Here’s a great inspirational article/list of 25 online start-ups to watch out for this year. If your an entrepreneur craving to see what’s hot in the web world then this is a must see list. Some services I live by, some I’ve never heard of…Time to start up the trial engine this weekend.
CNN’s article here and slideshow of all the groups here. I’ll post all the start-ups briefs after the jump.
In the same way that it matches users with like-minded websites, StumbleUpon’s technology also pairs online ads with targeted demographics and interests. Now StumbleUpon is attempting to do the same for online video and video advertising. In December the startup launched StumbleVideo, a service that offers the closest thing to channelsurfing that you’ll find on the Web.
Funding: $1.5 million (Ron Conway, Mitch Kapor, Josh Kopelman, Brad O’Neill, Ram Shriram)
Headquarters: San Francisco
Employees: 12
Founded: 2001
Business model: Advertising, subscriptions
Bragging rights: Cash flow positive
Next up: New features like content controls and mobile video recommendations
Contact: Partners@stumbleupon.com
Founder & CEO: Max Levchin
Headquarters: San Francisco
Employees: 45
Founded: 2004
Business model: Advertising, subscription
Bragging rights: Actor Jamie Foxx and Playboy founder Hugh Hefner use Slide on their MySpace pages.
Next up: Doubling staff in 2007; expanding into Asia; adding mobile phone features
Contact: Partners@slide.com
Headquarters: San Francisco
Employees: 28
Founded: 2005
Business model: Advertising
Bragging rights: Profitable; advertisers include Disney, Alltel, Dawn and AOL)
Next up: Promoting new Bebo Authors channel (launched Feb. 22); hiring in-house sales team
Contact: Partnerships@bebo.com
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Founders: Sandy Jen, Seth Sternberg (also CEO), Elaine Wherry (shown right)
Employees: 12
Business model: Advertising
Bragging rights:: 5.3 million unique instant messenger IDs per month
Next up: Doubling staff in 2007
Contact: Daniel Bernstein, Danny@meebo.com
Founders: Angela Beesley, Jimmy Wales
Headquarters: San Mateo, Calif.
Employees: 33
Founded: 2004
Business model: Advertising
Bragging rights: 500,000 articles in 45 languages
Next up: Hiring; expanding into Japan; adding more languages; developing open-source search engine
Contact: Angie Shelton, angie@wikia.com
Joost will be free, supported by highly targeted ads based on people’s actual watching habits, their friends’ viewing patterns, and information they volunteer. Ad revenue will be split between Joost and the content owners.
Joost can offload much of the heavy bandwidth and storage costs borne by Web video companies like YouTube because the service is a partial peer-to-peer system, with content distributed among viewers’ computers. And to reassure Hollywood moguls who watched the music industry get burned by Kazaa’s legions of illegal file sharers, all Joost video is streamed and encrypted.
Funding: Not disclosed
Founders: Janus Friis, Niklas Zennstrom
Headquarters: Luxembourg
Employees: 100
Founded: 2006
Business model: Advertising
Bragging rights: 40,000 beta testers; just beat rival YouTube by signing major content deal with Viacom; other content providers include National Geographic, Warner Music Group, and Dutch TV production company Endemol
Next up: Striking more content deals
Contact: Newyork@joost.com
Founder & CEO: Mary Hodder
Headquarters: Berkeley, Calif.
Employees: 11
Founded: 2005
Business model: Advertising
Bragging rights: 12,000 registered users to date; partnerships with MySpace, YouTube, Grouper, Brightcove
Next up: Hiring; a groups feature for users with similar interests to share video
Contact: Partners@dabble.com
CEO: Erick Hachenburg
Headquarters: Palo Alto, Calif.
Employees: 65
Founded: 2003
Business model: Advertising
Bragging rights: 17 million monthly users; revenues doubling each quarter
Next up: Hiring 100 employees in 2007; partnering with movie studios, record labels and producers
Contact: Business@metacafe.com
Cofounder & CEO: Jay Adelson
Headquarters: San Francisco
Employees: 7
Founded: 2005
Business model: Advertising
Bragging rights: 1.5 million monthly viewers; advertisers include Sony, IBM and Go Daddy
Next up: Launching up to 4 new shows
Contact: Info@revision3.com
Cofounders: Dina Kaplan, Mike Hudack (also CEO; shown right with Kaplan)
Headquarters: New York City
Employees: 12
Founded: 2005
Business model: Licensing, advertising
Bragging rights: 45,000 content creators; key advertisers include Dove, Paltalk; licensors include CNN, Oxygen TV
Next up: Doubling staff in 2007
Contact: Mike Hudack, mike@blip.tv
Varsavsky, however, saw the potential for a worldwide Wi-Fi network in the home broadband connections already in place. All that was needed was a service to tie them together.
Here’s how it works: Fon sells a $30 wireless router to consumers. They hook it up, register their node, and agree to share their broadband with other “Foneros” for free. Those who want to charge outsiders for access can do so, and Fon gets a cut. Likewise, if someone wants to pay $2 or $3 to use the Fon network for a day, Fon takes a share of that revenue. Just over a year old, Fon’s network boasts more than 70,000 hotspots. Initially focused on Europe and Asia, Fon plans a big push in the United States in the coming months.
Funding: $22 million (Google, Index Ventures, Sequoia Capital, Skype)
Founder: Martin Varsavsky
Headquarters: Madrid, Spain
Employees: 90
Founded: 2006
Business model: Subscription, router sales
Bragging rights: 400,000 users (including 40,000 Americans added since October); signed as-yet unannounced deal with first major U.S. broadband service provider
Next up: In deal talks with U.S. cellular service provider
Contact: Faisal Galaria, mailto:fonus@fom.com
Founder & CEO: Sam Altman
Headquarters: Palo Alto, Calif.
Employees: 18
Founded: 2005
Business model: Advertising, subscription
Bragging rights: Partnership with Sprint
Next up: Signing up sponsors; in talks with second U.S. carrier
Contact: Bizdev@loopt.com
Funding: $9 million (InterWest)
Founder & CEO: Ramneek Bhasin
Headquarters: Cupertino, Calif.
Employees: 40
Founded: 2005
Business model: Advertising
Bragging rights: Sprint and Cingular customers will be able to download widgets to their phones this spring; working with OpenTable, an online restaurant reservation service.
Next up: Service launches Feb. 26
Contact: Info@getmobio.com
Founder & CEO: John Poisson
Headquarters: San Francisco
Employees: 12
Founded: 2005
Business model: Sales of downloadable client, advertising
Bragging rights: 55 percent monthly user growth; 500,000 videos and pictures swapped on network per month; SunCom Wireless plans to distribute Radar
Next up: To have 1 million users by year-end; sign up more carriers; add premium subscription service
Contact: Amanda Krantz, amanda@tinypictures.us
Cofounder & CEO: Martin Frid-Nielsen
Headquarters: Campbell, Calif.
Employees: 30
Founded: 2005
Business model: Subscriptions
Bragging rights: Approx. 250,000 users; partnerships with Swisscom, WebEx
Next up: Premium services
Contact: Abbe Patterson, abbe@soonr.com
Since launching in beta in November, the company has signed up more than 1,000 advertisers and cranked more than 5 million ads through its analysis engine.
Twenty-five publishers are giving the system a tryout, according to Barnett, including a few large news sites and a big social network (which he declines to name).
As for competitive threats, Google has been rumored to be working on its own version of the pay-per-play model. But Barnett says the $16 billion-a-year online ad industry is growing so fast that he doesn’t worry about Turn’s ability to carve out a lucrative niche: “These days marketers need to use all the targeting approaches they can find.”
Funding: $17.5 million (Norwest Venture Partners, Shasta Ventures, Trident Capital)
Cofounders: Jim Barrett (also CEO), John Ellis
Headquarters: San Mateo, Calif.
Employees: 26
Founded: 2005
Business model: Advertising
Bragging rights: 25 million unique viewers to date; 1,000 advertisers; 20 publishers
Next up: Signing more publishers
Contact: Business2@turn.com
Cofounder & CEO: Larry Braitman
Headquarters: San Bruno, Calif.
Employees: 40
Founded: 2005
Business model: Advertising
Bragging rights: 4,000 publishers have signed up, including The Washington Post; revenues doubling quarter-over-quarter
Next up: Signing more publishers
Contact:
Founder & CEO: Omar Hamoui
Headquarters: San Mateo, Calif.
Employees: 22
Founded: 2006
Business model: Advertising
Bragging rights: 800 publishers, 250 advertisers
Next up: Technology to deliver interactive ads to mobile phones
Contact: Info@admob.com
Cofounders: Nick Grouf (also CEO), David Waxman
Headquarters: Los Angeles
Employees: 150
Founded: 2004
Business model: Advertising
Bragging rights: Clients include Century 21, Coldwell Banker, Mozilla, and Warner Independent Pictures; partners include The Interpublic Group of Companies, WPP, CBS
Next up: Extending the model to other media besides TV, possibly radio and the Internet
Contact:
Founder & CEO: Reggie Bradford
Headquarters: Atlanta, Ga.
Employees: 38
Founded: 2006
Business model: Advertising
Bragging rights: 100,000 site users; site on VH1.com
Next up: Developing new sites for youth-oriented media clients
Contact: Maria Sanzone, Maria@vitrue.com
CEO Lars Dalgaard claims that SuccessFactors has some 2 million users and more than doubled sales last year. Its customers, which pay an annual fee of $50 per user, range from small tech companies to corporate giants like ConAgra Foods. That kind of growth has not gone unnoticed among investment bankers, prompting talk of an IPO this year.
Funding: $45 million (Canaan Partners, Cardinal Venture Capital, Emergence Capital, others)
Founder & CEO: Lars Dalgaard
Headquarters: San Mateo, Calif.
Employees: Approx. 400
Founded: 2001
Business model: Subscriptions
Bragging rights: 1,200 customers, including Wachovia, MasterCard, and Kimberly-Clark; 2 million users
Next up: Expanding into Asia and Europe; developing web services tailored to specific industries, such as health care and retail
Contact: Info@successfactors.com
Cofounder & CEO: Scott Kveton
Headquarters: Portland, Ore.
Employees: 11
Founded: 2006
Business model: Advertising, subscriptions
Bragging rights: 50,000 users (nearly double the number in December)
Next up: Partnerships with bigger websites; new product rollout by summer
Contact: Scott Kveton, Kveton@janrain.com
Founder: Morgan Lynch (shown near right)
CEO: Paul Brockbank (shown far right)
Headquarters: Lindon, Utah
Employees: 120
Founded: 2001
Business model: Fee-for-service
Bragging rights: 65,000 customers to date, including Toyota and Pfizer
Next up: Selling services to small businesses through big box retailers
Contact: Info@logoworks.com
Founder & CEO: Patrick Grady
Headquarters: Foster City, Calif.
Employees: 155
Founded: 2000
Business model: Subscriptions
Bragging rights: Approx. 200 customers; new partnership with American Express
Next up: Expanding into the mobile market
Contact:
Founder & CEO: James Siminoff
Headquarters: New York City
Employees: 8
Founded: 2003
Business model: Subscriptions
Bragging rights: 5,000 users
Next up: Deal with major national carrier to be announced in April
Contact: Business2@simulscribe.com
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Hey tango!
I hope you can make use of the links. Thanks for sharing that web2.0 site, it makes for a nice web2.0 logo gallery in addition to a web2.0 directory. Good luck going through all those sites, there are so many! BTW, I emailed them and asked if they could ask musicovery to their list (at least I think musicovery is web2.0).
thomas,
yup, that web2 sites has a ton…I kinda of wish they had a better filter rather than just dates and names….be cool if they had fiolters like location, types of service(email, calendars, social network, electronics, shopping, etc), etc…. I dont mind the ajax interface, but it’s a bit slow for me…
as for musicovery…hmmm, perhaps they just post web2 companies that have a biz model…i’m not sure if musicovery has one besides their ads.
hmm…ads…reminds me of a recent article by Chris anderson of Wired mentioning how he thinks everything service wise will be free down the road…will post it once i find it again.
Hey tango! They do allow you to filter the list by tag by using the “select tag” drop down list… I guess it’s more of a drop down tag cloud.
This one makes sence “One’s first step in wisdom is to kuesstion everything – and one’s last is to come to terms with everything.”
Absolutely great !! Awesome post ..