geert lovink on 23 Feb 2001 14:40:26 -0000 |
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<nettime> Death of a Community |
(from: www.content-wire.com, posted first on "Europe's Internet Business Forum" digest <http://nowEurope.com>, reposted on nettime with the permission of the author. /geert) Sent: Friday, February 23, 2001 8:08 PM From: Paola Di Maio <pgalaxy@compuserve.com> Subject: Death of a Community Heard it just yesterday in a newsgroup. Surprising how many websites who never reached the limelight while they were alive and kicking, suddenly make the headlines. For example, last week I got a message in my mailbox saying 'company such and such' folds. Really? And who are they? Anyone I talked to didn't really know much about the company, and many ignored their existence altogether. But yes oh boy the website which issued the headline got the highest hits ever after the mail shot to all subscribers carrying the news. New economy, same old news tricks. Some things never change ... When I hear of highly pushed artificially inflated dot coms shutting down, not always do I feel sorry. Sometimes, cynically, I just think 'one down'. Some sites are really just hot air balloons and when they burst do not even leave a void. In the case of organically grown sites, however, that is very sad, and the Internet community, if there is any such thing, should be concerned. The fact that at the dawn of the Internet age healthy and sound online communities get shut, must indeed be a symptom of dangerous and potentially infectious disease, worth dissecting and including in the case study section of the 'New Harvard e-review'. Let's make sure we all learn from the lesson. So what went wrong? Everything. Who is going to suffer? Everyone, and not last, the new economy at large. Inkspot.com began as a hobby in early '95, Debbie Ridpath Ohi, Editor and Founder, writes in one of the pages, and has grown to nearly 50,000 subscribers and 70 staff and volunteers with over 500,000 visits a month. It received many awards including Writer's Digest and Write Magazine #1 writing Web site for writers in its 2001 Yearbook. Inkspot.com was sold to Xlibris last July (disguised as a partnership?). Now Xlibris is restructuring, and shutting the site down. Of course, strictly speaking, this is none of my business. But as part of the goodies that the Internet brings to all, there is also some free advice, so why not take it. I occasionally do contribute to dispense. New Economy Lesson Nr 1 When selling an company, a suitable committed buyer is essential, who undertakes to develop the business, and a series of clauses should be negotiated to ensure that the business will be managed properly, failing that, the economy and legality of re-acquisition should be facilitated. Inkspot now should dutifully appraise its assets: a rich mailing list - who wouldn't go after 50 000 email addresses and a lively skilled creative community of 500? After all content is in great demand these days, just it may be necessary to retrain the creatives to respond to market demands Members themselves could surely try to exercise some pressure on the owners for a better handling of the future of the community. At the dawn of the industrial age, history teaches, it was the coal that miners dug up with their own hands that built modern economy as we know it, and yet it did not happen without struggle, if I remember correctly. Why not issue shares to the members against a little capital, say a few dollars each, to refinance? First Tuesday (congratulations by the way) are working on it as we speak. Do not let the lack of business skills and the Internet fatigue that sooner or later is bound to affect every entrepreneur, impact the hopes and promises on the new economy. If a website is more than just a speculative venture, then there must be some real economic value behind it worth rescuing. At the time of declaring closure, it is not only morale that is down. The value of the assets is also at its lowest. That's when sharks and vultures start getting closer, to get a free meal out of a carcass. Don't let others get hold of the bones, what is left belongs to the community. We do not know what the schemes of the company are. Either these guys are really bad managers or, maybe, they are smarter than we think and perhaps are planning a turnaround and need a bit of free publicity, in which case the whole affair could be a marketing move. (It's worth to be mildly cynical these days, we have seen it before). Or maybe we just haven't heard the rest of the story yet. Either way, we look forward to real new economy lessons, hoping that someone out there knows what new economy means. Paola Di Maio Content-wire.com http://www.content-wire.com/Home/Index.cfm?ccs=86&cs=29 # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@bbs.thing.net and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@bbs.thing.net