Posts Tagged ‘Wall-Street-Journal’

Brett Hurt Will Second Life Get a Second Life?

August 26th, 2007 by Brett Hurt Founder and CEO

A face from Second LifeIn the entire Web 2.0 space, there may be no medium more hyped in the past year than Second Life, which provides us with a glimpse of what the 3D-Web of the future may be like.  You've read about Second Life everywhere – from the Wall Street Journal to BusinessWeek to Wired.  Back in January, I did some exploring of my own in Second Life in my Word-of-Mouth Wisdom interview series and reporting on the news that Second Life had open-sourced it's previously proprietary browser.

But recently Second Life is taking a beating.  Check out these recent articles in Time and Wired.  Even though many corporations have rushed in to grab their own virtual real estate, it turns out that not that many people are there to shop.  They are primarily there to gamble and have sex, and this shouldn't be surprising.  Many of the first businesses on the Internet were about gambling and sex.  It's the early-adopter syndrome in a medium that let's you hide your real identity and pretend to be someone else.

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Wayne Stribling Ordinary People Making Extraordinary Impact

February 27th, 2007 by Wayne Stribling Former VP of Client Services

Occasionally the Bazaarblog will feature guest bloggers. Today's blog was written and contributed by Tung Huynh, one of our Community Managers dedicated to helping clients leverage the Bazaarvoice solution, drive review volume, and promote ratings and reviews online and offline.

Recently the Wall Street Journal featured an article titled "The Wizards of Buzz". In it the authors cite how Web 2.0 is "turning ordinary people into hidden influencers, shaping what we read, watch, and buy." In today's connected and social media driven world, a twelve year old from Toronto is helping to define what "news" is on Reddit, a news site similar to Digg.

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Brett Hurt Netflix vs. Blockbuster: Round Two

December 6th, 2006 by Brett Hurt Founder and CEO

Because of the power of negative word-of-mouth, and the ability for Netflix to leverage the “bad profits” that Blockbuster had been collecting from its customers for late fees, round one of Netflix vs. Blockbuster was a total knockout. I wrote about this in February (and first referenced the concept of bad profits for this blog) and then revisited the battle in June and in my most recent post on bad profits a few weeks ago.

Blockbuster.com Total Access graphic
Round two is getting a little more interesting, as Blockbuster finally starts to leverage their stores to create a potentially more positive word-of-mouth offering. In today’s Wall Street Journal, Blockbuster announced that they are letting subscribers of Netflix rent movies for free through Dec. 21 by simply walking into one of their stores and redeeming the tear-off address flap from the signature red Netflix envelope for the free rental. This is a promotion for Blockbuster’s new “Total Access” feature, which lets customers return DVDs rented through its online service, which competes directly with Netflix, in their stores. Blockbuster announced Total Access in the November 1 edition of the Wall Street Journal with the following quote from their CEO:

“Customers shouldn’t have to choose between renting online versus in-store, and they should never have to be without a movie,” said Blockbuster Chairman and Chief Executive John Antioco in a statement.

This is a smart strategy as it enables Blockbuster to leverage something Netflix doesn’t have – 8,500 stores located across 29 countries. It will ultimately lead to some positive word-of-mouth for Blockbuster, and a new competitive differentiator against Netflix. I, for one, plan to try this out over the holidays as the only downside to my Netflix subscription is sometimes I don’t plan far enough ahead to have the movie I want when I want it.
Never be without a movie graphic from Blockbuster.com

However, it is hard to imagine that this will lead to a long-term competitive advantage for Blockbuster. The next wave that will hit is movie downloading, which will solve the only real challenge Netflix has (the wait time). And Netflix is planning to lead in that wave. Check out Reed Hastings’ recent interview on 60 Minutes. And don’t get me started on how great of a job Netflix does in creating high switching costs (or “community stickiness”) with all of its great ratings and social networking features. Even though I will try Blockbuster again as a result of this promotion, it is unlikely I will dump Netflix.

What is the lesson learned here? Leverage your multichannel assets, like Blockbuster is finally doing, to earn “good profits”, especially in the face of a competitor acting on your source of bad profits. This will help offset the negative word-of-mouth that your bad profits have generated with positive word-of-mouth. Also, reducing your sources of bad profits now will help prevent disruptive upstarts in the future. This is much harder to do than it sounds, and the book The Innovator’s Dilemma does the best job of any I have read in explaining why.

Update: I just saw that Reed Hastings won the “Innovator of the Year Award” from the NRF (National Retail Federation), the parent of Shop.org.