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Friday, April 18, 2008

Charterhouse on the funeral pire of b2b


Charterhouse Communications, a specialist financial mortgage mag b2b house has finally fallen into administration. Its share price had collapsed to almost zip and revenues were falling off a cliff as the credit crunch bit. But this is not just a story of the US sub prime crisis destroying a good business. Even before the recent crunch this was a business with a poor outlook. Too small and too dependent on magazines to walk across the shifting sands of the b2b media industry, the crunch has simply accelerated the demise.


This is further evidence that survival for everyone in this sector is going to depend on substantial and meaningful innovation on a scale not seen before in the sector. Too many survival strategies are based on;

More events and conferences and awards.

More companion web sites to magazines.

Cost cutting.


This is unimaginative and insufficent to turn the revenues into growth. As the economy downturns publishers are already seeing a tightening in the events sponsorship market. The exhibition and conference sector is overpopulated with events, print advertising decline is accelerating and web initiatives as currently unimaginatively invented are struggling to build meaningful advertising revenues.


The challenge is to create something entirely new that will enthuse users and customers. Here are three possible areas to think about:


1) Building professional networks (vertical LinkedIn)

2) Developing a better recruitment solution that focusses on push marketing rather pull from users.

3) Solving the vertical search conundrum.


We'll explore each of these in future posts.

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Tuesday, February 26, 2008

Join an FT Forum for £1700

The Financial Times is getting on the professional networking bandwagon, launching a service at £1700 a go to belong to a secure forum. Mmm. There is no doubt that general business networks have been popular but also have some disfunctionality. Linkedin is probably the most famous of these and, clever as it is, for users its an unwieldy beast. Two layers down and I find my network is now over a million people. Thats not a network - its a population.

Also lots of business folk are connecting to like minded folk on social networking sites like facebook.

So we could conclude that specialist business networks could be a cool thing. I doubt that many will want to pay £1700 for the privelege though.

All the evidence from forums on websites is that they are populated by a small number of enthusiastic posters and trolls. Good networks also take a lot of maintenance. Its like hosting a party. The owner of the network will need to work hard to keep people interested and in this case, deliver £1700 of value. We see professional networks as being a fantastic opportunity and many publishers will be watching this intiative closely. Personally I'll eat my hat if there are enough people who will pay to make this a real business for Pearson.

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