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To: stockman_scott who wrote (10)2/14/2011 1:34:27 PM
From: Glenn Petersen1 Recommendation  Respond to of 272
 
An excellent analysis of LinkedIn:

What A Deep Dive Into LinkedIn's S-1 Reveals About The Company's Growth Potential

Byrne Hobart, Byrne's Blog
Business Insider
Feb. 14, 2011, 10:20 AM

Last month, LinkedIn filed a prospectus with the SEC. It’s a great case study: LinkedIn is one of the largest social networks, and it may be the most mature of the major social networking businesses.

Like Facebook, LinkedIn has turned a profit; unlike Facebook, LinkedIn’s profit is dependent on several known business models.

The filing itself was a better read than most. Among other risks, it cited the possibility that:

[O]ur initial public offering could create disparities of wealth among our employees, which could adversely impact relations among employees and our culture in general.

I guess that’s what you get when your Chairman is an avowed “free-market socialist.”

The hurdle LinkedIn’s IPO faces is that the easy comparisons are completely wrong. LinkedIn shouldn’t be valued like a job board: for a variety of reasons, it’s a much more defensible model; LinkedIn is likely to stomp all over the traditional job boards (not so much traditional recruiters). But it’s not a “social network” that can be valued like Facebook and Twitter. LinkedIn’s business model is already in place, and its potential is a matter of execution, not innovation.

LinkedIn’s Competitive Advantage

Two of the strongest monopolies online are search engines and social networks. There’s rarely a good reason to use a less popular social network, and search engines have notoriously unforgiving economies of scale.

LinkedIn has solved both problems: for many users, it’s a second social network and a second search engine.

In both cases, LinkedIn isn’t competing with the dominant companies in the industry, because it’s targeting a very narrow use case. In search terms, LinkedIn is the ideal tool for finding job candidates with a very specific set of skills—project managers who know Perl and live within commuting distance of San Diego, or Ivy-Educated distressed debt analysts with at least a year of experience, for example. There’s no good way for Google or Bing to parse that query, but LinkedIn has that information at its fingertips. For recruiters, whose main “overhead” involves looking at résumés that turn out to be irrelevant, this is key.

As a social network, LinkedIn has positioned itself as the place for things you’re willing to brag about, which are not fun. This is brilliant. Most social networking tools are designed around the human need to show off. That can easily be divided into two basic categories: being happier than other people (partying, making great jokes, having kids, being close to family members, discovering funny videos), and giving up more happiness than other people (working hard, taking business trips, publishing a complex academic paper, dealing with a job search).

That’s a great niche, since things that aren’t fun are often the most impressive to potential employers. LinkedIn has clearly pressed this advantage by adding a powerpoint presentation-sharing app, an itinerary app, and a book-tracking app to user profiles. In my experience, very few people use the book-reading app to talk about fiction—they’re usually reading Too Big To Fail. The travel app isn’t for reporting on vacations; it’s for reporting on business trips.

This gives LinkedIn a purpose as a social network. They aren’t competing head-to-head with Facebook or Twitter. Instead, they’re absorbing the content that’s too boring for either. At the same time, Facebook and Twitter provide an outlet for anything less professional. It’s a symbiotic relationship that allows each network to move more content online.

(Yes, LinkedIn has Twitter integration. And some people do use Twitter to post mostly professional information. Twitter is a medium less dependent on message than LinkedIn or Facebook, so it makes sense that it could be cloned or integrated by each.)

LinkedIn also has another advantage: they have consciously tried to own people’s names as an SEO strategy. This is probably responsible for a huge fraction of their traffic. They don’t find people whose search queries imply intent: they don’t show up for terms like “tech jobs” or “find jobs,” and their ranking for “professional networking” is due to their Q&A page. LinkedIn is trying to find people who are looking for other people in a professional context, and they’re trying to make LinkedIn the way to do this.

LinkedIn actually has a great relationship with search engines; they even have “social sitelinks”:



That’s a tough policy for Google to reverse, so LinkedIn’s SEO risk is overstated.

LinkedIn’s competitive advantages rely on network effects. There is simply no better place to find out about someone’s professional skills and reputation. And there’s no better place to upload your résumé. LinkedIn has supplanted the personal site (will a hiring manager find it?) and the job board (what about when you’re not actively looking for a job?).

That’s actually quite impressive. LinkedIn is a well-executed version of two of the big business models of the 21st century: search and social.

LinkedIn’s Financials

Anyone can look at LinkedIn’s recent performance and see the salient numbers: quarterly revenues have risen from $23mm in Q2 2009 to $61mm in Q3 2010, an incease if 17.7% per quarter. Gross margins have gradually increased (75.9% to 80.9%) and variable cost as a percentage of revenue has dropped (63.8% to 57.9%) during the same period.

But the numbers get more interesting when we look at scalability:

• LinkedIn’s quarterly “hiring solutions” revenue per user has risen from about $.17/user to $.33/user. This is a reflection of the site’s network effects: with higher and higher saturation, it’s increasingly easy for LinkedIn to offer the very best applicant for a given set of criteria.

• LinkedIn’s quarterly marketing revenue per user has grown from $.16/user to $.24/user. This is a good sign that they’ve gotten better at price discrimination, and scaled their sales force up to be appropriate for the number of pageviews they handle.

• LinkedIn offers a “Premium” account for recruiters and job-seekers, offering more access to profiles, and more chances to contact users. “Premium” revenue per user has declined in the last six quarters, from $.29/user to $.19/user.

The numbers paint a pretty simple portrait. LinkedIn is three major businesses:

• Premium Subscriptions were an early cash cow, and still bring in $15.7mm/quarter. But they’re growing slowly. LinkedIn appealed to hyper-networkers early, but there aren’t that many of them out there. And LinkedIn needs to keep these prices high, to ensure that these networkers don’t bother other users.

• Hiring Solutions is LinkedIn’s most effective vehicle for monopolistic pricing. This is the revenue stream to look at when considering LinkedIn as a job board (versus LinkedIn as a social network or LinkedIn as a source of high-quality pageviews). LinkedIn is growing their hiring solutions revenue rapidly, in terms of revenue per user (12.4% quarterly growth), revenue per employee (10.5% quarterly growth), and revenue per “corporate user” (7.4% quarterly growth). This product makes LinkedIn most comparable to a job board in terms of monetization strategy. But LinkedIn’s competitive advantage, discussed above, put it well ahead of other job boards.

• Marketing. LinkedIn’s marketing revenue is icing on the cake. As a large site with a capitive audience and great SEO, LinkedIn generates pageviews. Lots of pageviews. And it sells them. LinkedIn’s marketing revenue per user has risen 6.1% per quarter in the most recent six quarters. Combine that with their user growth of 13.7% per quarter, and the result is a massive ad platoform.

“Marketing” and “Hiring Solutions” are both high gross margin businesses. LinkedIn has been able to continuously raise revenue per customer even as they go after more customers, which is a good sign that they haven’t nearly hit the point at which this market is mature.

Overall, LinkedIn’s marginal revenue per user is in the $.50 to $1.25 range, depending on the quarter. This is probably driven by two forces: on the downside, the quality of their users is declining over time as the extend their reach to people who a) have lower-prestige jobs, b) aren’t very active online, or c) are less likely to seek out new jobs. On the other hand, every new user raises the value of the site’s marketing and hiring solutions.

LinkedIn may end up using their “Premium” accounts as a way to reduce, but not eliminate, annoying interactions. They can gradually strengthen the site’s privacy settings (as they have already done), while loosening them for paying customers. That means LinkedIn captures lots of the economic gain from invading people’s privacy or sending them unsolicited messages. And since LinkedIn benefits in the long term if those interruptions are rare enough that users don’t flee the site, it’s an optimal arrangement.

The best-case scenario for LinkedIn is that they find a new stream of revenue to join this triumvirate, adding more high-margin profits to their existing revenue. But even if they don’t, they’re in a great position. All of their major revenue sources are growing in a way that implies that additional users won’t seriously disrupt things, and that additional sales staff will offer a useful contribution.

Thus, while LinkedIn is profitable, and has a few conventional business models, it’s still worth considering the possibility that it will have a sudden, sharp acceleration in growth.

One note regarding LinkedIn’s financials: they have some “variable” costs that vary with revenue (e.g. hosting costs, marketing expenses), and some that vary on a discretionary basis (e.g. investment in new products). LinkedIn has cut back their product development as a percentage of revenue, from 36.8% in early 2009 to 27.8% in mid 2010. This accounts for 138% of their increase in operating earnings. In other words, if they invested in R&D like they used to, they’d be losing money.

This is not, strictly speaking, a bad sign. LinkedIn doesn’t have a comparative advantage in this kind of spending—Google and Facebook will always be able to outbid them for the best technical talent. But LinkedIn is still a technology company, so it’s important to note that their profitability is a result of being less technical and more of a sales-and-marketing company.

There is a decent chance that this is an abberation, and that they’ll raise their product spending later on. This would account for their projection that they won’t be profitable their first year as a public company. This isn’t a useful long-term concern, but anyone buying on the IPO and looking at the next quarter should beware.

The LinkedIn Management Team

LinkedIn is traditionally considered an offshoot of the “Paypal Mafia.” Their founder, Reid Hoffman, certainly got some great experience—and a healthy grubstake— from Paypal’s IPO.

But LinkedIn’s management also hails from Yahoo!, not LinkedIn. Their CEO, Jeffrey Weiner, worked there, as did their SVP of operations and engineering. They’ve also recruited from TiVo (CFO Cteven Sordello) and Google, (Dipchand Nishar, SVP of product and user experience).

Oddly enough, many of LinkedIn’s senior executives were promoted to their current roles just in time for the IPO. Of their top six executives, four were promoted in January. This is probably a sign of the usual pre-IPO reshuffling (in a company of that size, it’s important to identify which VPs are worth talking about!) but it may also have something to do with LinkedIn’s options grants.

LinkedIn’s Competitors and Risks

LinkedIn is not a job board. It shouldn’t be compared to them. However, the market will probably look at job boards as the most similar companies to LinkedIn. A few of their competitors:

• Monster Worldwide trades at 2.5X sales. It’s fairly mature: the big determinant of Monster’s revenues is the market for jobs in general.

• TheLadders, like LinkedIn, targets high-income professionals. TheLadders has, by all accounts, done a great job of extracting more revenue from top-tier job applicants. But it’s a site for finding a new job, not curating a career.

• Dice Holdings is a more interesting case. They have vertical-specific job boards (Dice.com for technology, eFinancialCareers for finance, ClearanceJobs.com for government jobs, etc.). Their operating margins approach 25%, and they’ve shown some recent growth. Dice trades at 8X sales.

Most of the publicly traded companies in the employment space are recruiters, not job boards. Recruiters have been early adopters of LinkedIn (hence that high but declining “premium” revenue). LinkedIn may gradually erod the economics of that business, but in the short term recruiters are happy to embrace it.

There are a few companies that are actively eroding LinkedIn’s competitive strengths:

Hashable is trying to own the “introduction” part fo the LinkedIn relationship. While that’s critical in the short term, LinkedIn monetizes the metadata—where someone worked, who recommendeded them, and who they know—not just information on who met whom. Hashable is a good acquisition target for LinkedIn, and might be a long-term threat, but even if they own the personal introduction market, LinkedIn still has a lock on the long-term employment data market.

Branchout is a new Facebook app that offers career information, hosted on Facebook. This could be a threat, since there are more Facebook profiles than LinkedIn profiles. But connecting Facebook activity is a bad move (the big career risks: for people under 30: pictures of parties! For people over 30: pictures of kids!). The new Facebook profile has a similar risk/reward profile: yes, it offers some of what LinkedIn offers, and does a better job. But it’s easier to create a LinkedIn account than to massage privacy settings to the point that Facebook is a useable tool for interacting with friends and bosses.

Quora is destroying LinkedIn answers. It is what LinkedIn answers should be: a site where the right expert answers the right question. Quora launched with a good audience; LinkedIn’s good audience had gotten less active by the time they launched Answers.

Applicant Tracking Systems are a broad competitor to LinkedIn. Once the hiring process gets started, these content management systems get used a lot. The problem with them is that they vary in quality: from being awful but useable to being awful, unuseable, and ubiquitous.

LinkedIn could easily squash Taleo, one of the largest applicant tracking systems, by creating a one-click application system, that ordered applicants based on an algorithm that looked at their experience and their degree of connection to the company. This wouldn’t just give LinkedIn a new revenue source: it would help LinkedIn replace company “Careers” pages the way it’s so thoroughly replaced personal résumé pages.

Ten Questions for LinkedIn’s Management

• Why did discretionary expenses drop so much ahead of the IPO?

• What will you do to address Hashable?

• What will you do about M&A replacing HR? What if hiring is obsolete and the best employees get found because they start compelling companies? This doesn’t post big short-term risks to the LinkedIn model. But anecdotally, programmers are overrepresented among LinkedIn user (or at least LinkedIn ads). If LinkedIn is the place to hire not-the-best programmers, how does that affect the site’s pricing power?

LinkedIn can use price discrimination to deal with part of this problem. Instead of charging full price for all companies, LinkedIn can offer discounts to funded startups with a small number of employees. If LinkedIn is a great tool for hiring the first ten people, it may be a cost-effective too for hiring the next hundred.

• Field sales are growing faster than online sales. These are higher-margin deals, with bigger lead times and more generous payment terms. What will the next big hiring slowdown look like, from a balance sheet perspective?

• Are you going to remain active in the Q&A space?

• How wil you deal with out-of-date profiles? As LinkedIn matures, the average age of profiles will go up. This will reduce the utility of profiles, which is the main driver of non-ad revenue. (And since ad revenue is driven by pageviews, it’s indirectly affected by how often people log in). LinkedIn could partially mitigate this problem by sending more emails. Whenever an employer lays people off (as announced in the news or as noticed by LinkedIn), LinkedIn could email that compay’s employees and suggest that they update their profile and ask friends for a recommendation.

• How will you deal with Facebook? Facebook is the elephant in the room. If they perfect their privacy settings, LinkedIn’s only reason for existing is its relationships with recruiters, and its database of recommendations. Facebook could clone both within a year or two, if necessary. What is LinkedIn doing now to make sure that’s not an economically viable decision for Facebook?

• Do you have another business model in the works? Marketing, hiring solutions, and premium accounts are great. But are they everything?

• Will you ever partner with other job boards? LinkedIn invades the job board niche, but many job boards still have valuabe résumés in their databases.

• Will you partner with a recruiting agency? Recruiters with niche dominance could use LinkedIn especially well. They may be able to find recruiters who dominate a particular market, and are willing to pay up for special rights.

A Few Post-IPO Predictions

(In the spirit of Byron Wien’s “Ten Surprises,” these are not things with high odds of happening, but events whose odds are higher than one would normally think.)

• LinkedIn has a few soft quarters early on, but shows solid growth in FY2012.

• LinkedIn buys an Applicant Tracking System.

• LinkedIn buys Quora for $500mm. This is widely derided, but immediately raises their revenue from every business segment, and gets them some great technical and design talent. Facebook will have trouble buying Quora for personal reasons; Google because it already owns Aardvark; Twitter because it doesn’t buy other product. Yahoo, Microsoft, and AOL are the only other suitors. I doubt that either company is willing to pay so much for a pre-revenue company.

• LinkedIn subsumes the company “Careers” page the way they’ve subsumed the personal “résumés” page. They do this through a combination of SEO and purchasing an applicant tracking system.

• LinkedIn does not buy or get bought by a job board.

• LinkedIn’s stock, at IPO, is a good deal. At some point, it will probably close 20-30% below the first day’s closing price, but it will be considered a good investment five years down the line.

Full Disclosure: don’t consider this financial advice. Consult with a broker before making financial decisions, even poor ones. Assume the worst, and act on it.

In addition: I am an avid LinkedIn user. I will not be buying at the IPO, but may trade LinkedIn stock or related derivatives in the future. I will not necessarily trade in the direction implied by the above.


businessinsider.com



To: stockman_scott who wrote (10)2/24/2011 3:08:36 PM
From: Glenn Petersen1 Recommendation  Respond to of 272
 
Collateral damage:

LinkedIn access in China disrupted amid protest calls

Reuters
Thu Feb 24, 2011 11:00am EST

* LinkedIn site unavailable in China, say users

* Disruption comes as China cracks down on protest calls

* Extended blockage could dampen IPO appeal - analyst

BEIJING, Feb 24 (Reuters) - Access to the professional networking site LinkedIn was disrupted in China on Thursday, following online calls on other sites for gatherings inspired by protests against authoritarian regimes across the Middle East.

Many users in China were unable to access LinkedIn, which is planning an initial public offering set to raise up to $175 million.

LinkedIn could be accessed as recently as Thursday morning, according to two regular users, one a Reuters employee and the other a business consultant, who declined to be identified.

Some users who later found they could not access it via the Chinese Internet said the site was however accessible via routes outside the reach of Chinese censors.

LinkedIn, with its relatively small user base of adult professionals, has been accessible in China through the local Internet service, unlike Facebook and other social websites with much larger numbers of users.

ANXIETY

The news of the disruption coincided with a rash of detentions and tighter censorship in recent days, underscoring the government's anxiety in the face of calls for "Jasmine Revolution" protests -- pro-democracy gatherings inspired by unrest in the Middle East.

If the disruption for LinkedIn is permanent in China, it could hurt the company's prospects at an IPO as a ban would exclude the company from the world's largest Internet market -- about 450 million users and growing.

"It certainly would be a negative in terms of the company's future growth and profitability," said Jay Ritter, a professor of finance at the University of Florida.

"This is something where investors would take it into account and be willing to pay a little lower price per share."

LinkedIn Corp, which filed last month to raise up to $175 million in an IPO either on the Nasdaq or the New York stock exchange, was not immediately available for comment.

reuters.com



To: stockman_scott who wrote (10)2/27/2011 10:30:52 AM
From: Glenn Petersen1 Recommendation  Respond to of 272
 
LinkedIn: IPO Will Place Company at Strategic Crossroads

by: IPO Candy
Seeking Alpha
February 27, 2011

LinkedIn (LNKD) has been rescued by the Twitter/Facebook phenomenon and is now positioned as the ”professional” networking leader.

The company was started in the horse-and-buggy days of online networking way back in 2003. The first value proposition that stuck with users was the notion that having a professional profile on record made sense, and being able to link with other professionals would be desirable. So, many people found it worth their time to create a free profile and the company grew.

At the end of the first year they reached 500,000 users. By the end of 2004 they reached 1.6m members, then 4m at the end of 2005, and 9m by the end of 2007. Even as the company reached 33m members at the end of 2008 there were some bumps in the road as the credit crisis and economic turmoil forced the company to lay off employees, change their CEO and do some soul searching.

That difficult period has left some scars on the company in terms of both strategy and execution. The success of Facebook begged the question whether LinkedIn should be a ”Facebook for businesses” or remain more of a professional network. At the same time, Twitter was growing rapidly among technologists and consumers. Under the current CEO the company has basically focused on where the money is, which is in recruiting, advertising and premium services. Since then member growth, revenues and profitability have been excellent.

Where does LinkedIn go from here? In the short term their strategy should work well as the economy and the job market continue to recover. More and more members will want premium services and more companies will be spending on corporate, recruiting and marketing services. Longer term though they may have some more soul searching to do.

For example, although LinkedIn now integrates with Twitter it doesn’t really have a use. Twitter sits in the middle of the personal and business world so having your tweet stream display inside LinkedIn doesn’t have a clear value. Dedicated services such as Yammer and the new Chatter product from Salesforce.com are the tools business users are adopting for this style of collaboration when people are actually working together.

Another challenge LinkedIn still has to address is their mission to provide ”expert insights and knowledge”. So far they have attempted to tackle this with LinkedIn Answers and LinkedIn Groups. Providing these tools has been fairly unrewarding. It may be that the mixture of information along with promotion and advertising just has not worked. In contrast an upstart called Quora has emerged to be an interesting example of what might work in this domain. However, Quora is still blessed with not having a business model and they too will have to figure out how to make this work within the context of making money.

Post IPO, LinkedIn will stand at a strategic crossroads. Will they plunge deeper into expert networks and knowledge sharing? Will they focus instead on corporate information and more B2B services? Their mission has been to focus on members but in the past two years that has certainly become fuzzy as corporations and advertisers have become the majority revenue source.

There’s also the entire collaboration space, which is already large and growing. This results in linking professionals for actions, projects, efforts, and day to day tasks. Collaboration is a more fluid type of application mode and much of what LinkedIn offers is static or more batch oriented. This works for job recruiting but not so well for projects, virtual organizations, and the rapid assembly of high-performance teams.

Another issue facing LinkedIn is the ”forking” of professional communities over to their own sites. For example Stackoverflow is becoming the place for many programming types to share ”expert insights” and build their profiles based on what they know and can do. Most recruiters agree that it’s way better than an online resume. We see more of these emerging in specialized communities. That could leave LinkedIn to become the place of choice for only a portion of professionals.

In the short term LinkedIn should be a solid IPO given their 80 percent growth and 20 percent (EBITDA) operating margins. The preliminary Intrinsic Value in our report suggests a valuation of $2.6B to $2.9B. After the final prospectus is available and the company begins marketing we will update the report and add to the IV and peer analysis sections with a more detailed business model.

seekingalpha.com



To: stockman_scott who wrote (10)3/7/2011 3:39:17 PM
From: Glenn Petersen1 Recommendation  Respond to of 272
 
Some of the competition:

Viadeo opens S.F. office to compete with LinkedIn

Benny Evangelista, Chronicle Staff Writer
San Francisco Chronicle
March 7, 2011 04:00 AM

LinkedIn Corp. is the world's leading professional social network with more than 90 million members, but the company's main international competitor has quietly put down Bay Area roots to help close the gap.

Viadeo S.A., which has 35 million members, has opened an office in downtown San Francisco and its chief executive has moved here from Paris along with his family and about 20 engineers.

Viadeo hopes to expand its largely unknown presence in the United States by touting its overseas networks. Its strong presence in countries such as China - where LinkedIn was briefly blocked - could be attractive to people seeking new business opportunities.

"We still strongly believe that networking is a local thing," said founder and chief executive Dan Serfaty. "You don't network, create content and manage your contacts the same way when you're in France, in Italy, in China, in India or in the U.S."

The privately held Viadeo plans to host an open house Tuesday at its new offices on Spear Street, about 37 miles north of LinkedIn's Mountain View headquarters.

Serfaty wanted to bring Viadeo closer to the wealth of engineering talent in Silicon Valley and hopes to expand its local workforce to about 50 or 60 by the end of the year.

But he also was interested in opening his company's platform to the "culture and knowledge" of Silicon Valley entrepreneurs who could bring in new features or products to help it grow.

"It was an opportunity for all of us to be part of this Jerusalem of the Internet," Serfaty said.

Professional sites

Although Palo Alto's Facebook is the king of social networking, LinkedIn, Viadeo and Germany's Xing A.G. separate themselves from Mark Zuckerberg's growing empire by positioning their services for professional workers.

In that market, Viadeo remains a distant second to LinkedIn, which is adding about one new member each second and recently announced plans for an initial public offering. Xing is third with about 10 million members.

But Serfaty believes his network offers more than the career-management services that LinkedIn highlights. He's promoting Viadeo as a way for professionals to find new business partners and tap their expertise, especially in overseas markets.

"It's much more business-development oriented," he said. "We hope to offer the U.S. market a gate of entry to these emerging countries."

Viadeo, which started in Paris in 2004 under the name Viaduc, has only about 2 million U.S. members. But it is the market leader in France, Italy and Spain and has 8.1 million members in Europe.

About 23 percent of LinkedIn's members are in Europe, but that firm will have more trouble expanding there because Viadeo and Xing are entrenched
, according to a recent report by NeXt Up Research of Palo Alto.

From a revenue perspective, Viadeo is a distant third, according to NeXt Up. The company had a 5 percent share of the estimated $370 million professional social networking market last year, compared with 19 percent for Xing and 56 percent for LinkedIn.

Xing hasn't been as aggressive in expanding its user base as its rivals, but leads the way in finding new revenue-generating sources, such as a related events management and ticketing service, said Matt Brischetto, senior associate for Pacific Crest Securities' Internet and digital media investment banking group.

Job recruiting

But all three firms could tap into the global job recruitment market - worth an estimated $100 billion a year - while capturing some online advertising revenue, he said.

More importantly, he said LinkedIn, Viadeo and Xing are creating a new market for professional identity management services (making sure you look good online).

"The way we see it, there's room for all three of them to be successful," he said.

Viadeo, which has been profitable since September 2009, entered new markets by buying regional firms. It has acquired companies in Canada, Spain and India.

Viadeo provides the underlying platform, but keeps local management and brands intact because they know their particular cultural and political landscapes.

Know the market

For example, Serfaty said he was initially skeptical about one acquisition, which includes horoscopes for members in India, until he read that a business owner there postponed closing a deal because the stars weren't aligned.

"If you would implement a horoscope feature in the United States or Europe, it would be weird," he said. "They would say, 'C'mon, they're not professional anymore.' In India, you don't do a job interview without consulting your horoscope."

That grassroots approach is an advantage for Viadeo, Brischetto said.

The strategy came into play last week when access for some of LinkedIn's 2 million members in China was blocked for about a day after the network was used for a discussion of the revolutions in the Middle East.

Operations are back to normal, and LinkedIn spokesman Hani Durzy said that the company hasn't had any contact with the Chinese government about the blockage. "We know that we were being blocked for some in China, and then we weren't. We'll continue to monitor the situation," he said in an e-mail.

But the disruption did not affect Tianji, China's largest professional social network with 5.5 million members. Viadeo bought Tianji in 2008.

Serfaty said he kept his fingers crossed while LinkedIn was blocked, but "it seems the government has decided to let alone the local players."

There's been speculation that Facebook, which has an estimated 600 million members, could disrupt the market by adding a business-networking component.

But Brischetto discounted that possibility, saying that business people prefer keeping their professional lives separate from their social lives.


Also, he said, business members are more willing to pay for professional social-network services, creating a source of predictable revenue that "is attractive to Wall Street."

Serfaty said there's no internal pressure on Viadeo to go public. But with social media such a hot topic, he said an IPO is "an option we would be foolish not to consider. Even if we would not want to, my phone keeps ringing with bankers calling to bring forward this option."

E-mail Benny Evangelista at bevangelista@sfchronicle.com.

sfgate.com



To: stockman_scott who wrote (10)3/10/2011 8:16:30 AM
From: Glenn Petersen1 Recommendation  Respond to of 272
 
LinkedIn Wants To "Become The Wall Street Journal Of Social News", Says Former Staffer

Pascal-Emmanuel Gobry
Business Insider
Mar. 10, 2011, 5:38 AM

LinkedIn is going to add a smart news aggregation feature and thereby become "the Wall Street Journal of social news", Mrinal Desai, who used to work there, writes in a guest post at TechCrunch.

Making this more than just speculation, he recently received an email from a news@linkedin.com address containing the most shared news in his network, a feature that hasn't been announced or publicized yet.

If LinkedIn rolls out this feature widely that would be smart. LinkedIn's main problem is that, as it says itself in its S-1 filing, the vast majority of LinkedIn members don't actually use it. To be blunt: it's just not useful for the majority of users. It's only a minority of people like recruiters and salespeople who use the site. That's the reason why your writer went through customer service hell to leave the site.

It would also be a good place to sell more advertising, which is the worst-performing of LinkedIn's business units.

So becoming a smart aggregator of business news could make it more useful for more people. The question is all about the execution -- can they pull it off? The right personalized news aggregator has been a holy grail of the web for many, many years now and most startups who have tried to pull it off have failed.

The closest thing to a successful personalized news aggregator is Twitter. And it's hard to see how LinkedIn could add value beyond that: if we want to read the best news shared by our network, well, that just sounds like the definintion of Twitter, which also has many other great things going for it on top of that.

businessinsider.com



To: stockman_scott who wrote (10)3/12/2011 3:45:10 PM
From: Glenn Petersen1 Recommendation  Respond to of 272
 
LinkedIn filed the first amendment to its registration statement on Friday. The amendment includes the audited financial statements for the year ending December 31, 2010. The four quarter growth was very impressive. I have updated the disclosures in the thread header, leaving in the nine month numbers so that you can get a feel for how good the fourth quarter was.

sec.gov



To: stockman_scott who wrote (10)3/14/2011 6:55:04 PM
From: Glenn Petersen1 Recommendation  Respond to of 272
 
LinkedIn IPO: What’s New?

By Shira Ovide
Wall Street Journal
Deal Journal
March 14, 2011, 1:20 PM ET

The market is eagerly awaiting the initial public offering from LinkedIn, the social-networking website oriented to the work world. In the meantime, we at Deal Journal HQ have a few fresh data points about LinkedIn to chew over.

LinkedIn has updated its IPO documents, including fresh disclosures about its financial results in the final three months of 2010 (good) and a warning about Web blockades in China (bad, but not unusual for social networks).

LinkedIn still hasn’t said how many shares it wants to sell in the IPO, nor at what price. Companies typically update their IPO documents several times before the big day. Deal Journal reported previously that LinkedIn expects to raise $200 million from the IPO, which is expected to value the company in the ballpark of $2 billion.

Here are a few fresh details from LinkedIn’s updated IPO documents, filed with the SEC late Friday:

4Q results:

LinkedIn finished 2010 with revenue of $243 million, more than double the company’s top line in 2009. The company posted net income of $15.4 million for last year, and “adjusted” Ebitda of $48 million — more than three times the adjusted Ebitda levels from 2009.

LinkedIn’s year-over-year revenue growth rate for the first nine months of the year was a shade slower, meaning LinkedIn’s revenue rate accelerated slightly in the final three months of the year.

Just remember not to get too excited about LinkedIn’s finances. The company has said previously that it is favoring future investments over profits at this point. “In 2011, our philosophy is to continue to invest for future growth, and as a result we do not expect to be profitable on a GAAP basis in 2011,” LinkedIn said in its IPO filing.

China:

Recently, LinkedIn was among the websites blocked in China in the wake of popular protests across North Africa and the Middle East. LinkedIn also updated its IPO materials to caution investors about the risk from China’s Great Firewall.

“The government of the People’s Republic of China recently blocked access to our site in China for a short period of time. We cannot assure you that the Chinese government will not block access to one or more of our features and products or our entire site in China for a longer period of time or permanently.”

“Material Weakness”

Companies have internal systems in place to catch any red flags in their financial accounting. LinkedIn said previously that it identified in the past a “material weakness” in its financial-reporting systems — which need to be more robust for a public company than they are in closely held companies.

LinkedIn gave more details in its updated documents about what happened. The company said it had to restate its 2006 and 2007 financial statements because of a problem in its financial-reporting internal controls “due to an ineffective financial statement closing and review process.”

LinkedIn also said it has more work to do:

Although we believe the actions we have taken will remediate these significant deficiencies during 2011, we may fail to do so or could experience unforeseen difficulties causing new significant deficiencies or material weaknesses. In addition, we may need to operate for an extended period of time with the new or revised controls in place before these significant deficiencies will be determined to be remediated.

If we are unable to assert that our internal control over financial reporting is effective, or if our auditors are unable to express an opinion on the effectiveness of our internal controls, we could lose investor confidence in the accuracy and completeness of our financial reports, which would cause the price of our Class A common stock to decline.


blogs.wsj.com



To: stockman_scott who wrote (10)3/17/2011 3:21:40 PM
From: Glenn Petersen2 Recommendations  Respond to of 272
 
Executives Flock To LinkedIn

Corporate leaders are shying away from Twitter, Facebook, and other consumer-oriented sites and embracing LinkedIn and specialty business networks, according to the Society for New Communications Research.


By Alison Diana
InformationWeek
March 17, 2011 01:49 PM

Decision-makers are using social media as knowledge and communication networks, primarily visiting these Web sites to access the wealth of available thought-leadership content, according to a report published Thursday by the Society for New Communications Research.

In the second annual New Symbiosis of Professional Networks Study, SNCR polled 114 executives across 10 countries, most of whom were key decision-makers at companies ranging in size from fewer than 100 to more than 50,000 full-time employees.

Interestingly, executives have decreased their use of all social networks other than LinkedIn, the report found. Almost all -- or 97% -- of those surveyed used LinkedIn in 2010, compared with 92% in 2009, according to the study, released Thursday. By contrast, Twitter use dropped to 33% last year vs. 40% in 2009; Facebook usage fell to 20% compared with 51% the year prior, and Plaxo decreased to just 5% from 14% a year ago, the report found.

"Hundreds of other networks were mentioned, many by only one or two respondents," wrote SNCR fellows Donald Bulmer, VP of global communications, industry, and influencer relations at SAP, and Vanessa DiMauro, CEO of Leader Networks.

Managing the exploding number of new addresses needed for mobile computing and virtualization requirements.

Reducing Network Management Complexity Through Automation
Today, 55% of executives surveyed participate in three to five social networks, slightly up from the 50% who were involved in that number of social media sites in 2009. Eighty-four percent of respondents were either satisfied or very satisfied with online professional networks, the report found.

Apparently there is room for specialty social networks that focus solely on particular issues or vertical markets. Although most executives polled participate in large professional networks such as LinkedIn and 65% are active in open social networks like Yelp and Twitter, 48% of respondents said they were involved in "midsize or specialized membership-specific industry, roles, or interest-specific groups online" and 26% said they "prefer to engage with a smaller peer group in a private and confidential exchange."

These professional social networks have become a trusted environment for relationship management and decision support, the study said. In fact, 60% said one benefit of participation was increased competitive brand monitoring and performance; 60% said it was to establish or increase their professional network.

Professional collaboration is changing from a small professional exchange into an interaction with content in more public ways," said DiMauro, in a statement. "The consequence of sharing content online is enhanced influence."

Networks also give executives access to information they otherwise could not get, said many respondents. Eighty percent of respondents are able to accelerate decision processes and information or strategy development by participating in online communities, according to the study.

"Business professionals are changing how they collaborate as a result of online professional communities and peer networks," said Bulmer, in a statement.

Not surprisingly, almost all -- or 97% -- of executives log-on to social networks via a PC or Macintosh. Mirroring the consumer world, a growing number of professionals now visit these sites using mobile devices: In 2010, 59% used a mobile device compared with 44% in the prior year, according to the study. More than half, or 52%, used an iPhone; 37% used a BlackBerry; 15% relied on an Android; and 15% used an iPad, the report said.

To keep up with their colleagues, the world, and their business, executives check-in frequently, with 43% logging on more than three times per day, according to the study. More than one-third log-on once a day, and only 2% said they check-in occasionally, the report found.

informationweek.com



To: stockman_scott who wrote (10)3/22/2011 8:15:29 AM
From: Glenn Petersen1 Recommendation  Respond to of 272
 
Boom! Professional Social Network LinkedIn Passes 100 Million Members

By Leena Rao
TechCrunch
March 22, 2010

2011 has proven to be a monumental year so far for professional social network LinkedIn. The company filed its S-1 for a public offering, released a number of data-focused products and unveiled a social news reader for professionals. And today, the professional social network has hit an important milestone: 100 million users.

LinkedIn, which launched in 2003, says that it is now being used in over 200 countries, with more than half of its users originating from outside the U.S. To be exact, the U.S. has 44 million LinkedIn members, and there are 56 million members outside of the U.S. Brazil is seeing the highest growth rate, with new user adoption rising 428 percent year-over-year. Mexico is also seeing major growth, with membership growing by 178 percent year-over-year.

Currently 17.8 million LinkedIn users a members of the network’s Groups and 1.2 million post comments to Groups weekly. There are now over 2 million company pages, with eBay, Amazon, Apple, Cisco, EMC and Campbells as the most represented companies on the network based on the number of employees that are on LinkedIn. There are now 1.3+ billion connections between LinkedIn’s members and 79+ million job transitions/changes tracked on the network.


For LinkedIn, 100 million users comes with a caveat. As the company wrote in its S-1 filing, “The number of our registered members is higher than the number of actual members, and a substantial majority of our page views are generated by a minority of our members… If the number of our actual members does not meet our expectations or we are unable to increase the breadth and frequency of our visiting members, then our business may not grow as fast as we expect, which will harm our operating and financial results and may cause our stock price to decline.”

So while 100 million users is an impressive milestone, the company admits that its active users are below this number. How much below, however, is unclear. According to comScore, LinkedIn saw 71.5 million unique visitors worldwide in February.

And of course, it’s important to note that 100 million is one-sixth of Facebook’s 600 million userbase (Facebook saw 676.7 million unique visitors worldwide in February, reports comScore). But as the company prepares for a public offering, growth in terms of users will be an important selling point for potential investors. And LinkedIn’s revenue and profit is increasing steadily. It took LinkedIn 8 years to reach 100 million members; how long will it take the network to reach 200 million users?



techcrunch.com



To: stockman_scott who wrote (10)3/24/2011 11:19:27 AM
From: Glenn Petersen1 Recommendation  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 272
 
LinkedIn's astonishing growth: By the numbers

The professional-networking site now has 100 million users. That includes 997,000 teachers — and no fewer than 74 Elvis impersonators


posted on March 24, 2011, at 6:30 AM
The Week

LinkedIn may not be in the same league as Facebook and Twitter, but it's catching up. The professional-networking site recently passed the milestone of 100 million users and is growing exponentially. According to the site's creators, a million people are signing up to LinkedIn every week. The site connects members in the same industry, allowing them to network with each other online, and hosts company pages listing employees from firms such as Apple, Cisco, eBay, and Amazon. Here, a look at the numbers behind LinkedIn's growth:

100 million
Number of LinkedIn users

98,425
The height, in feet, of a hypothetical stack of business cards representing all 100 million LinkedIn members

44 million
Number of LinkedIn users in the U.S.

200
Number of countries with LinkedIn users

428 percent
Growth over the last year in LinkedIn users from Brazil

178 percent
Growth over the last year in LinkedIn users from Mexico

1 million
Number of users joining LinkedIn every week

20 percent
Share of LinkedIn users who are in the service industry

9 percent
Share of LinkedIn users in the high-tech sector. Members in the finance sector represent the same share.

500
Number of Fortune 500 companies with executives on LinkedIn

997,000
Number of teachers with LinkedIn accounts

1,030
Number of chocolatiers with LinkedIn accounts

74
Number of Elvis tribute artists with LinkedIn accounts

46
Number of LinkedIn users who list "beatboxer" as their profession

4
Number of LinkedIn users who list "dog or cat psychologist" as their profession

1
Number of LinkedIn users who list "martini whisperer" as their profession

8 years
Amount of time LinkedIn has been in operation. The company launched in May 2003.

$243 million
LinkedIn's total revenue in 2010. It makes money from recruitment and marketing services and premium subscriptions.

$15.4 million
LinkedIn's net income in 2010

$175 million
Estimated value of LinkedIn, as submitted in its January 2011 filing with the SEC

600 million
Number of Facebook users

$2 billion
Facebook's approximate total revenue in 2010

$500 million
Facebook's approximate net income in 2010

200 million
Number of Twitter users who have joined since its launch in 2007

3.2 million
Number of users joining Twitter every week (460,000 every day)

Sources: LinkedIn (2), CNET, TechCrunch, Reuters

theweek.com



To: stockman_scott who wrote (10)5/4/2011 5:58:06 AM
From: Glenn Petersen1 Recommendation  Respond to of 272
 
Why Google Should Buy LinkedIn, Now Before It's Too Late

By Pascal-Emmanuel Gobry, provided by Business Insider
SFGate.com
Tuesday, May 3, 2011

Google's new CEO Larry Page is all about winning in social, tying every Googler's bonus to the success of the company's social strategy.

And he's right: Google absolutely needs to win in social because social is driving an ever increasing share of online traffic, and traffic is power and money.

An obvious shortcut for Google to win social is buying other successful social companies.

The company that most often comes up as a potential target is Twitter, because it's the biggest Facebook rival and it's struggling to find a good business model, which means Google could be a long term home for it. But Twitter doesn't want to sell.

One that gets less talked about is LinkedIn, because LinkedIn is more "niche" (albeit a huge niche). But with yesterday's news that LinkedIn is becoming a traffic firehose with its new focus on content, we should note the big reason why LinkedIn would make a very valuable social property for Google.

LinkedIn has one thing that no one else except Facebook has: REAL IDENTITIES.

The focus on real identities is one of the biggest factors in Facebook's success. At the beginning, you could only sign up with a college, and then a work email, which made people sign up with their real identities. Today Facebook still enforces its only-real-names policy.

Real identities are why people go on Facebook all the time. It makes the site feel more trustworthy. It makes sure people have their real friends on there with real photos. Being an online identity repository and system is a huge competitive advantage for Facebook, and something it's doing effortlessly despite every big company trying and failing to get people to use their real identities online. Real identities are what makes social networks "stick" and be so valuable.

With LinkedIn, Google would instantly get a database of 100 million real and valuable identities, which it can then cross-pollinate with Google Profiles, its own ho-hum effort to get people to give it their own real identities.


LinkedIn can then evolve its focus slowly and progressively away from "merely" professional networking. The barrier between personal and professional identity online is getting blurrier and blurrier anyway. Services like Twitter and About.me are already hard at work obliterating that distinction. That would be bad for LinkedIn as a standalone company, but great for a Google-owned LinkedIn.

Sharing content is another big social network activity that LinkedIn is already shifting to, and combining Google's new sharing service +1 with LinkedIn would give it that instant boost. LinkedIn would stop being a resume database but become a sharing hub for information like Facebook and Twitter.

Integrating LinkedIn profiles and Gmail, like third-party tools like Rapportive already do, would also be a big boon: opening an email you would see not only a person's email and "name" but their real identity. Integrating LinkedIn and Gmail that way might cause privacy jitters (but again, some tools already do this using publicly available info and APIs) but it would improve Gmail and drive a huge new wave of signups to LinkedIn.

In time, LinkedIn could go from being a social network for execs, to a social network for people who have jobs, to a social network for everyone. That would be a real threat for Facebook.

If Google wants to buy LinkedIn, it had better do it soon rather than before it gets a huge IPO pop. So it's something to think about.

tinyurl.com



To: stockman_scott who wrote (10)5/4/2011 6:02:37 AM
From: Glenn Petersen1 Recommendation  Respond to of 272
 
CHART OF THE DAY: Suddenly, LinkedIn Is A Traffic Firehose

By Nicholas Carlson
Business Insider
May 2, 2011, 4:43 PM

Out of nowhere, Business Insider started seeing real referral traffic from LinkedIn last month.The chart below illustrates the spike.

LinkedIn product manager Liz Walker tells us the traffic is coming from a bunch of sources – mostly new products like LinkedIn.com/Today, newsletters, and LinkedIn News.

All of these sources are programmed by LinkedIn populated "inShares," which are kind of like Facebook "likes" or Twitter "re-tweets."

Who knew?

Google, by the way, is trying to pull of a similar trick with its +1 button. Larry Page is obsessed with figuring out social. He's worried about how people are finding content in their Facebook News Feeds and Twitter streams before they ever think to Google search for it. Maybe he should worry about Linkedin, too. Maybe he should just buy LinkedIn.



tinyurl.com



To: stockman_scott who wrote (10)5/4/2011 5:48:42 PM
From: Glenn Petersen1 Recommendation  Respond to of 272
 
LinkedIn filed its third amendment today:

sec.gov

LinkedIn IPO to List on NYSE: Big Win for Big Board

By Shira Ovide
Wall Street Journal
May 4, 2011, 10:13 AM ET

In IPO filing: the social networking company for business professionals has decided to list its shares on the New York Stock Exchange.

The LinkedIn IPO — one of the most high profile tech-stock debuts of 2011 — is a big psychological boost for the Big Board, which is fighting off a unwanted acquisition overture led by the Nasdaq stock exchange. Nasdaq, of course, is a traditional haven for tech stocks and would have been an obvious choice for LinkedIn.

Other recent tech-stock listing wins for NYSE include today’s debut for Chinese Internet giant RenRen, often referred to as the Facebook of China. Online-music service Pandora Media also has applied to list on the NYSE, under a coveted one-letter stock symbol, “P.”

NYSE and Nasdaq fiercely fight over prominent stock listings, and take joy in poaching listing companies from the other. Listings also have become a battering ram in the heated war over a NYSE acquisition. An annoyed-sounding NYSE CEO Duncan Niederauer last month lashed out angrily at Nasdaq for suggesting the Big Board was losing ground in stock listings.

“You’ll also read some stories that says, the NYSE isn’t competitive anymore going after IPOs, or NYSE Euronext: we’re not well positioned,” Niederauer said last month in a message to his troops. “More than 80% of IPO issuance in the US in the last couple years has happened at the NYSE. You can do the math and figure out where the other less than 20% has gone.”

For its NYSE listing, LinkedIn has chosen the stock symbol “LNKD.” Steve Rubis on Twitter reminded Deal Journal that a perhaps more logical ticker — LINK — already is taken by a small company called Interlink Electronics.

Also in the updated IPO documents, LinkedIn disclosed that its first-quarter revenue accelerated a bit from the growth pace of 2010. LinkedIn said it generated $93.9 million in net revenue for the three months ended March 31, a 110% jump from the same three-month period of 2010. For all of last year, the company pulled in $243 million in revenue, about 102% more than in 2009.

LinkedIn eked out $1.28 million in income from operations for the first quarter, down from $3.2 million in the same period of 2010.

LinnkedIn also disclosed it has more than 100 million members, up from more than 90 million when it last filed its IPO materials a month ago.

tinyurl.com



To: stockman_scott who wrote (10)5/6/2011 6:55:35 AM
From: Glenn Petersen2 Recommendations  Respond to of 272
 
This Man Is Beating LinkedIn In China, India, And Brazil (EXCLUSIVE Q&A) (LNKD)

Pascal-Emmanuel Gobry, provided by
Business Insider
SFGate.com
Thursday, May 5, 2011

Viadeo just might be the biggest social network you've never heard of. At 35 million members, this Paris-based professional social network is well behind LinkedIn's 100 million members, but it's ahead in the places many would argue matter the most: high-growth emerging countries like China, India and Brazil.

As LinkedIn gears up to go public, it's interesting to talk to the man who could pose a serious threat to its future growth, Viadeo's founder and CEO Dan Serfaty, to learn more about the company and hear his vision.

We went to Viadeo's Paris headquarters on the auspiciously named Victory Street, where the company houses over 100 employees in an entire building and had a talk with the refreshingly plainspoken and straight-talking Serfaty.

Here are some highlights:

•Viadeo is the biggest professional social network in China, Brazil and India;

•The company is profitable and revenue is growing 100% year over year;

•He thinks his product sucks, and explains why and what he's doing about it;

•How mobile is transforming professional social networking.
Here's the interview (edited for clarity):

Business Insider: Explain Viadeo to someone who's never heard of it.

Dan Serfaty: We're the number two professional social network worldwide, with 35 million members. What sets us apart is that we want to be the leader in a small number of local markets. So we're most active in France, Italy, Spain and emerging countries.

We are a multi-platform, multi-product, multi-features and mulit-brand company. We're called Tianji in China, Apna Circle in India, Unyk in Brazil and Viadeo in Europe.

That sets us apart from LinkedIn, which has a very global approach. When they go into a market, they play up the fact that they're international and start with the top of the pyramid.
We aim for the core of the market, the middle of the pyramid. So it's a very different go-to-market strategy.

Their approach has a strong inherent virality and value proposition. They say to anyone: "If you want to network with the US, go with us." We go to Brazilians or Indians or Chinese and say: "If you want to network with Brazilians or Indians or Chinese, go with us."

Which is why we've had an acquisition strategy: we've bought the leaders in China, India and Latin America.

LinkedIn's biggest countries are, in order: the US, the UK, India, Australia and New Zealand. All of them English countries. For us, they're: China, France, Brazil, Mexico and Italy. So it's much more diverse.

BI: Great. What about metrics?

Serfaty: We had 200 employees at the end of last year, and we plan to double that by the end of this year, in our offices in Paris, Beijing, San Francisco, London and New Delhi.

We've been profitable since September 2009 and we have 100% year over year revenue growth. Which is why we can double our headcount out of cash-flow.

BI: What's your revenue and profits?

Serfaty: (Laughing.) Sorry, I'm gonna pass on that one. But I can tell you that we make 50% of our revenue through subscriptions, compared to 20% for LinkedIn, 30% through recruiters, and the remaining 20% through advertising.

BI: So what else sets you apart from LinkedIn?

Serfaty: What I'd say to a potential member is: if you're in the US and you want to do business with China, don't leave LinkedIn. But join Viadeo.

I think people see LinkedIn as a career tool. By contrast, we started Viadeo in 2004 out of an entrepreneurs club, with offline events. I think we have more of an entrepreneurial DNA. So people will use Viadeo more as a business tool than as a career tool.

Which is why we have much higher conversion rates to paid accounts. We have more paying members in France than they do in the US -- our respective home countries -- despite the fact that they have 10 times more members. And Xing [the biggest professional social network in Germany --Ed.] has the highest conversion rate in the industry.

BI: What is that?

Serfaty: Look at what LinkedIn offers. For $25 per month, you get 5 InMail. For $100 per month, you get 15 or 20. For us, for 6 euros, you have unlimited as long as it's not spam.

BI: (Laughing) Well that explains the higher conversion rate. But what does it mean, in reality, when you say Viadeo is more entrepreneurial than LinkedIn? Are there different features?

Serfaty: Sure. So take a look at the search. If you do a search for people on LinkedIn, the first results are going to be people in your network. If you're a sales guy, who cares?

And by the way, the thing about contacting someone in your network so they can put you in touch with someone in your network, that's bullshit. Nobody does that.

No, the reason why LinkedIn does that is so they can sell their search engine to recruiters, where they get much more relevant results.

Next: Isn't Viadeo doomed?

BI: A question you must not like to hear: aren't you doomed? Social networks are network effects businesses, and these tend to be winner-take-all. I used to have a Viadeo account, and I realized on Viadeo I had all my French contacts, and on LinkedIn I had all my French contacts and international contacts, so I deleted my Viadeo account. Aren't you doomed to be beat by LinkedIn?

Serfaty: I think what you're saying is true for Facebook, and certainly they crushed most of their smaller rivals. But I don't think it's true for professional social networks.

Start from the motivation of someone who signs up for a professional social network. You go for basically two reasons: to be visible for recruiters and to find customers. If you want to be visible to recruiters, why the hell wouldn't you sign up for a second social network? If you want to find customers, why would you exclusively look at one network?

On Facebook, all that matters is your own network. If your friends aren't there, there's nothing to do.

On a professional network, to be honest, people don't really give a shit about their network.

BI: Ok. Second uncomfortable question: why do professional social networks suck? It seems like there's no innovation. When Quora launched, my own reaction was: "This should have been on LinkedIn for five years." And LinkedIn Answers has really gone nowhere. I think you guys suck. Why do you suck?

Serfaty: (Laughing.) I agree.

I think professional social networks right now haven't reached 5% of where they should be.

BI: Ok, but why?

Serfaty: Have you looked at the dashboards on LinkedIn and Viadeo? They're fucking awful. It makes you want to cry, right? "So-and-so joined the group Smallsville University Alumni." Who cares!

When you're on Facebook it's funny to see your friend join some ridiculous group. But on a professional social network, you don't care.

I think the big reason is that we stayed about recruiting for too long. That was a good use case, and a highly monetizable one, so we focused a lot of energy on that, for too long.

We want to move on to the next phase.

So for example we're working on a product called Smart News. If you look at LinkedIn's new news thing, it's basically Twitter, right? It's your friends' feeds, and those are basically Twitter feeds, so it's basically a Twitter client.

What we're trying to build with Smart News and will release soon is a product that shows you not news that is shared by people in your network, but news that we think you're going to be interested because of the information in your profile, and you're going to be able to see who shared it, even if that person is not in your network. If there's an article that's interesting to you and someone shared it, then that person might be interesting to you. We can generate new connections through shared media. That's very exciting.

The other big thing we're working on is opening our APIs. That's why we're opening up and staffing up a big San Francisco office.

And I think we have a real edge over LinkedIn, because they're much more afraid of giving up their data. So for example, recently they wouldn't open their API to Salesforce. We jumped on that!

LinkedIn in general doesn't innovate. They're very cautious, very guarded. We'll open up everything we can open.

Next: When is Viadeo going public?

BI: Ok. What's next for Viadeo?

Serfaty: Mobile.

BI: Like what?

Serfaty: I'm not talking about the app. We have iPhone and Android apps like everyone else, and like everyone else no one uses it. We're even less compelling on mobile than on the web.

On the other hand, there are 500 million out there living their lives--their professional lives-- on mobile.

In India, after meeting someone, you don't send a followup email, you send followup texts.

So we're not thinking about new apps, but new mobile features, especially for emerging countries. We're experimenting with ways of including pictures, and location, and texting.

BI: Fascinating. What else?

Serfaty: Geographically, there's one country we lack: Russia. We're number one in China, Brazil, India, we need Russia.

BI: And what about an IPO? There's been plenty of rumors you're planning an IPO?

Serfaty: (Laughing.) I knew that's what you wanted to ask!

The answer is: not now.

My feeling is that going public killed Xing. They went public years ago and their stock hasn't moved for 5 years. They even gave money back to their shareholders recently. When your company is public there's a huge focus on profitability. You have your eye on EBITDA all the time.

At Xing, the founder left after cashing out, and they hired some CEO out of McKinsey who closed down all their international operations, with huge writedowns. And now Xing has 96% of its members and revenues in Germany, Austria and Switzerland. You just can't take the same risks when you're public.

One thing I agree with LinkedIn about, though: soon, a billion professionals will be signed up on professional social networks. That's a huge pie that's up for grabs. Right now is not the time to be focused on profitability.

But yeah, given what the market is doing right now, I get like 250 emails from bankers every day. (Laughing.) Some even contact me through LinkedIn, that's annoying.

BI: So are you going to raise money privately?

Serfaty: Hmmm… I'm looking at my options. Capital is very cheap these days. I don't know. We'll see.

BI: Ok. What's next for the sector in general?

Serfaty: I'm really interested in this Facebook app called BranchOut. It lets you do two things you can't do on Facebook: see your contacts' contacts, and see who looked at your profile. And it's a professional social network based on Facebook. It's not very well done, it's a bit cheap, but it's very interesting.

BI: So you could see yourself going on Facebook.

Serfaty: Yeah. Why not. (Laughing.) Or maybe I just want you to print that.

BI: Well now I have to.

tinyurl.com



To: stockman_scott who wrote (10)5/9/2011 6:54:34 AM
From: Glenn Petersen1 Recommendation  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 272
 
LinkedIn has tentatively priced its shares in the range of $32 to $35, valuing the company at approximately $3 billion to $3.3 billion.

sec.gov