Business - Written by Hagai Fleiman on Thursday, January 17, 2008 14:33 - 9 Comments
Cost Cutting at PlentyofFish.com
An interesting article in the New York Times describes how Markus Frind, founder of PlentyofFish.com, is able to run a $10,000,000/year business on his own out of his apartment in Vancouver, British Columbia, while putting in only 10 hours of work per week. How does he do it? Frind has created new software that allows him to offload the majority of the work onto his customers, who do it – believe it or not – free of charge, with some volunteers evaluating more than 100,000 images in a year.
The eagerness of consumers to get involved provides a large opportunity for social networking sites such as Facebook. For example, to reap the benefits of complimentary consumer involvement, new Facebook applications targeting selected individuals (based on their profile information) can get consumers more involved in the product development process. The already available demographic information can save companies an enormous amount of time that would have otherwise been spent surveying consumers to find the right demographic, provided these users are willing to make their information available. Given the willingness of many Facebook users to allow various applications access to their personal information, it seems these companies should not have a hard time finding eager and willing consumers to contribute their thoughts and opinions. In fact, MySpace is currently in talks with market research firm Passenger regarding the creation of private communities within MySpace that will foster market research.
The great opportunities that Web 2.0 offers , such as harnessing the collective manpower of satisfied and willing consumer volunteers, does have an ugly flip side, however. For as many delighted customers that exist out there, there are always a few disgruntled ones who are not afraid of making their voices heard. Dell found out the hard way when a frustrated customer posted his negative customer service experience on his daily blog which started a downward spiral that involved many other dissatisfied Dell customers and eventually led to Dell’s stock plummeting 45%.
Frind suggests that his customers are willing to put in the hours, free of charge, because “Lots of people feel like they want to give back to the site because it’s free.” Thus, in order for firm’s to take advantage of this trend, they must give off a positive image in that their product/service should be perceived as beneficial for the community. Whether the quality of this ’free’ labor is up to par may be questionable, however, companies should not overlook this potential source of complimentary work.
9 Comments
Dan Herman
Ok, so fair enough – the guy makes millions by leveraging the efforts of others. But is there a breaking point to how far his profits can go before those volunteers want a piece of the pie? At some point there’s a trade off between the money saved by having a free site, and the amount of volunteer time necessary to make it that way.
Hagai Fleiman
The $10m is the net profit that Frind brings in every year so the value of the company would be much higher. The site generates its revenue from banner ads, google supplied ads and most profitable of all affiliate marketing links that send users to other dating sites.
Wow – as simple as that!! So there really is money in well optimised content rich sites that act as sign posts. Good on him.
Wikinomics » Blog Archive » Crowdsourcing at Facebook
[...] week in this post I described how the owner of Plenty of Fish.com is able to earn $10 M per year by leveraging the [...]
He is so great and master-mind in marketing. Woh, I am impressed by Mr. Markus.
Mr. Markus is great and famous to the world now. How smart he is in terms of business and marketing. I know plentyoffish site since 2004 and now this site generates too much income. I am really impressed.
“Frind has created new software that allows him to offload the majority of the work onto his customers” – nothing new about it, I have the same thing and I’m also gonna need soon some volunteers on my site – http://www.livedatelove.com to screen photos and look for spammers.
Woh, he was born to be a millionaire. He is master minded. Excellent marketing strategy.
Well done job.
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How does the $10m valuation work in this instance? Following the link to the site, is it based simply on the number of profiles (circa 500K) or is there an advertising angle? The reason I ask – it is great to see distributed workforces and variations on crowd sourcing working well, but valuing such an entity in what is a generally fickle market is “tricky”? Isn’t it?