99designs - Connecting Designers from Around the World

Vishal Sharma Tuesday, July 15, 2008 , , , , , , , , , , , 0 comments

Today we showcase an exciting and a successful venture co-founded by, Mark Harbottle in 2008 from Melbourne, Australia, 99designs - it connects thousand of designers from around the world with clients who need design tasks completed fast, and without the usual high cost and limited choice you get from most traditional design firms.

In a recent email based interview with Mark, he gave insights into his venture and how he is progressing with it. This is what he has to say:

• Please tell us about yourself, your background and interests?
I’m 34 years old. I have a degree in computer systems engineering. I started my working life as a programmer, but I eventually found I was much better at online marketing, which back in 1995 was an area not many people had explored.
I’ve worked with pure internet businesses for 13 years now. The first 4 years after I graduated I worked with one of Australia’s first internet companies, and the last 9 have been spent working on my own businesses. I started sitepoint in 1999 with a business partner in Canada, and I launched a new company earlier this year called 99designs.
I live in Melbourne with my wife and two little girls. When I’m not running around after two kids and two businesses (I’m not sure which is harder) I’ve usually either escaped to the footy or I’m at the gym battling to keep fit.

• What services do you provide for your customers?
99designs can be used to source any custom design work, so logo designs, business cards, web page designs, brochures, t-shirts, banner ads and so on. The difference between 99designs and your typical design firm is that we have access to a large community of designers who contribute to the outcome of your design rather than a single person.
The way it works is like this…
Say you want a logo designed for your business - you post your requirements on 99designs.com for $39 USD and nominate the amount you wish to pay for the finished design, say $300 USD. Designers from around the world view your requirements and start producing designs for you. Over the course of a few days you guide the designers by communicating what you like and dislike about their work. At the end of the process you choose your favourite design, pay the designer the amount you nominated (in this case $300 USD), and you walk away with a finished design.
We currently have around 16,000 registered designers, growing at 100 a day, so there’s no shortage of creative inspiration and variety.

• Who are the people behind this and how did it get started?
The original concept that 99designs is based on was founded by a group of passionate designers within the sitepoint.com forums. These particular designers needed an outlet for their work and they loved challenging each other so they would seek out small design projects and compete to produce the best design.
We noticed that this activity was gaining in popularity within the forums so we invested in building an online platform to better manage the design process and help bring new projects to the table for the designers. We ran a proof of concept for 18 months before deciding that it had enough legs to spin off into a new company.
So you could say our users founded the idea, we just crafted it into a business.

• What is the main objective/mission behind your venture?
Our objective is to build the biggest designer community on earth. The designers really are the core of our business, so our goal is to provide them with a friendly, professional, and secure environment where they can compete on a level playing field, show off their work, improve their skills, communicate with peers, and build relationships with new clients. We already have many designers from around the world who make their living through 99designs.com.

• What type of customers you are targeting?
As I mentioned 99designs is a community of designers but when business is transacted it’s also an online marketplace, and like every marketplace you have two sides to target – buyers and the sellers. For 99designs, the buyers are the clients seeking design work, and the sellers are the designers selling their services - so we obviously need to cater to both.

• How many people are using your services?
In the 4 months since we launched 99designs has grown to over 35,000 registered users, around half are designers. Traffic has grown from just 1.5 million page views per month in February 2008 to over 6.2 million page views a month in July 2008. It really is going gang busters.

• What sort of marketing you are using to spread the word?
Apart from ad hoc promotions on our sister site (sitepoint.com) we haven’t done any outbound marketing at all – the uniqueness and simplicity of the service we provide and the fact that we’ve disrupting the multi-billion dollar a year design industry has meant that word of mouth has largely been responsible for our growth to date.

• How are you measuring the success of your venture? Are their any special mechanisms/tools in place to monitor the progress?
Yes, we measure the success of our venture based on a number of key metrics. We have an online dashboard that’s linked to our user database via a number of reports and graphs that provide an instant view of everything that’s going on in the business. We also use third parties tools like Google Analytics to measure traffic and track referrals.

• What is the monetizing/revenue model? Is their any new model, which is being tried?
We charge a $39 USD listing fee to upload your design brief to 99designs.com. That gives you access to our design community who will view your brief and decide if they want to participate. The designer is paid directly by the customer once they produce a design they’re happy with. That’s the way it works now, but we’re moving towards a slightly different model where we charge a small success fee at the end of the process and handle the whole transaction. This will simplify things a lot for everyone.

• Which are the main competitors or major players in this market segment?
There are a few competitors popping up and drawing inspiration from 99designs, however by being first to market we’ve very quickly established a critical mass of both designers and clients and claimed the #1 spot in this space. Obviously we’re working hard to protect our position and continue to grow.

• What are the main technologies used behind this venture?
99designs is built using commodity open source tools, Apache, PHP and MySQL. The site is hosted on Amazon's virtualized clustering product, EC2. Thanks to a number of cutting edge tools, the site can scale up or down virtual server resources based on time of day and traffic demands. This has allowed 99designs to survive a sustained growth that would have outgrown conventional setups several times.

• What is your operating environment (operating system) and what type of database you are using?
The development and production servers run Linux. The database servers run MySQL 5 with Innodb.

• The conventional computing model is shifting to Cloud computing. How do you see the future of business changing with the use of this technology?
I see the major change being the lower barrier for entry for small startups. Garage-based companies can now develop applications in weeks that can handle huge volumes of traffic and only pay for what they use. Avoiding significant infrastructure costs up front means less risk, and more funding for innovative ideas. The ability to scale on demand means smaller outfits can hope to deal with the volumes of traffic that sites like Digg and Facebook can deliver without having to provision entire server farms ahead of time.

• What do you think the government (federal and state) should do to improve the culture of innovation?
At a federal level they shouldn’t be removing access to key government funding initiatives such as the Commercial Ready Grant. Start ups need all the help they can get and grants such as these are vital for their survival.
In terms of encouraging established businesses to innovate I think if your company has a proven history of success there should more in the way of incentives to encourage you to do more to drive innovation, whether that be via new grants, tax offsets, or rebates.
On a state level, they should be providing incentives for businesses who hire more people not penalizing them – so abolishing payroll tax would be a good start.

• If you are given an opportunity to change the nation, what 3 things would you do?
I would improve our health care system buy looking at examples of what’s working and what’s not working overseas. I would do something about the rising cost of living and housing affordability. And lastly I would build desalination plants around the country, funded by introducing a ‘water tax’ for excess water usage. Seems logical to me.

Thanks Mark for sharing your thoughts with us. All the best for future.

For coverage on other Australian startups, innovation, tech trends check this out and our coverage on interviews can be found here

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Coastal Watch - Surf Reports & Live Streaming Vision for Beaches in Australia

Vishal Sharma Monday, July 14, 2008 , , , , , , , , , , 0 comments

Today we showcase an exciting and a successful venture co-founded in 2000 by Ex-MD, Mal Jago, who now has a digital consultancy business Earworm Consulting, from Sydney, Australia, Coastal Watch - provides accurate surf reports for beaches around Australia and live streaming vision.

In a recent email based interview with Mal, he gave insights into this venture . This is what he has to say:

• Please tell us about yourself, your background and interests?
Spent 15 years as a Foreign exchange Dealer before a sea change in 2000 into Coastalwatch

• Please tell us about your venture/company?
Surfcams at beaches to provide surf reports and conditions to surfers/boating/ Surf Life Savings

• Who are the people behind this and how it started?
Chris Lane- Surfer and IT guru wanting to avoid getting up at UNi and wasting his time getting
to beach and find no waves.

• How long it took before it was up and running?
1-2 years established 1998.

• What services it provides it for consumer or customers?
Streaming surf cams/Surf Reports/ Swell Forecasting/ Surf news/Mobile phone data/ iPTV

• What type of customers were are targeting?
Surfers, Boating, Surf Life Saving and really anyone with a interest in the beach and water ways

• How many people were using your the services?
450k Uvs/month

• What sort of marketing you are using to spread the word?
Mainly done via word of mouth and through key sponsorship deals.

• How did you measure the success of your venture? Are their any special mechanisms/tools in place to monitor the progress?
Traffic against other sporting sites online as well as weather and news sites.

• What w
as the monetizing/revenue model? Was their any new model, which was tried?
Shifted from start as advertisers were slow to move spend online with audience. So content sales to mobile/ web dev initially then display took over as major revenue model. Also r
an a community radio model, as it was a free service and expensive to run people could opt in to become a member with no extra service. Professional people were happy to as they know how expensive it is to run a business and we saved them considerable time in doing the sport they love.

• Who were the main competitors or major players in this market segment?
Major sports portals with large franchises behind them. Other weather/surf sites

• What are the main technologies used behind this venture?
IP cameras and streaming software, but alot of the infrastructure was custom built or adapted.

• Were you using lot of open source tool sets for this?
Yes we did.

• What’s your thought on being an entrepreneur? How tough was it to start a venture in Australia?
Being early to market seeing such huge potential as did many others and the constant validating your story and keeping the dream alive. Not being apart of the major publishers and being massively under financed made it very difficult.

• What’s your thought on the start-ups culture and innovation coming out of Australia especially in media and telecom?
Always so exciting the last 2 years as more serious money enters the space. But its super competitive and many good ideas dont make it.

• What do you think the government (federal and state) should do to improve the culture of innovation and the telecom industry?
Broadband/Broadband/Broadband.

• If you are given an opportunity to change the nation, what 3 things you will do?
Poverty/ health / education all the things Government should be.

• How often do you catch up with others trying similar things and where do you catch up? Do you have dedicated communities in your city?
Go to as many events as i can and touch base with a good network of people.

• Do you have any advice for people who want to start their venture?
Believe/ passion/ planning/ good investors

• Which City you were based in?
Sydney

Thanks Mal for sharing your thoughts with us. All the best for future.

For coverage on other Australian startups, innovation, tech trends check this out and our coverage on interviews can be found here

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The Podcast Network - World's First Podcasting Business

Vishal Sharma Monday, June 30, 2008 , , , , , , 0 comments

Today we showcase an exciting and a successful technology business co founded by Cameron Reilly , from Australia,The Podcast Network - World's First Podcasting Business.

In a recent email based interview with Cameron, he gave insights into his venture and how he is progressing with it. This is what he has to say:

Please tell us about yourself, your background and interests?
I'm 37, stunningly handsome, brilliant, and like long walks on the beach.

What is the name of your venture/company?
I'm the founder of The Podcast Network, MODM, Geeks Who Care, Twittories and The Church of LOTU.

Please tell us about your venture/company?

Where to start?The Podcast Network - the world's first podcasting business. We currently produce over 80 podcasts with a monthly audience of about 500,000 people from around the world.
MODM - a monthly networking event for the digital media industryGeeks Who Care - a charity based on getting geeks together to use their geekful powers for good in their local communities.
Twittories - an experiment to get 140 people to collaborate on writing a short story using Twitter
The Church of LOTU - a church for atheists and critical thinkers.

Who are the people behind this and how it started?
Let's focus on TPN. My co-founder was a guy called Mick Stanic but he left the business about a year after we started it in Feb 2005. TPN was formed off the back of the podcast Mick and I started doing in Nov2004 called "G'Day World", which was the first Australian podcast (which now makes it the longest running Australian podcast).

How long it took before it was up and running?
It took us about two months from the day we came up with the idea to start something to launching the site.

What is the main objective/mission behind your venture?

To build a 21st century global media company that can change the world.

What services it provides it for consumer or customers?
Audio and video podcasts mainly, but we recently published our first book (in both paperback and e-book formats).

What type of customers you are targeting?
Intelligent people who want to change the world.

How many people are using your services?
about 500,000.

What sort of marketing you are using to spread the word?

Just word of blog.

How are you measuring the success of your venture? Are their any special mechanisms/tools in place to monitor the progress?
We look at the stats.

What is the monetizing/revenue model? Is their any new model, which is being tried?
We're selling advertising. Not much of it yet, but that's the plan.

Which are the main competitors or major players in this market segment?
The entire radio industry, the entire television industry, and everyone with a podcast.

What are the main technologies used behind this venture?
The interwebs. And a microphone.

What has been the most easy to use, out of box and helpful technology

Wordpress rocks.

Are you using lot of open source tool sets for this?
Yes it's 100% open source.

What is your operating environment (operating system) and what type of database you are using?

Linux and MySQL.

What's your thought on being an entrepreneur? How tough it is to start a venture in Australia?
I love being an entrepreneur. Australia has advantages and disadvantages, the same as anywhere else.

What's your thought on the start-ups culture and innovation coming out of Australia especially in media and telecom?
There aren't enough of them.

How do you see the opportunity in mobile space? Do you think iPhone (closed) and Google's Android based (open) platform will be the two major players going forward?
I think mobile is huge and yes, Apple and Google will be the key players moving forwards.

The conventional computing model is shifting to Cloud computing which is comprised of SAAS, PAAS and IAAS (infrastructure). This has resulted in changes to conventional monetising model? How do you see the future of business in terms of technology and revenue model?
I'm just a media guy. Software business models don't interest me much outside of what I have to pay for it. I think Microsoft are screwed though.

What do you think the government (federal and state) should do to improve the culture of innovation and the telecom industry?
Get out of the way, mostly. And perhaps create some incentives for start-ups (like a tax break or two).

If you are given an opportunity to change the nation, what 3 things you will do?
I am changing the nation (and the world) every day.
Here's my plan:
1. Run a large media company.
2. Start a new political party.
3. Use the media company to start a new political party.

You are a prolific and a well-established blogger and podcaster. How do you manage this with work?

It is my work.

How often do you catch up with others trying similar things and where do you catch up? Do you have dedicated communities in your city?
I started MODM about a year ago in Melbourne for that very reason. It was a monthly catch-up at various bars in Melbourne. This year I'm launching it nationally.

Do you have any advice for people who want to start their venture?Do it. Stop making bullshit excuses and stop listening to your spouse. Just pull your socks up and do it.

Thanks Cameron for sharing your thoughts with us. All the best for future.

For coverage on other Australian startups, innovation, tech trends check this out and our coverage on interviews can be found here

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Sticky Tickets - Online Ticketing and Event Registration

Vishal Sharma Wednesday, June 18, 2008 , , , , , 0 comments

Today we showcase an exciting and interesting startup from Sydney, Australia, Sticky Tickets - an online ticketing and event registration web portal. It is co founded by Matt Freedman, Jay Gaibisso and Dany Gruosso.
I further explored about Sticky Tickets and how Matt is progressing in a candid interview with him. This is what he has to say:

• Please tell us about yourself, your background and interests?

I’m Matt Freedman and I’m the CEO of Sticky Tickets, an online ticketing and event registration web portal. We are based in Sydney, Australia and our site currently services all of Australia. I am also the Chairman of eMarketing business Redback Solutions which I founded in 1999.

• Who are the people behind this and how it started?

The business was co-founded by myself and Sydney entrepreneurs Jay Gaibisso and Dany Gruosso. Jay hired the IMAX during the FIFA World Cup in 2006 to watch Australia v Brazil but couldn’t find a simple to use, self service online system to handle the ticket selling and payments so brought on Dany and myself to help him develop and realise the idea.

• How long did it take before it was up and running?

After initial planning and developing the idea through late 2006, Sticky Tickets was formed in early 2007 and the site was launched in July 2007. The actual development time was only around 4 months once the market research was complete and scope of the functionality of the site was developed.

• What service does it provides for consumer or customers?

It allows anyone that is running an event to sell tickets to it or handle registrations. We’ve created a very simply process of joining up as an organiser for free, creating and listing your event, marketing you event and managing the ticket sales, ticket delivery and invoicing.

It takes all of the admin nightmare out of the ticketing process, so event organisers can their time on the higher value tasks of managing and promoting their event.

It can be used for a very diverse range of events from business lunches, charity events, fashion shows, movie nights, theatre and even for private events where someone just needs to collect money from the other attendees, like a birthday or bridal shower.

Most importantly it add eCommerce facilities to organisations that not in a position or don’t want the hassle of building their own payment gateways into their websites.

It doesn’t matter how big or small your event is. We have had people use for a 4 person dinner, through to the Sydney International Boat Show who will have thousands of people buy tickets online.

• How many people are using your services?

We have hundreds of event organisers current using the site with new organisers joining everyday. There are thousands of registered members buying tickets through the site daily, many of which are return purchasers and use the site as a what’s on for local events.

• What sort of marketing you are using to spread the word?

Much of our marketing has been through targeted online advertising such as Google Adwords. We have also implemented a very successful word of mouth campaign and increase the spread of this with a referral program.

Our organisers are our best salespeople, spreading the word for us. We are finding that our rate of growth is accelerating as we bring on board more organisers.

• What is the monetizing/revenue model? Is their any new model, which is being tried?

For free events, there is no charge at all. If we process a credit card, we charge a small transaction fee that the organiser can choose to include in the ticket price or add onto the ticket. It is a low margin, high volume business.

• What are the main technologies used behind this venture?

The site has been built using ASP.NET and MS SQL. The site utilises an infrastructure that can handle massive growth with any decrease in performance.

• What has been the most easy to use, out of box and helpful technology?

The site itself has been custom built to handle the specific (and changing needs) of our market. In other areas of the business we utilise as much off the shelf software as possible. Salesforce.com has probably been the most useful out of the box solution for handing enquiries, opportunities and customer support.

• What’s your thought on being an entrepreneur? How tough it is to start a venture in Australia?

Being an entrepreneur is great!! I love it. But it is certainly a personality type. The main thing to consider when being an entrepreneur is that you are going to have to work hard, you have to try and focus on one idea at a time (because the ideas just keep coming) and once you have got the idea off the ground, you need to hand over the control or management to someone who is better suited to the details of day to day business management.

• What Government resources have you used to help your business? And have they made an impact? Have you sought any funding?

I’ve found as an entrepreneur, the amount of time and paper work to get any sort of government assistance is usually counter productive and it’s easier just to do it yourself and do it the way you want to do it. Private funding is much more successful and available. We have several private investors that have contributed funds and expertise to enable us to get the business off the ground and continue to grow it.

• Do you have any advise for people who want to start their venture?

  • Try and learn as much as you can before you start doing anything.
  • Make sure your idea has a sound revenue model
  • What ever your budget is, half you revenue forecasts and double the time frame. If you can still make it viable, then its worth a go.
  • Look for ideas that can run on autopilot, ie use technology and outsourcing to deliver the product. Stay away from service based models (ie selling hours for $). You aim should be to grow the biggest income generating business with least amount of people. Most people try and grow the biggest business employing the most people.

• Any suggested reading material?

Books

  • Secrets of Internet Entrepreneurs Exposed, Dale Beaumont – it features me, so I’m a bit biased, but it also has some great stories and ideas from 13 other internet entrepreneurs.
  • The E-Myth, Michael Gerber – an oldie but a good. Set up your business with automated systems and the end goal in mind.
  • The Tipping Point, Malcolm Gladwell – all you need is a social epidemic to make an average business into and exceptional business.
  • Anything from Seth Godin – he is truly the permission marketing guru.

Blogs

For coverage on other Australian startups, innovation, tech trends check this out and our coverage on interviews can be found here

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Tjoos - Compare Prices For Better Choice While Shopping

Vishal Sharma Wednesday, June 11, 2008 , , , , , , 0 comments

In our ongoing coverage of startups coming out of Australia and interviews with CEO's, Media Personalities, Philanthropists, and VC’s, today we showcase a startup in eCommerce segment from Manly, Tjoos.com - Compare Prices For Better Choice While Shopping. It is co-founded by Kim Chen and Bart Jellema.

Let us explore what Bart, co founder of Tjoos.com, is progressing with his venture. This is what he has to say:

• Who are the people behind this and how it started?
Back in July 2007 my partner and I were looking to purchase contact lenses online. Having done comparison shopping a few times I expected it to be easy to find the lowest price using one of the price comparison sites. We spend all day looking at every comparison site we could find and got some upsetting results. Shopping comparison engines rarely list the lowest price, and if they do it's merely a coincidence. Shopping comparison sites only list stores that pay them, making most sites nothing more than PPC product search sites. Basically the current function of comparison shopping engines is to give consumers the 'perception' of finding the lowest price and thereby facilitating the buying process. We believed there was a market for a quality online shopping portal and started plans for Tjoos.com (pronounced choose).

• How long it took before it was up and running?
In October 2007 we launched the site with the world's first real price comparison engine. The only category we listed was contact lenses, and to calculate the 'store to door' price we took into account volume discounts, shipping costs, hidden handling costs, taxes and available discount coupons. After successfully launching the contact lens price comparison feature we experimented for a few months and created an online store directory listing over 90,000 online stores, a clothing recommendation engine, some widgets and an extensive coupon code listing.

• What is the main mission behind your venture?
We have narrowed our focus to online coupon codes. Coupon codes are the online equivalent of grocery coupons. Many online stores such as Old Navy, Dell and Amazon issue coupon codes that give you instant discounts during checkout. This is a huge market with over 25 millions users looking for coupon codes each month, however there is no dominant player. This is
because the quality of coupon sites is so low that none of these sites can give consumers the confidence that they list all available coupons and that their coupons work. At Tjoos.com we are setting up a team of people that work 24/7 around the globe to collect, enter, organize and test coupon codes to provide the most comprehensive and highest quality coupon site on the
web. It's free to use and we don't display advertising.

• How many people are using your services?
More than a million people have already used our site and visitor numbers keep growing.

• What is the revenue model?
A number of the stores we list on our site provide us compensation for referrals. This means that if we refer a user to one of these stores and the user makes a purchase, we receive a percentage of the sale. Currently the sales we make through our partners are over US$100.000 per month. In line with our mission we naturally also list many stores that do not provide any
compensation for the referrals.

• How often do you catch up with others trying similar things and where do you catch up?
Over the last few months we've met many like-minded people and we try to go to at least one event every week. To help others find out what's happening around Australia I setup an open wiki where everyone can share their knowledge on starting up in Australia.

• What are your thoughts on being an entrepreneur?
We absolutely love it! We live and work in Manly, close to the beach and though we work long hours, we work when we feel like it. For me it is like doing what I would do as a hobby anyway, but now I get to do it full-time. When running your own business, there is none of the big company rubbish, no red tape, no politics. We get to decide what to do and just do it. It's also very exciting to create a successful company out of nothing. Less than a year ago we just had an idea and some crayon drawings. Now we have website with thousands of visitors every day.

• Any external funding?
We are a self funded company.

• Which City are you based in?
We are in the heart of Silicon Beach: Manly, NSW

• Do you have any advice for people who want to start their venture?
Start! Just get it out there as soon as you can. Don't be afraid someone will steal your idea and stuff like that. As long as you're small nobody will notice, when you're big you're already ahead of the pack. On top of that people tend to not believe in what you do until it works, so just get out there and do it, talk about, get feedback, go to social events such as OpenCoffee, BarCamp, friday night drinks, and many of the other regular meetups happening around Australia.


Thanks Bart for sharing your thoughts with us. All the best for future.

For coverage on other Australian startups, innovation, tech trends check this out and our coverage on interviews can be found here


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Navsports - Your Sporting Community

Vishal Sharma Sunday, June 08, 2008 , , , , , , 1 comments

Today we showcase a story of another successful startup and entrepreneur, Stewart Whicker, Founder & CEO, NavSports Ltd

NavSports is an Australian based company focused on providing next generation tools to grass root sports clubs to promote to and communicate with existing and potential participants.

Let us explore what Stewart has to say about his venture NavSports and his thoughts on Sports as a industry and Innovation coming out of Australia. This is what he has to say:

• Please tell us about yourself, your background and interests?
My name is Stewart Whicker and my background is in Sports Facility Management and Elite Sports Coaching. My interests include sports promotion and playing tennis when I get the chance.

• Who are the people behind this and how it started?
Dean Viglione is Navsports Chairman and a former Australian Junior Judo Champion.
Marcelo Moraes is our Chief Information Officer lead software developer .
Navsports also has a small team of graphic designers and software engineers.
Navsports was started by Stewart Whicker (CEO/Founder) about three years ago.

• How long it took before it was up and running?
About 12 months

• What is the main objective/mission behind your venture?
Provide the most cutting edge applications to the world`s sports clubs and provide the largest sports social network in the world.


• What services it provides it for consumer or customers?
Club benefits

  • Map location/Address.
  • Customised logos and pictures.
  • Contact phone numbers.
  • Contact emails.
  • Personal Profiles can display club`s logo.
  • Additional website linking.
  • List and edit coach profiles.
  • Competitions, Tournaments, squads.
  • Sports camps, coaching programs.
  • Socials and Lots more.
  • Latest competitions and tournaments are display right on you home page.
  • Closest sports players / athletes are displayed right on your home page.
  • Live event video streaming.
  • Communications portal with associated members. (Navmail)
  • Volunteer incentives.
  • Much more.
Personal member benefits
  • Upload photo of yourself.
  • Personal blog about your interests.
  • Shows a list of your local sporting clubs.
  • Add your friends to your profile.
  • Search for other people based on age and skill level.
  • Search thousands of Australian sports clubs.
  • Associate yourself with your favourite club by having their logo on your profile.
  • Upload your own sports videos and have the public vote for you to be our video star.
  • When you associate with a club, your profile will be on their club template under club members.
  • Select your own skill level.
  • Make your profile available in other sports.
  • Create sporting groups.
  • Much more.

• What type of customers you are targeting?
Sports minded people of all ages.

• How many people are using your services?
Last month we had over three hundred thousand unique searches on sports directory NavSports

• What sort of marketing you are using to spread the word?
We are working closely with National sporting bodies through our getting started program. You can view this program here

• How are you measuring the success of your venture? Are their any special mechanisms/tools in place to monitor the progress?
Yes we measure the growth of our site through member registrations, club registrations, visitors to our site and through advertising revenue, premium membership registrations and online statistical gathering.

• What is the monetizing/revenue model? Is their any new model, which is being tried?
Premium memberships, advertising models we are developing a new model but its under wraps for know.

• Which are the main competitors or major players in this market segment?
There are many players in this field. There are many national and international companies all vying for this market. You have players like (Nationally) Doubledrummer, 3eep, Sporting Central and the like and then you have (International) players like FanNation, Takkle and quite a few more.

• What are the main technologies used behind this venture?
We are a leading proponent of web2.0 technologies. Ajax, php, java, flash and a few newly developed technologies that are under wraps for the moment.

• What has been the most easy to use, out of box and helpful technology?
Gee we customise are own applications, we have partners for highly refine technologies but mainly believe in developing in house applications.

• Are you using lot of open source tool sets for this?
No we like to customise and develop our own apps

• What is your operating environment (operating system) and what type of database you are using?
Window server, and we are running MSQL database configurations

• How often do you catch up with others trying similar things and where do you catch up?
Absolutely, it’s very important to communicate with industry leaders we catch up online. Sportsmarketing20 is a great resource for budding entrepreneurs’

• Do you have dedicated communities in your city?
There are communities within Australia, but within Australia we mainly work with National sports bodies and local sporting clubs.

• What’s your thought on being an entrepreneur? How tough it is to start a venture in Australia?
If it was easy then everyone would be doing it, so I very much appreciate the difficulties and complexities of the industry. My background in elite sports coaching has given me insight to believe in yourself and your team.

• What government resources have you used to help your business? And have they made an impact?
I looked into Government resources. I must admit that for the time and effort in chasing Government funding as a resource you would be better off networking with industry peers.

• Have you sought any funding?
We have had fruitful meeting with venture capital firms, but at the moment continue to rely on our private backers. We see venture capital as imperative when we start to develop our hardware infrastructure further.

• What do you think the government (federal and state) should do to improve the culture of innovation and the telecom industry?
Stop wasting money by outsourcing funding pools to consultancy firms. They are out of touch and lack interest in innovation.

• Do you have any advice for people who want to start their venture?
Research, research and study. Know your industry. And don’t let people take your belief away (because they will try).

Thanks Stewart for sharing your thoughts with us. All the best for future.

For coverage on other Australian startups, innovation, tech trends check this out and our coverage on interviews can be found here


Image Credit PhotoWorx


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OurPatch - Regional And Rural Business Directory

Vishal Sharma Thursday, June 05, 2008 , , , , , , , 1 comments

In our ongoing coverage of startups coming out of Australia and interviews with CEO's, Media Personalities, Philanthropists, and VC’s, to gauge the innovation and startups landscape in Australia, today we showcase our interview with, the co founder of OurPatch - Regional And Rural Business Directory, Simon Wyk .

I did this interview to know more about OurPatch, its offerings, its progress and what does it mean to regional and rural business of Australia. Let us explore what Simon has to say about the progress of OurPatch and state of affairs in this domain in Australia. This is what he has to say:

• Please tell us about yourself, your background and interests?
I was born in South Africa, came to Australia in my mid twenties. I started my career in marketing. Initially for a chemicals company and subsequently for a home improvements company.

I then found myself in Interactive Communications and built the first commercial CD-ROM is Australia. We migrated from commercial CD-ROM to CD-ROM titles and I co-founded Brilliant Interactive Ideas which later became Brilliant Digital Entertainment. I left BII to found Hothouse a web development company. Our first client was Microsoft. We also worked for Coca-Cola, McDonalds, Telstra, Lexus. NineMSN, I7.

I co-founded Stuff Auctions. We outlasted GoFish, Sold but finally could not get past eBay.

I’m interested in my family, horse riding, Burning Man, kayaking and the Internet.

Please tell us about your venture/company?
The industry buzzword fanatics would say it’s a local search play. We think it’s a little more than that. We’re focused entirely on rural and regional Australia. We’re a directory of local business, we have community groups and events and we’re creating community with our blogs and forums. We think we’ve made a start on the local paper for 2008 and beyond

Who are the people behind this and how it started?
Patrick Cusack and I had been tinkering with ideas for sometime. We both had a passion for rural and regional Australia. We found a model in the Southern Highlands run by Steve von Kohorn and started with that

How long it took before it was up and running?
We started work in April 2007 but we were still working full time and it took until November before we had a working model. We launched officially on Australia Day 2008.

What is the main objective/mission behind your venture?
We’re trying to connect business and customers in rural and regional Australia

What services it provides it for consumer or customers?
We provide listings for business and community groups. We have a fully functioning jobs board, we have a comprehensive events calendar and we have community tools, forums, blogs and groups. We’re adding dating. All of this functionality is available down to the postcode.

What type of customers you are targeting?
Rural and regional Australian businesses and community groups.

How many people are using your services?
We launched the site on Australia day with thee Patches. Orange, Bathurst, Blayney and the Southern Highlands. We now have 38 Patches and the traffic grows every week. We’re pleased we’ll catch up with some of the established players by the end of July.

What sort of marketing you are using to spread the word?
We are using search and PR. We’ve done over 100 interviews on regional radio.

How are you measuring the success of your venture? Are their any special mechanisms/tools in place to monitor the progress?
We have 4 measures of success. We have three separate systems delivering these numbers. It’s not perfect but it works. It’s simple and pragmatic and we know where we are going.

What is the monetizing/revenue model? Is their any new model, which is being tried?
We are monetizing our site with advertising and premium listings. We’re also implementing a range of new services all with a fee for service model, Jobs, dating, coupons and other services all have well established business models.

Which are the main competitors or major players in this market segment?
Yellow Pages are the key competition here.

What are the main technologies used behind this venture?
We have built the platform using Ruby-on_Rails

What has been the most easy to use, out of box and helpful technology?
We use many of the 37 Signals products. We have people scattered across the country and we needed an easy way to keep them all across the progress and issues. It had to be easy to use. These products all fit the bill, I’d swop a few enterprise products for their products anyday.

Are you using lot of open source tool sets for this?
Yes the entire platform is open source.

What is your operating environment (operating system) and what type of database you are using?
Linux and My SQL

How often do you catch up with others trying similar things and where do you catch up? Do you have dedicated communities in your city?
Yes I know quite a few people in the same space trying to do similar things. We all share war stories. It’s motivating and helpful

What’s your thought on being an entrepreneur? How tough it is to start a venture in Australia?
It depends what you want. If you want the status and security of a big job with a big company it’s extremely difficult. If you’re prepared to give it a go and put up with the uncertainty that goes with a start-up, the lack of status and structure it’s not that hard. I’ve managed to raise money for a few of these now.

What do you think of the digital revolution that is breaking the conventional business model for media houses & music companies?
It’s an exciting time. Those of us who work in this industry are extremely lucky. This type of change does not happen very often and we won’t see it again for a long time. We’ve lived through a revolution and it’s not finished yet. Simple things like email have been transformed over the past year. You could now run an enterprise on email services that are outsourced and cost nearly nothing. A year ago every enterprise needed Exchange or Notes and a huge cost for the infrastructure. You can get started with a collaboration space for $40 per month two years ago you had to buy Sharepoint or Vignette. And on it goes. It’s amazing to be part of this.

Do you think Telstra is the major player for the future growth of Australia in a digital economy?
No I don’t. They missed out on search, the missed out in real estate, they missed out in auctions, they have missed out on job classifieds.

What do you think of new ventures and innovation coming out of Australia? There is a lot of interesting work going on in Australia. You scratch the surface and you’ll find a lot going on. We have a smaller population so it’s harder also our mindset is a little local, we’re a long way away form the rest of the world. The people that get it right have to work twice as hard so you have to take your hats off to them.

Do you think we can create an entity like Google in Australia?
Yes we have the smarts but Google had luck and timing on their hands. That’s not always easy to replicate. They have implemented well but there was a point it could have gone either way. Luck played a huge part. Geocities could have been Ning, Facebook, etc but it was too early. Broadcast.com should have been YouTube but we were not ready.

What Government resources have you used to help your business? And have they made an impact? Have you sought any funding?
I don’t have the time to deal with the government. They have no bearing on what we are doing.

Do you have any advice for people who want to start their venture?
Yes – just do it. There are so many reasons not to give it a go, but when you do you’ll find the learning’s are amazing.
Thanks Simon for sharing your thoughts with us. All the best for future.

For coverage on other Australian startups, innovation, tech trends check this out and our coverage on interviews can be found here

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HatchThat - A Collection of Entrepreneurial Interviews

Ashutosh Saturday, April 12, 2008 , , , , , , , 0 comments

In our ongoing series of interviews where we are interviewing CEO's, Media Personalities, Philanthropists and VC’s, today we bring our interview with Ross Hill, Founder of HatchThat. HatchThat is a blog that interviews entrepreneurs. Ross's other startup Yabble will also be launched sometime soon.

Let us explore what Ross has to say about his startups and also about Entrepreneurship and Innovation in Australia.

• Please tell us about yourself, your background and interests?
I'm 20, and was accepted to RMIT's Entrepreneurship program straight out of High School. I'm in the final year now, but have had a web design business for 6 years. I'm interested in social media and where that is going to take us in the future. More recently I have started developing my own websites including an entrepreneurial interviews blog at HatchThat.com, a cd cover search engine at CoverHunt.com, and the latest which hasn't been launched yet at Yabble.com.au.

• What is the name of your venture/company/start-up?
HatchThat.com

• Please tell us about your venture/company/ start-up?
HatchThat is a blog that interviews entrepreneurs. My aim is to get a wide variety of people from all sorts of industries.

• Who are the people behind this and how it started?
I have done all of the interviews so far but I'm open to guest interviews.

• How long it took before it was up and running?
One rainy afternoon. I had the idea, set up a Wordpress installation, and made a quick and simple custom template. I wanted to get it up and running as quickly as possible so that I could focus on getting the first few interviews online and prove that the concept was popular. Now that I know it is I am working on a redesign to give it a more interesting interface which has room for growth.

• What is the main objective/mission behind your venture?
To interview lots of interesting people, and create a blog that is useful for other entrepreneurs and people in business.

• How many people are using your services?
There are around 400 subscribers right now, but there will be a redesign and relaunch in the next few weeks which should increase that substantially.

• What sort of marketing you are using to spread the word?
The most important thing is to try to make interesting interviews, but I am trying a few things with StumbleUpon and Twitter.

• How are you measuring the success of your venture? Are their any special mechanisms/tools are in place to monitor the progress?
I'm measuring subscribers as the main metric, and using Google Analytics for other statistics.

• What is the monetizing/revenue model? Is their any new model, which is being tried?
I'm going to start selling banner ads privately in the redesign, because Adsense while being easy to implement doesn't pay very well.

• Which are the main competitors or major players in this market segment?
Well you seem to be doing pretty well with your interviews :) There are plenty of blogs out there but only a few that focus purely on interviews. Competitors don't concern me as long as they post interesting stuff for me to read.

• What are the main technologies used behind this venture?
Wordpress is open source and runs on PHP and MySQL. I use a couple of plugins but it is a pretty standard installation.

• How often do you catch up with others trying similar things and where do you catch up? Do you have dedicated communities in your city?
I go to three or four networking events each month, including The Hive of which I am a founding member. Cam Reilly's MODM is another good one.

• What's your thought on being an entrepreneur? How tough it is to start a venture in Australia?
It really depends on the scale and industry of the venture. If you are starting a blog you can do it from anywhere in the world, the same really goes for any online venture. It might be easier in some areas than others because of the networks that exist, but I don't think location is a barrier to getting started.

• What do you think of new ventures and innovation coming out of Australia?
I don't think we hear enough about Australian startups - for example not many people know that Google Maps actually came from a startup here.

• Any new ventures you think are worth keeping an eye on?
Yabble of course!

• Do you think we can create a new Google in Australia?
Why not? I'm sure there are people already trying.

• Which city in Australia is more vibrant and can be regarded as the Silicon Valley of Australia?
I'd have to say Melbourne, since I'm just down the road in Geelong :) But really, there are interesting startups all around the country.

• Do you have any thoughts on our TAFE/Universities and their curriculum in terms of promoting and encouraging entrepreneurship and innovation?
I'm in the final year of RMIT's Entrepreneurship program, which is focussed on entrepreneurship and innovation - but I think more entrepreneurial subjects should be offered to other areas of study. A lot of graphic designers will end up running their own businesses, doctors have ideas they would like to commercialize, computer science students might try building their own software and selling it. More business concepts should be taught across the board so that less small businesses fail. It should start at high school.

• What do you think the government (federal and state) should do to improve the culture of innovation and the telecom industry?
At one stage a few years ago Internet access was rapidly decreasing in cost, but over the last year nothing has happened. I talk to people overseas and I have to explain the concept of download quotas, and they wonder why our definition of broadband is so slow. If everyone had access to true high-speed broadband it would open up a lot of potential for developers. The same goes for mobile. At Mobile Monday last week game developers explained that if they sell a game for $4 the consumer still had to pay about $10 to actually download the thing - which makes it ridiculously expensive. If the communications infrastructure gets cheaper it will provide a more competitive environment for developers which can have a massive impact on everybody.

I am looking forward to the results of the Review of the National Innovation System and hope that the new government supports innovation in Australia.

• What do you think what can we expect from the Rudd government for IT and the Telecom industry?
When I heard about his plan for ISP-level filters I was very concerned both for freedom of speech and also from a technical perspective how it is even possible.
I don't think we have seen much so far in regards to broadband speeds but it was an election promise so hopefully there is some action on that soon.

• Any thoughts on who is going to get the network coverage for the launch of iPhone in Australia?
If it is an exclusive deal then my money is on Telstra, and hopefully Apple can talk them into a good data plan. I think it is quite possible that it won't be an exclusive deal though.

• Do you have any advice for people who want to start their venture?
Start today.

• How many business partners you have?
None.

• Which City you are based in?
Geelong, near Melbourne.

• Do you have any business advisor/mentor?
I think we can learn from everybody that we meet - I love sharing my ideas with a wide range of people and hearing their perspectives.

Thanks Ross for sharing your thoughts. We look forward to hearing from you in the near future. All the best.

For coverage on other Australian startups, innovation, tech trends check this out and our coverage on interviews can be found here

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RAYV - Local Business Directory

Vishal Sharma Wednesday, April 09, 2008 , , , , , , , 0 comments

Today we are showcasing another venture from Sydney, Australia, RAYV startup, australia, consulting, business development

Founded by Anil Sabharwal , RAYV - a local business directory with recommendations, targeted towards Sydney customers, allows consumers to find, review, and talk about local businesses.
It's a cross between a web-based social community and an online business directory and a recommendation engine.

We explored bit further about RAYV from one of the founders - Anil Sabharwal. This is what he has to say in his interview with us:

• Please tell us about yourself, your background and interests?
I’ve always had a passion for technology. It started with hardware – computers, video game consoles, mobile phones – but as of late my real interest has been the digital space. There is so much information in the world today but it’s all useless if it can’t be filtered and delivered in a meaningful manner. To me the Internet represents both our greatest opportunity and our biggest challenge – and this is what drives me day and night.

I have a technical background, having graduated with a degree in Mathematics and Computer Science from the University of Waterloo. Waterloo’s claim to fame is that it’s the number one University in the world that Microsoft hires from, so, like all good Waterloo boys, I started my career at Microsoft as a Product Manager. I then co-founded an e-learning company which is now the second biggest educational e-learning company in the world. After selling my share of the business to my partner, I worked in Senior Management roles (mostly Sales and Marketing) for a few different software companies. Eventually the entrepreneurial bug bit me again, and I started RAYV.

• What is the name of your venture/company/start-up?
RAYV Pty Ltd

• Please tell us about your start-up?
It is a well documented fact that most people believe asking friends is the best way to find restaurants, mechanics, hairstylists, or anything else local. RAYV makes it fast and easy to access these recommendations by collecting and organizing them in one convenient place.

For businesses, RAYV is word of mouth marketing amplified. Given that nearly 90% of all purchases are influenced by word of mouth, RAYV is an innovative new marketing channel for local establishments to target local consumers effectively and efficiently. Businesses are given the opportunity to differentiate themselves from the crowd and promote their business success stories to a captive audience.

• Who are the people behind this and how it started?
RAYV was founded in September 2007. The idea was simple – to fill a gap in the Australian market and provide consumers with a single place to go for trusted word of mouth recommendations across all types of local businesses.

Ian McCallam was immediately brought on board as my business partner to lead the charge on Marketing and Product Management while I focused on setting up the business, raising capital, and managing the software development team. Philip McCauley was brought on board in October, 2007 to manage the finances. All team member bios can be found here.

• How long it took before it was up and running?
RAYV launched in Sydney in January 2008.

• What is the main objective/mission behind your venture?
Deliver the best possible experience to our users (members, visitors, and business owners) and become the ultimate Australian city guide tapping into the community’s voice and revealing insights on local businesses.

• What services it provides it for consumer or customers?
RAYV is a fun and engaging place for passionate and opinionated influencers to share the experiences they’ve had with businesses and interact with other like-minded people.

It’s a place where anyone can go to get a trusted recommendation on a local business.

And it’s a place where local business owners can promote their establishments to an active and captive audience.

• What market segment verticals you are targeting for?
RAYV currently targets 10 segments:

  • Restaurants
  • Nightlife
  • Beauty & Spas
  • Shopping
  • Arts & Entertainment
  • Automotive
  • Professional Services
  • Home Services
  • Health & Medical
  • Active Life
• What type of customers you are targeting?
Consumers who wish to share their experiences; consumers looking for a business and a trusted recommendation; and business owners looking to promote their establishment.
• How many people are using your services?
RAYV currently has several hundred active members and well over 50,000 page impressions a month. These numbers are growing at a rapid rate, given that the site is only 3 months old.

• What sort of marketing you are using to spread the word?
  • Viral – videos, Facebook, MySpace, email
  • Sponsorships – see Speak Up Sydney
  • Online and Print Advertising
  • Search – Google AdWords, SEO

• How are you measuring the success of your venture? Are their any special mechanisms/tools are in place to monitor the progress? RAYV measures its success based on the feedback of our community and by the growth of our visitation and member base. As revenue picks up, this will become a crucial measure as well.
• What is the monetizing/revenue model? Is their any new model, which is being tried?
RAYV provides a unique method for local businesses to promote their products and services. For a small monthly fee, businesses can sponsor categories and searches, be featured on the homepage, and take control of their business listing page to include pictures, price lists, special promotions, and take advantage of a host of other valuable benefits. These elements ensure the business owner gets more hits to his/her page, and in turn, more business.

• Which are the main competitors or major players in this market segment?
  • TrueLocal
  • Yellow Pages (Sensis)
  • RaveAboutIt
  • WOMOW
• What are the main technologies used behind this start-up? Java, JSP, PHP, AJAX, XML, HTML

• What has been the most easy to use, out of box and helpful technology? All technologies have been easy to use so long as the proper time has been spent up front to architect and design.

• Are you using lot of open source tool sets for this? We use some, but are also building new technology, such as our Compatibility Tool which tells a member how compatible he/she is with another member. This is extremely valuable when trying to figure out whose reviews you can trust.

• What is your operating environment (operating system) and what type of database you are using? Linux and MySQL.

• How often do you catch up with others trying similar things and where do you catch up? Do you have dedicated communities in your city? We look to catch up regularly with our member base and business owners to better understand their interests, needs, and issues with the RAYV product. Through this direct feedback mechanism we’re able to make sure we build a product that is right for our customers.

• Have you sought any funding?
We have. RAYV is partially self-funded with additional investment coming from Angel Investors.

• What’s your thought on being an entrepreneur? How tough it is to start a venture in Australia? Having spent most of my life in Canada, the first thing I noticed about Australia is that the country appears to be risk averse when it comes to technology investments. That’s not necessarily a bad thing – just an observation. But it does make it difficult for entrepreneurs with good ideas, as investors here will typically require that a company has reached a certain level – measured by revenue, visitors, and/or members – before they take a risk and put money into your venture. That’s good news for entrepreneurs when it comes to dilution, since the valuation of a company is ultimately higher once you’ve hit a few key milestones. But it’s bad news if you can’t fund the project initially to get it to that point.

• Would you move your business to another country, and if so, for what reasons?
I think Australia is a brilliant country for RAYV and it’s where we plan to stay.

• Which city in Australia is more vibrant and can be regarded as Silicon Valley of Australia? I don’t think any one city in Australia can be singled out. The country is so well connected that technology ventures are popping up all over, and this is the way it should be.

• What do you think of new ventures and innovation coming out of Australia? Purely within the technology space, I fear that Australia is lagging when it comes to new ventures and innovation.

• Do you think we can create a new Google in Australia? Absolutely. Australians are some of the brightest minds in the world and creating the next world class technology company is definitely something we should all strive for. The challenge is that the odds are stacked against us. Based on population alone, the U.S. has 15 people for every one of us. Couple that with the government funding programs in the US, the abundance of investment capital, and the willingness to take risks, and it seems like a safer bet that the next Google will come from overseas. But that shouldn’t stop us from trying – it just makes the challenge that much more exciting!

• What do you think of our TAFE/Universities and their curriculum in terms of promoting and encouraging entrepreneurship and innovation? From what I’ve seen, they’re a good start. But more emphasis needs to be put on the practical side so that students don’t immediately get discouraged after graduating. Too often great ideas never see the light of day because an entrepreneur gets overwhelmed at the outset and gives up.

• What do you think government (federal and state) should do to improve the culture of innovation? Anything and everything. While Australia has some good government programs, they are underfunded and far too restrictive. While I agree we need to emphasise innovation, the truth of the matter is that some of the most successful companies have never invented anything new. Facebook and YouTube are great examples – at the outset (and arguably even today) they did no technology innovation. It was about taking existing technologies and putting them together in a new and innovative manner. The idea itself was the innovation, not the technology. But in Australia, if you can’t patent it, the government doesn’t want to hear about it.

• What Government resources have you used to help your business? And have they made an impact? For the reasons mentioned above, we’re not eligible for government support in Australia.

• At the 2020 conference, PM Kevin Rudd is meeting with top 1000 people from different background to discuss and collaborate on the issues facing the nation. What issues would you like to raise if you are given a opportunity to attend? I’d look at instituting more practical work experience programs into University curriculums (co-op programs and internships) as well as encouraging the government to set up more technology incubators and government funding in support of technology start-ups.

• Do you have any advice for people who want to start their venture?
Do it. Take the plunge and be willing to fail and learn from your mistakes. And find yourself a mentor to help you along the way.

Thanks Anil for sharing your thoughts. We look forward to hearing from you in future on the progress of RAYV. All the best.

For coverage on other Australian startups, innovation, tech trends check this out and our coverage on interviews can be found here

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Story of an Aussie Entrepreneur - Mother of 4 and Owns 3 Ventures