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- YouTube Launches Campaign Toolkit For Politicians
- Spotify Already Has 30,000 U.S. Users – So Why The Launch Delay?
- MasterCard Takes On PayPal With MoneySend iPhone App
- MyPunchbowl Makes Online Invitations Look Like Fine Stationery
- Netvibes Is Prepping An iPad (Web) App, And We Have Some Early Screenshots
- LeNewz Is A Handy Realtime Coverflow-style iPhone News Reader
- Want To Advertise On Spotify? BigAudioAds May Be The Answer
- Mobile Startup Rummble Raises Cash To Boost Product, Team
- Former Macromedia CEO And Adobe Board Member Rob Burgess Joins Syncapse Board
- Thomson Reuters Acquires Compliance Software Company Complinet
- TechStars Boston Graduates Ten New Startups In 2010
- Buzzd Aggregates Check-Ins From Foursquare, Gowalla And Others In Social City Guide
- BanxCorp Files Antitrust Complaint Against The NYT, Fox, CNN, Dow Jones, Others
- AdSafe Reports Rise Of Online Advertising Exchanges, RTB And DSP Platforms
- Flash Sales Site HauteLook Raises $31 Million
- Fwix Expands Its Geo Index Via Local Widgets And A Broader API
- After Facebook, eBuddy Second Mobile App To Reach 50 Million Downloads On GetJar
- WOWIO Raises $1.7 Million, Acquires Online Community WEvolt
- Online Advertising Startup LucidMedia Raises $4.5 Million
- Lending Club Surpasses $10M In Monthly Loan Fundings, Makes Key Hire
- Facebook Investor DST Taps Another Senior Goldman Sachs Banker As Partner
- BookRenter Raises $10 Million To Be The Netflix For Textbook Rentals
- Invites To Pleet – Like A Plancast For The Near Future, With Offers
- Microsoft Rolls Out Impressive Enhancements To Windows Live Essentials Suite
- Citysearch Recasts Itself As CityGrid Media
YouTube Launches Campaign Toolkit For Politicians Posted: 03 Jun 2010 08:38 AM PDT
The toolkits aim to provide political candidates with the resources to successfully use both YouTube and other Google products to engage constituents and citizens. On YouTube, campaigns will have access to features like a Politician channel (which allows campaigns to brand their channel and upload longer videos), Google Moderator, and analytics tool YouTube Insight. The toolkit also includes paid advertising campaigns, such as in-stream ads and Promoted Video. The Google toolkit shows how products in the Google Apps family like Docs and Gmail, can keep staff and volunteers connected. The offerings are sure to be particularly useful for politicians and candidates who are running for office in the coming year. Long-winded politicians should love the fact that video time limits are longer than normal, and they can run the same 15-second and 30-second TV ad spots in YouTube. President Obama notably used YouTube for both his campaign efforts and now within the White House. The White House also uses Google Moderator and App Engine. ![]() |
Spotify Already Has 30,000 U.S. Users – So Why The Launch Delay? Posted: 03 Jun 2010 08:36 AM PDT ![]() ![]() |
MasterCard Takes On PayPal With MoneySend iPhone App Posted: 03 Jun 2010 07:57 AM PDT
MoneySend, which is partly powered by Obopay, allows users in the U.S. to send or request money via an iPhone app through banks and credit unions. Senders and receivers can either use an existing MasterCard account or a bank account. Users can also create a virtual prepaid account through Bancorp Bank that is linked to an existing MasterCard credit card or checking account. The user designates an account for the MoneySend transaction, and then users can manage and trigger the exchanges through the app. Users who transfer money will incur a transaction fee and recipients don’t face any additional fees. Of course, there are security concerns with storing financial information on a device or app, but MasterCard assures that personal and financial information is never stored on the iPhone or iPad. This is the second instance of MasterCard encroaching on PayPal’s territory over the past week. Last week, MasterCard announced a definitive plan to open up its credit cards payments platform to developers to build innovative online and mobile apps. This has been the territory that PayPal has basked in, thanks to a much hyped launch of its API, PayPal X. Clearly MasterCard is making a big push to get into the mobile payments space; but PayPal is a tough competitor with massive reach. It should be interesting to see if MasterCard can compete with PayPal. ![]() |
MyPunchbowl Makes Online Invitations Look Like Fine Stationery Posted: 03 Jun 2010 07:50 AM PDT While the design of online invitations has evolved since Evite first launched nearly ten years ago, these invitations still don’t capture the same quality as fine stationery. Until now. MyPunchbowl, a start to finish party planning site, is unveiling a new Digital Invitation Studio that helps you create online invites and e-cards that look and feel like you created customized stationery from a store. The startup hasn’t opened the site up yet (it is expected to be rolled out to the public sometime over the summer), here’s a special preview site for TechCrunch readers. MyPunchbowl Digital Invitation Studio offers hundreds of stylish and modern invitations and save the dates, each with companion customizable envelopes in a variety of shapes, sizes, and colors. You can add envelope liners, customized postage stamps, and personal photos. The result is a sleek custom online invitation with a matching envelope that replicates the act of opening a traditional paper invitation. Invitations can be emailed and guests can RSVP directly from the online invite. The studio also includes a number of compelling new features including suggestions for wording your invitation and the ability to upload and re-size multiple photos to your invitation. Powered by Flash, the technology is easy to use and intuitive. The startup already had a compelling e-card creator, but this offering is impressive. And free. MyPunchbowl’s platform also provides tools that let you find supplies, organize an after party and even set a date, via an algorithm that recommends the best date for your party. The site also allows you to set up gift registries, save-the-dates, message boards, integrate Google Maps' to display the location, and share comments, photos, and videos. Launched in 2007, MyPunchbowl has turned into a all-in-one party planning site in a matter of two years. The site added birthday reminders, ecards, wedding planning tools, and also just acquired a local business directory to boost vendor listings. Competitors to MyPunchbowl include Socializr, Pingg, Someecards, Cocodot, and MySpace, Facebook and Evite. ![]() |
Netvibes Is Prepping An iPad (Web) App, And We Have Some Early Screenshots Posted: 03 Jun 2010 07:45 AM PDT Netvibes, which has been making start pages more personalized and more ‘real-time’ for users for years now, is working on an iPad The alpha version of the site will be available later today (screenshot below), but users will have to wait a couple of more weeks for the launch of the more polished version (screenshot above). The site you’ll be able to visit later today will not enable people to create or edit Netvibes accounts and won’t allow users to share content via Twitter, Facebook and the like, among other limitations. What both versions will have, is synchronization with the Netvibes desktop version. That means users will be able to from their desktop or notebook computer to the iPad and continue to consume content, while already read and unread posts will be marked as such on both. Truth be told, I think this iPad-specific site will be appealing to existing users, but there are a bunch of dedicated feed readers out there for the iPad that offer mostly the same, if not a better, experience than what Netvibes will have to offer. Check for example the Pulse iPad app, created by two Stanford grads, that I recently wrote about. I’m also left wondering why Netvibes isn’t looking at creating experiences for iPhone and Android first (they tell me they’ll come, eventually). ![]() |
LeNewz Is A Handy Realtime Coverflow-style iPhone News Reader Posted: 03 Jun 2010 07:29 AM PDT ![]() ![]() |
Want To Advertise On Spotify? BigAudioAds May Be The Answer Posted: 03 Jun 2010 07:26 AM PDT ![]() ![]() |
Mobile Startup Rummble Raises Cash To Boost Product, Team Posted: 03 Jun 2010 07:19 AM PDT ![]() ![]() |
Former Macromedia CEO And Adobe Board Member Rob Burgess Joins Syncapse Board Posted: 03 Jun 2010 07:16 AM PDT
Burgess was Chairman and CEO of Macromedia from 1996–2005, when Adobe Systems acquired the company for approximately $4 billion. He currently also sits on Adobe’s board. Burgess joins Ian Giffen, Chairman of The Descartes Systems Group, and a former board member of Macromedia, on Syncapse's inaugural Board of Directors. Giffen's appointment was announced earlier this month together with a round of private equity funding to the tune of $3.3 million. The company offers community building, technology solutions, and digital measurement products. Founded by entrepreneur Michael Scissons in 2007, Syncapse has offices in Toronto, New York, London and Portland. Previously, Scissons served as the Canadian Director of Facebook media sales within the Interpublic network where he worked with companies to integrate their marketing into Facebook starting in early 2006. ![]() |
Thomson Reuters Acquires Compliance Software Company Complinet Posted: 03 Jun 2010 07:02 AM PDT
Complinet’s technology helps companies in the financial services industry handle governance, risk and compliance. In an age where the sector is being regulated more than ever, Complinet helps these institutions navigate regulations, risk and compliance. Of course, since Thomson Reuters caters to the financial services industry, Complinet’s software will be used to offer clients an option to manage compliance. Thomson Reuters also recently bought analytics company DiscoveryLogic and acquired Breakingviews, a site that provided commentary on UK and European breaking financial news. Thomson was rumored to have paid close to $18 million in cash for the site. ![]() |
TechStars Boston Graduates Ten New Startups In 2010 Posted: 03 Jun 2010 07:00 AM PDT Editor's note: The following report comes from Don Dodge, who blogs at Don Dodge on The Next Big Thing and is a Developer Advocate for Google. TechStars is a seed accelerator program that selects about ten companies and provides funding of $18,000 per team, as well as support and mentorship. Dodge covered the last Boston TechStars class in September, 2009. TechStars has now been operating for four years. According to results data that TechStars has published, six of the first twenty companies to go through the program have been acquired by larger companies, and about 70% of its companies have been funded and/or are now profitable. This week, TechStars debuted ten new startups from the second Boston class. The teams presented on Tuesday to about 250 VCs and angel investors for the first time. These companies are about three months old and have two or three founder employees. Don was in attendance and these are his notes on the startups that presented. Just nine months ago, I attended the inaugural Boston TechStars demo day where companies such as oneforty and Localytics presented. Since that time, TechStars has shifted the Boston program to operate in the spring instead of the summer, so ten new companies presented. Below is a summary of each one.
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Buzzd Aggregates Check-Ins From Foursquare, Gowalla And Others In Social City Guide Posted: 03 Jun 2010 07:00 AM PDT
The buzzd network compiles information from its base of over a half-million users, Twitter, and other real-time sources to provide users with activity updates for almost half a million venues across the United States, the U.K. and Canada. You download the app and it will bring up a list of venues close to you that are currently popular based on people talking about them on Twitter and Buzzd. And the app now aggregates over 500,000 check-ins per day from Twitter, Foursquare, Gowalla, Brightkite, Loopt, Yelp, Whrrl and many other real-time location -based services sources to present activity at bars, clubs, restaurants and other points of interest. The new data will be added to the app’s "buzzdmeter," which gives you a real-time measure of activity at popular bars, restaurants and nightclubs in your city. The integration with these services makes a lot of sense for Buzzd, as the app essentially tells you where the most frequented places are within your location. As Foursquare, Gowalla and other location-based social networks continue to attract more users, these services increasingly provide a comprehensive way to see where your social graph With the new versions of the apps, users can now find their Facebook friends and Twitter followers on buzzd as well as simultaneously post their buzzd ratings to their Facebook wall and/or Twitter feed. And users can see what their friends are up to in the new “feed” section. Buzzd has also created a rewards program to encourage more people t broadcast their ratings of venues to friends. Currently, Buzzd is tracking over one million active users/month across its apps, which is solid growth for a niche app that was only released a year ago. Buzzd originally launched an app on the BlackBerry as one of the original BlackBerry Partners Fund recipients. While the startup is expanding to the iPhone and Android platforms, Buzzd is also adding nifty features, which should help increase its userbase. ![]() |
BanxCorp Files Antitrust Complaint Against The NYT, Fox, CNN, Dow Jones, Others Posted: 03 Jun 2010 06:51 AM PDT BanxCorp this morning announced that it has filed a federal antitrust complaint against nine firms, including Dow Jones & Co, Fox News, The New York Times, CNN and MSNBC. The company alleges (PDF) that the nine companies engage in “unlawful per se horizontal market division, customer allocation, and price fixing agreements” with its competitors in the market for bank rate websites throughout the United States. The complaint was filed in the U.S. District Court for the District of New Jersey, and accuses the firms of entering into “a conspiracy in restraint of trade and forming a cartel” with their competitor Bankrate.com together with approximately a hundred competing bank rate website operators including some of the largest media conglomerates in the United States. The complaint estimates that the damages caused by the “price-fixing cartel” may exceed $500 million, to be trebled under the antitrust statute. BanxCorp, which operates competing bank rate website BanxQuote.com, indicated that other members of the ‘cartel’ may also be joined. Currently included: Dow Jones & Company and Fox News Network (both News Corp.-owned), The New York Times Company, CNBC, Cable News Network, MSNBC Interactive New, AOL, LendingTree and Move. ![]() |
AdSafe Reports Rise Of Online Advertising Exchanges, RTB And DSP Platforms Posted: 03 Jun 2010 05:23 AM PDT
The report provides an analysis of the key display advertising brand safety metrics and industry insights observed by AdSafe Media throughout the first quarter of the year. One of the key findings: 47% of traffic was served by exchanges, real-time-bidding (RTB) or demand-side (DSP) platforms, a significant increase in the use of these channels from last quarter. According to AdSafe, premium brand advertisers appear to be shifting a larger percentage of their display adverting spending to exchanges, RTB and DSP platforms because of increased media efficiency and broader reach afforded by these channels. Just yesterday, we reported that Google reportedly acquired demand-side advertising startup Invite Media, and this morning one of its competitors, LucidMedia, raised $4.5 million in funding. Clearly, there’s some momentum going in this space. Other key findings cited in the report are: - 752 was the AdSafe Safety Index for Q1 2010, a metric which trended down from last quarter’s Index of 814, indicating that overall brand safety in the display advertising ecosystem decreased slightly ![]() |
Flash Sales Site HauteLook Raises $31 Million Posted: 03 Jun 2010 05:17 AM PDT
Thanks to the immense popularity of members-only, online sample sales, HauteLook has grown to 2.5 million members since launching in 2007. The site has partnered with more than 1,000 brands to date, offering more than 2,500 sale events in women's fashion, men's fashion, accessories, kids' clothing and toys, home and beauty. The basic idea behind the online sample sale model is this: big designers, such as Marc Jacobs or Versace, place excess inventory on a sale site at 50 to 70 percent discounts over a several day period. The sales are private, available only to members, with upcoming sales from brands announced via emails. Products include clothing for men, women and children as well as jewelry, handbags and home accessories. You can get invites from other members or request invites via the site. The new funding will be used toward member acquisition strategy and to expand to new categories such as gourmet food, wine, and other services. The company is also looking to boots its social media and mobile offerings. The flash sales space is definitely competitive; and the amount raised isn’t surprised The amount raised isn’t surprising considering that similar startups in the online sample sales space like Gilt Groupe, and Ideeli are all raising huge amounts of money, growing their user base at a rapid pace and turning a strong profit. In fact, Gilt just raised $35 million in funding a few weeks ago. VC firm Kleiner Perkins recently invested in One Kings Lane, an online sample sale site for home decor and accessories, which we wrote about here. The concept has even attracted retail giants like Saks and Neiman Marcus, which are now jumping on the bandwagon to offer their own private sales. ![]() |
Fwix Expands Its Geo Index Via Local Widgets And A Broader API Posted: 03 Jun 2010 05:13 AM PDT Up until now, fwix has stuck to indexing and serving up hyperlocal news from neighborhood blogs and news sites. Its main competitor in that respect is Outside.in. But fwix is moving beyond local news to create a broader geo index via publisher widgets and its API. In addition to its existing local news API (which is already being tested by the New York Times Co. and the UPI), fwix is adding geo-tagged status updates (from Twitter, Foursquare, Gowalla, and Brightkite), geo-photos (from Flickr, yfrog, Smugmug, and Twitpic), local events (from Eventbrite, Eventful, Upcoming, and Zvents), nearby reviews and restaurants (from Yelp and Citysearch), concerts (Songkick), local crime and government data, weather, listings (Oodle, Trulia), and deals from local merchants (Groupon, Town Hog, and Living Social). A little map pops down you tell you where these places are. Publishers and sites can pick and choose whatever data they want and create widgets with a customized local feed they can place in a sidebar. These could include Tweets about about the publisher’s business, Flickr photos, check-ins, or Yelp reviews. Widget publishers can also opt to include ads in the widgets targeted to the same location and content on their sites and split the revenues with fwix. Affiliate links to group buying deals is another source of revenue. “What we are building is this massive geo index,’ says CEO Darian Shiraz. Developers can use the API to pull in localized status updates, photos, and more. Publishers can create their own widget from any of the given geo streams. Mobile apps can also use the data. Fwix is at first exposing all of this new data only through its widgets and APIs. Eventually, fwix will roll it out on its own site as well. ![]() |
After Facebook, eBuddy Second Mobile App To Reach 50 Million Downloads On GetJar Posted: 03 Jun 2010 04:59 AM PDT
eBuddy thus joins the ranks of Facebook as the second mobile app to exceed 50 million downloads on GetJar. Notably, the milestone was reached less than 15 months after hitting 10m downloads. GetJar, which dubs itself the ‘Walmart of mobile apps’, says it is currently the second largest app store worldwide, after Apple’s iTunes. It offers more than 65,000 mobile applications across all major handsets and platforms to consumers in more than 200 countries. The company recently launched a mobile advertising distribution platform that offers developers the opportunity to bid for premium catalogue placement per download in GetJar's store and distribution channels. App developers and publishers can set their own maximum daily budgets, and only pay when consumers successfully download the advertised application. eBuddy says this pay-per-download solution helped making GetJar its number one external source for downloads, particularly in key countries like India (GetJar’s solution allows developers to geo-target campaigns by country, handset or even carrier), although most of its growth is organic. ![]() |
WOWIO Raises $1.7 Million, Acquires Online Community WEvolt Posted: 03 Jun 2010 04:32 AM PDT eBook marketplace WOWIO announced today the close of $1.7 million in private financing and the subsequent acquisition of WEvolt, a social networking platform. WOWIO CEO Brian Altounian led the financing round, which follows a seed round of $1 million completed in October 2009. According to the press release, the financing rounds will be used for WOWIO to pay off legacy obligations and set the stage for more acquisitions down the line. WEvolt basically enables comic book artists to create and share their work with their fans. Its online platform will soon allow creators of comics, and soon other media, to generate revenues by participating in ad sales and other activities such as merchandising. Users can create and submit their original material for broader distribution consideration, or they can simply use the site as an aggregator of their favorite online content. WEvolt was created by Jason Badower, a comic artist from Australia who has illustrated and colored several Heroes graphic novels, and Matt Jacobs. (Via press release) ![]() |
Online Advertising Startup LucidMedia Raises $4.5 Million Posted: 03 Jun 2010 04:19 AM PDT
The news comes merely a day after word got out that Google reportedly acquired rival Invite Media in a “$70 million range” deal (still unconfirmed at this point), which would significantly narrow down the exit possibilities for LucidMedia. Either way, LucidMedia plans to use the funds to expand its recently launched self-service DSP platform, which enables agencies and advertisers manage their online advertising campaigns. The DSP leverages LucidMedia's contextual targeting technologies, which the company says are patent-protected, to provide more than 14,000 categories. This funding follows a December 2008 investment from investors like Lake Street Capital and Redleaf Group. LucidMedia has now raised $13.3 million in total, according to CrunchBase data. The company was originally founded in 1999. (Via press release) ![]() |
Lending Club Surpasses $10M In Monthly Loan Fundings, Makes Key Hire Posted: 03 Jun 2010 03:23 AM PDT
Main rival Prosper is closing in on $200 million in personal loans funded in total – last time it has broken out the monthly statistics was for February 2010, when the company announced it had reached roughly $1.7 million in loan volume for that month. In related news, Lending Club has appointed Scott Sanborn as chief marketing officer. The new CMO comes from publicly traded ecommerce company eHealth, where he served as chief marketing and revenue officer. Prior to his role at eHealth, Sanborn was the CMO and interim president of e-commerce and catalog retailer RedEnvelope, where he oversaw the sale of the business to Provide Commerce. Lending Club, which originally started out as a Facebook app, recently secured a $24.5 million Series C financing round led by Foundation Capital. In total, the amount of capital raised by the company exceeds $52 million. ![]() |
Facebook Investor DST Taps Another Senior Goldman Sachs Banker As Partner Posted: 03 Jun 2010 03:09 AM PDT ![]() ![]() |
BookRenter Raises $10 Million To Be The Netflix For Textbook Rentals Posted: 03 Jun 2010 02:50 AM PDT
The idea behind Bookrenter’s service is simple; it essentially aims to be the Netflix of textbook rentals. Students are able to save money by loaning textbooks for a fixed duration, usually a semester, and end up spending only the fraction of the cost of outright purchases. The system is simple: a student searches for a book on the website using a title or ISBN, and places an order by selecting a rental period and delivery option. The book(s) are delivered complete with return UPS labels for easy shipping. The startup also made an effort recently to expand its userbase by opening up its platform to other sites to allow any college or business to launch its own online textbook rental store. Partners, such as universities or campus bookstores, will be able to use BookRenter to set up a virtual store on their sites. Partners have access to the same selection of textbooks available on BookRenter's site (which are electronically sourced from the largest textbook suppliers.) Since March, BookRenter has enabled 75 bookstore partners serving more than 1.3 million students. Schools with bookstores currently offering a textbook rental store on the BookRenter platform include the University of Texas at Austin, North Carolina State University, the University of Memphis, the City College of San Francisco, and the University of San Diego. BookRenter, which faces competition from Chegg and Barnes and Noble, claims a competitive advantage over its competitors by offering more flexible loan schedules and faster delivery (they offer next-day delivery on many titles, and use UPS). Chegg and BookRenter recently got into a tussle over a trademark to the phrase “#1 In Textbook Rentals." ![]() |
Invites To Pleet – Like A Plancast For The Near Future, With Offers Posted: 03 Jun 2010 02:11 AM PDT ![]() ![]() |
Microsoft Rolls Out Impressive Enhancements To Windows Live Essentials Suite Posted: 02 Jun 2010 09:14 PM PDT The picture above is a complete fake. But more on that in a minute. Microsoft is giving a preview of a variety of enhancements to its Windows Live Essentials suite – a set of online and desktop services that includes hotmail, messenger, sync, movie maker and photo gallery. Most of the desktop versions of these services are available only for Windows users, although the online components only require a browser from any operating system. These enhancements come after Microsoft’s preview of the online version of Office, which is also within this suite. I had a chance to sit down with Brian Hall, GM of the Windows Live Business Group, today to see some of the changes. Many of the changes are fairly minor, but at least two are going to be big crowd pleasers. First, Microsoft has made changes to their Movie Maker video editing software that allows for the creation of Animoto-like video clips containing photos and videos. They’ve added a variety of transition and effect options, as well as the ability to add music and text, to these clips. But the really interesting changes are around Photo Gallery. Previously Microsoft had a facial recognition feature to allow you to quickly add names as tags to photos. But they are now adding facial recognition as well, and it takes a guess as to the person in the photo. In the demo it worked very well and saves time with tagging – a lot of time. The application also has one click sharing of photos to Facebook and other services and the tags go with it. But by far the most impressive thing I saw today was the Photo Fuse feature that they’ve added. The general idea is you can take a bunch of pictures and turn them into a single photo that’s better than any of the originals. And it only takes a few seconds. The best use case is clearly group photos that you’d take a a wedding or wherever. Someone always has their eyes closed or is looking away. With Photo Fuse you can take the best parts of a number of photos and create that perfect group picture. Hall spent a lot of time today showing me Photo Fuse, which I zeroed in on among all the other new features launching. We even took a few pictures of Hall and his PR people – Michael Celiceo and Bonnie McCracken – and ran them through Photo Fuse. This was the final result – a picture that was never actually taken (the top image – you just can’t tell). The working photos that are real are below it. There’s also a video of the whole process. Fascinating stuff.
The new suite will launch in a few weeks, says Microsoft. In the meantime we’ll give away 100 accounts now – details in the next post. More screenshots from the new products:
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Citysearch Recasts Itself As CityGrid Media Posted: 02 Jun 2010 08:59 PM PDT Ever since the launch of his CityGrid local advertising network at the beginning of the year, Citysearch CEO Jay Herratti has been putting most of his efforts into building out CityGrid as the largest network of local advertisers and local apps. Citysearch is now simply a flagship publisher on the CityGrid network. To reflect this shift in focus, the Citysearch business unit of IAC (which includes CityGrid, Citysearch, Urbanspoon, and Insider Pages) is changing its name to CityGrid Media All of the local listings in Citysearch are available through CityGrid’s APIs so that anyone creating a mobile app or local Website can grab business listings, addresses, phone numbers, photos, reviews, and more and build their own apps around them. CityGrid also matches local advertisers with these local publishers. The geo-local market is developing so quickly that Herratti knows he cannot predict which mobile app or approach will win out in the end. Instead, he wants to scale CityGrid to become the largest network of local advertisers and publishers so that no matter what turns out to be the hot Geo app of the moment, CityGrid ads and content will be at the center of it. CityGrid already has 700,000 paying local advertisers, and is on its way to a million. Some Citygrid partners include YellowPages.com, SuperPages.com, Bing.com, MapQuest, and Loopt. ![]() |
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