as history and economics the hard sciences are doing pretty good.
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Obviously, a good number of historians never went very far with economics.
There's a fair amount of evidence pointing towards a recovery from the depression even without WWII. The government was starting to buy a lot of highways, bridges, and other public goods in order to put people to work. Of course WWII sped up the process a great deal, because suddenly the government needed a shitload of planes, sol
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1. Gov't needs to buy bombs. Buys them with money collected from taxes.
2. Private companies sell bombs, uses money to pay salaries.
3. Salaries are taxed, leftovers used to buy fun and useful things.
4. Bombs are dropped, destroyed, along with resources and infrastructure (plus fun and useful things).
6. After the war, gov't buys new infrastructure to replace the old.
7. Private companies sel
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ITEM 1: Gov't needs to buy bombs. Buys them with money collected from taxes.
not all the money is from taxes, some is borrowed from people/institutions and are called bonds, now the "money" your talking about is called M1, cash and checkable deposits, the bonds are called M3, and both are money, just different kinds. When a statement about economics is made, the part that typically left out is the "Other things being equal" part. Increasing the money supply faster than the demand for the money makes it
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Removing money fro
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It seems like employment is more important than produc
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Re:Federal Reserve HEY MODERATORS! (Score:5, Insightful)
It will however balance out. China, Japan and OPEC can't simply dump 2-3 trillion dollars worth of bonds, they would be insane to do so. Instead they'll simply make Americans pay their debt. The US is just going to be saddled with high interest rates and high inflation for a while. At the end the dollar probably isn't going to be such a favoured reserve currency and Americans will have to work that little bit harder, just the same as the rest of the world.
They do currently have another option. Stop printing money and start running a surplus budget.
Oh Btw, the big problem isn't Iraq, that's just causing a gradual slide, it's the retirement of the baby boomers, we should start to see the effects fairly soon.
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We're pretty scared that the Chinese will stop keeping the American dollar afloat (They have a static exchange rate) or that OPEC will make oil transactions in Euro's instead of U.S. dollars.
If either of those happens we're going to be looking at a BIG BIG BIG recession.
Don't take us with you plz! Just FYI! K Thx bai!
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Silly Canadians (Score:5, Funny)
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How? By having the de facto international currency. Take a handful of dollars and you'll see that they are accepted as legal tender pretty much everywhere on the globe. Yes, even in countries like Iraq or North Korea. For the simple reason that those countries need Dollars for international trade, too.
Pretty much every country on this planet has Dollar reserves. The price of internationally traded goods is given in USD, and more often
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The response is known.
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Do you really have relevancy to speak on this subject?
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If the Chinese ever "call in our paper" we would experience a recession while their country went down in flames.
That might have been true were the dollar the only reserve currency... By diversifying into euros and others, the currencies in question will increase in value making imports cheaper for those countries. Imports from for example china.
e.g.
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0ca841d4-c3c7-11da-bc52-00 00779e2340.html [ft.com]
A bad thing? (Score:5, Insightful)
High Startup Cost (Score:5, Insightful)
If managed correctly, this is far less expensive than maintaining a 'real world' location.
If I were an investor, I wouldn't write off the Web 2.0 companies as a whole, but I would be leery of things like high salesman salaries, a large management to production employment ratio, and an absence of realistic business plans.
We still have the best of the Web 1.0 bubble with us, and they're profitable. Five, ten years from now, we'll have the best of the Web 2.0 bubble with us and will be speculating about which of the 3.0 companies are next to go.
Business as usual (Score:2)
Now, I'm not economist, but a lot of investors lost their shirts in the dot-bomb and going to be put off the technology sector all together. I'd say thats going to act as a mitigating factor. People aren't just asking whats the hot
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youtube and google is actualy a good fit google lives and breathes bandwidth manageme
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Possibly, however maintenance isn't start-up. Many of these Web 2.0 ventures are exactly that, capital ventures, and those are typically anything but lean and mean. My employer company jumped on the 'portal' thing with Excite a few years back and dropped $70 million, some on the typical Web essentials of designer chairs and oxygen dispensers, over
tagging beta: yes (Score:5, Informative)
Web 2.0 looks to me to be the same as the
Let me try and expound on that last statement a bit; it is based on personal experience, not some knee-jerk reaction. I got hired as a consultant about 9 months before the
All of the latest marketing and hype for Web 2.0 seems to have this same negative attitude about tech. dweebs. Geeks become slaves, IPOs go through the roof (but you can't afford the shares on a geek's salary) and companies sell vapourware. Projects go over budget, get extended, fire their entire team, hire more expensive consultants and extended again. The last contract I was at was still suffering from this crap. The product had been in development for 4 years by 2-3 people full-time, and I could still write a better version in 6 months by myself.
If there was an obvious decline in corporate corruption, I'd say that Web 2.0 might not be such a bubble. AJAX and other "dynamic" approaches do offer a better end-user experience. Broadband content is commonplace. Blogging is popular. But the overall negatives vastly outweigh the positives. We need to stop thinking about technology as a short-term investment strategy, and consider the overall societal impact. I'm not in it for the IPOs myself; I hope those that are start to listen to the geeks. "Don't make me angry; you wouldn't like me when I'm angry"
mandelbr0t
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All of the latest marketing and hype for Web 2.0 seems to have this same negative attitude about tech. dweebs. Geeks become slaves, IPOs go through the roof (but you can't afford the shares on a geek's salary) and companies sell vapourware. Projects go over budget, get extended, fire their entire team, hire more expensive consultants and extended again.
Huh? What? I mean, for the most part, what you just said was similar about the Web 2.0 bubble and the .com bubble is actually.... well it is what is different, not similar.
Geeks become slaves? Well maybe here and there, but the Open Source movement is happening right along side the Web 2.0 movement.
IPO's through the roof? Nope, not true. This bubble is more about being bought out than going public. Acutally, almost all the new about anything is a buyout, not a IPO.
Companies selling vaporware? Not
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Projects go over budget, get extended, fire their entire team, hire more expensive consultants and extended again? Examples? This sounds like a company looking to embrace Open Source, not some Web 2.0 thing.
Hmmm. Actually, it was a company that embraced Microsoft. And they did that because they got tired of Sun. I'll admit that there's some truth to many of the points you brought up, but I stand by my corruption argument. And, in a strange way, you've proven the "geeks don't know business" argument.
Try being a little cynical for a few minutes, and stay with me. The issue in this particular case was not how quickly the project could be done; in fact, there didn't appear to be much interest in creating a workin
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1. It serves no apparent useful purpose
2. You don't see easily how anyone can make money doing it
3. Everyone you know has made so much money doing it
Anything that inflates to quickly will POP. The problem is that ANYTHING that makes money these days is pounced upon by get rich quick assholes who drive up prices and kill the whole thing. There's no such thing as an unsaturated market unless you innovate or in
Irrelevant (Score:3, Informative)
Information technology is developed at an exponential pace - and we are nowhere near a saturation.
Re:Irrelevant (Score:4, Funny)
Just ads!?#@! (Score:3, Insightful)
Really, if all web2.0 is about ad supported services, then we are truly heading for a bust. Ads are like having prostitiution support your schools. Also, features such as "more collaboration" is great, but it not a revolutionary thing.
Great, another fine use of all those MBA degrees on Wall Street.
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So if I use Ad block extension, it means I'm having sex with prostitutes for free?
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Am I the only one who missed the connection here?
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Oh come on man, your hyperbole does not serve the arguement well. I'm no fan of advertising, but no one pays attention to arguements like that.
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Two, ad supported media businesses do have precedent, it's called broadcast TV.
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You *do* realize that's what TV is all about, right?
Pretty much (Score:2, Interesting)
The new dot-com business are like donkeys chasing a carrot on a stick. They just keep on walking, never getting any closer to the carrot, but expending a lot of energy (money). They need some company to come along and give them the carrot.
I call this "The Paul Graham Business Plan".
This doesn't sound like Paul Graham (Score:2)
So will there be a Web 3.0? (Score:5, Funny)
=P
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To point out the person pointing out the obvious. (Score:2, Insightful)
Wait a moment, the characteristics of a fast moving segment of the business world is that it moves faster than the other segments?
Wow. I wish I could be an analyst.
My prediction for 2007: Thirsty people will continue to buy water.
web 2.0 (Score:2, Insightful)
the point of websites such as facebook, youtube, digg, etc. are not to stay aronud forever. instead, the point is to take advantage of technologies and trends today (broadband, social networking on the web, etc.) to create something interesting for people.
sure, ad revenue off a website is nothing compared to a costco store. but for paying a few hundred bucks to get your site colocated or hosted and then running ads, you can sit back, relax in a chair, and watch money pour int
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As soon as you start paying folks for work, it gets really expensive (a few good developers, consultants, sales folks, rent(!), and you're looking at a multimillion dollar operation---unless of course they work for peanuts, which most good developers don't).
Also, the idea of `setting up something', and the
boredom (Score:2)
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It's not the "connection" part that will fail, it's the economic part.
Sure, you might make the best site ever, holding the most interesting collection of data of the whole universe. That does not mean that you will make enough money by selling ads. Also note that ads get in the way of when you intend to have faster loading times and going straigh
Old news... (Score:4, Funny)
Its all about the CPM (Score:2)
TechCrunch makes $60,000 a month for just 2.5 Million page views. Thats $24 CPM ($ per 1000 page views), or 2.4 cents every time a page is rendered. This bubble will burst.
The average joe is lucky to get $2 CPM. Which I think is much more reasonable.
http://money.cnn.com/magazines/business2/business2 _archive/2006/09/01/8384325/ [cnn.com]
http://www.sitemeter.com/?a=stats&s=s26techcrunch& r=33 [sitemeter.com]
Audiences beg to differ (Score:2)
Baidu, Digg, Flickr, Orkut, Tencent QQ, Photobucket et al are prob
Sounds so familiar... (Score:2)
Real Web2.0 Profits (Score:4, Insightful)
When was the last time you read someone's favorite books, movies, or TV shows off of a Facebook or Myspace profile? What about the comments on some recent product purchase in a blog (that's even what my blog is about)? What goods could you see in the background of the latest hot YouTube video? Ever wonder why your Gmail doesn't want you to delete old messages, even if they're useless, but instead "Archive" them?
"Web 1.0"'s advertising-driven model was about getting users to click on their ads. Companies would throw ads everywhere, with the hope that people would bite. Web 2.0 is more about gathering background on customers so that retailers and manufacturers can market more successfully to them. The ads on digg can look at what you've dugg in the past, so that they can have a more informed base for what they're going to pitch to you. It's one thing to say that a sporting goods company should advertise on ESPN.com and a software developer on Slashdot, but if you take your market research further than you can advertise for the perfect place to go after your team's next home game on ESPN.com or where you can find some good reference books for your language of choice on Slashdot.
It's not about getting in and getting out. It's about the data you collect. And if these companies are smart then they can bill on a subscription model for their customer information databases and be in business for quite some time. This is because background data is vital to marketers, and they will pay exorbitant amounts of money for the data. This should more than offset the operating costs of a website.
MySpace vs YouTube (Score:2)
YouTube is different. I see potential here. If anything can penetrate the caustic grip of the few transnational corporations who own the media and information in United States, it may be Google's YouTube. There are a number of ways they can gene
Like, sooooo 2006 (Score:3, Funny)
It leverages collaborative synergies in an open and proprietary way to deliver value for interactive component architecture.
It is so now, so modern so YOU! The smart set are 3.0!
Seriously, does anyone doubt me when I say that IT is just like the fashion industry?
That's why in 6 months I hope to be done with it.
Slashdot Skeptics (Score:2)
Personally, I'm refreshed at the resurgence of technologies since 2003. After the bubble burst, there was little or no investment in tech/Silicon Valley. It was no-mans land.
Since then, I've seen a bunch of products that would be classified as Web 2.0
Time for Web 3.0! (Score:2)
For the future, we should aim to launch the next gen faster. It seems investors don't care about their money anyway. One should assume that they've learned their lesson after the dot.com bubble burst. That the market isn't limitless and that copying a concept isn't profitable.
Well, it seems they don't learn. It's just the same crap all over. A handful of
Sustainability (Score:2)
I find it odd that so many people think like this. I.e., that to be a success a company MUST be bought, either by the public or by another company. In either scenario, the company being bought loses most of its capability to be rational and agile... so selling is an act that destroys value quite a lot of the time, not just in terms of lost profits t
Are we STILL discussing if such a thing exists ? (Score:2)
NO (Score:2)
We are again reaching the point where decorated turds get market capitalisations in the 100s of millions.
And still, they simply arent worth it.
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Investors care about returns. Growth is only one way for that to happen. A steady stream of large dividends from fairly constant profits will keep them happy too.
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Slashdot has been around longer then this "Web 2.0" thing. How exactly is slashdot "web 2.0"?
Re:Web 2.0 Url Please (Score:5, Informative)
Some businessmen somewhere realized that they can use "community produced content" to drive their sites rather than having to pay for writers and editors to produce content.
Our boss just gave us the "we will move toward web 2.0" speech in our "year and review" meeting. Free, up-to-date content (via forums) was the reasons he gave for moving toward "web 2.0".
That's all fine and dandy. Except that achieving a GOOD community driven site is not easy. You really need to reach a critical mass of users before your site's community will generate good, useful content that will attract more readers (and thus grow your community, and ad dollars). Would slashdot be as appealing to you if the community was only a handful of people? The news comes late, and you don't even get the whole story. The whole reason you come here is for the community's feedback to the stories. Most sites don't achieve anywhere close to this level of success, and their forums lie dormant with at most a couple of posts.
Eventually managers will realize that the promise of free "web 2.0" content is not as easy to achieve as they thought, and the pendulum will swing back toward "web 1.0."
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Slashdot is not a "web 2.0" site. It uses virtually no javascript, let alone AJAX. Its fonts are normal sized, it uses very few gradients, and not all the corners are rounded. It's also old.
As for five: flickr, digg, del.icio.where.the.fuck.do.the.dots.go.us, 37signals.com (3 "web 2.0" apps there), technorati
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Re:Web 2.0 Url Please (Score:5, Insightful)
http://www.flickr.com/ [flickr.com]
http://www.wikipedia.org/ [wikipedia.org]
http://del.icio.us/ [del.icio.us]
http://docs.google.com/ [google.com]
You might try Tim O'Reilly's [oreillynet.com] explanation, since he coined the bloody term in the first place.
Oh, and of course you heard of and used web 2.0 sites before anyone called them web 2.0. Think about it. Tim O'Reilly didn't sit around and think, hmm, let's come up with something we could call web 2.0. What would it be? And then went and made a bunch of people start implementing his ideas. It is descriptive, and the term to describe something (as happens pretty much always with history) came after that which is described. There had to be a web 2.0 before anyone could recognize it as something different from what came before and name it.
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Uhm, what about wikipedia is "Web 2.0" ?
Wikpedia uses no ajax, and uses standard http post methods, and generally is ( somewhat ) static content...
I thought Web 2.0 was supposed to be about user driven content using ajax and a load of other eye candy crap...
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5 Web 2.0 URLs (Score:2, Insightful)
technorati.com
digg.com
youtube.com
wikipedia.com
Not one of those sites provides it's own content - all content is users generated "for free". Every one of those sites allow you to publish the content on your own site "for free". You can keep up to date with new content without visiting the sites "for free".
If you don't understand the difference between this and nytimes-registered-users-only content, then it's no surprise you don't get the difference between the old web and the direction the web is
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Your theory doesn't seem to account for the recent record-low levels of unemployment. High-skill tech jobs have always gone unfilled.
Re:I hope Web 2.0 is another bubble (Score:4, Insightful)
High-skill jobs do go unfilled because the requirements to fill the job are unrealistic. i.e. someone with 10 years experience in
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A web 2.0 site is one where the users provide the content.
Google is not [it's just a search engine].
Gmail is arguable, but would likely fall into the "not" category.
Wiki is.
Blogs are not (unless the main draw is the comments, ala Slashdot), but blogging sites (blogger, livejournal) are.
Y