Web pioneers lay foundation for cyber-communities
September 11, 1997
Web posted at: 5:25 p.m. EDT (2125 GMT)
By Jonathan Weber
Michael Egan made a mid-nine-figure fortune building Alamo
Rent-A-Car into an industry powerhouse, and though he isn't
much of a gear-head, his decades in the travel business
convinced him that we haven't even begun to see the changes
that will be wrought by information technologies.
And so last month, Egan invested $20 million in
WebGenesis/The Globe, a New York-based Web venture founded by
two 23-year-old Cornell University graduates, Todd Krizelman
and Stephan Paternot. His advisors were dubious: "They said,
'For what it is, it's neat, but have you lost your mind?'" he
recalls with a chuckle.
What the Globe and other Web ventures, ranging from America
Online to Santa Monica, California-based GeoCities, are doing
is not so much creating community as providing tools for the
creation of community. And people are beginning to use those
tools in large numbers.
The Globe's specialty has been "chat" service: It developed
technology that works better than most Web chat software, and
it has created an environment that makes people comfortable
chatting. It also provides other services, instant messaging
and e-mail, personal home pages, games, shopping and even a
little news, with the aim of becoming members' home base in
cyberspace.
The site claims more than 600,000 registered users, some of
whom pay $25 a year for a premium membership that offers
special features. Krizelman and Paternot consider the
competition to be America Online and the Microsoft Network,
even though Globe members must buy their Internet access
somewhere else.
Though it started from a very different place, GeoCities has
many of the same aims. Its original proposition was simple:
free home pages, organized in thematic neighborhoods, using a
geographic metaphor of streets and houses.
Interested in the arts? You can set up your home page,
displaying just about whatever kinds of text and pictures and
graphics you'd like, in Soho or Paris. Wine lovers might opt
for the Napa Valley. Sports fans can head for the L.A.
Colosseum or Yosemite.
Again, the idea is to establish the site as people's home in
cyberspace, and it seems to be working. GeoCities, which has
attracted more than $11 million in venture capital funding,
is closing in on 1 million "homesteaders," and with more than
2 million visits per day, it is one of the most-trafficked
sites on the Internet.
"We give people the opportunity to connect with people of
similar interests," GeoCities founder David Bohnett says. The
site is not so much a community as a meta-community, a
collection of many different groups of people with similar
interests.
Internet access providers, and even search sites such as
Yahoo, are trying to develop similarly appealing interfaces
and tool sets. But the success of GeoCities and the Globe
indicates that many Web surfers are looking for something
that they aren't getting from their access company.
Egan says the evolution of online communities will, in
critical respects, emulate communities in the real world. The
earliest human communities provided for procreation and
socialization, and for common procurement of food and shelter
and common defense, he says, "and these societies evolved,
constantly giving more services to their members, until you
get present-day San Francisco."
For this to happen, people must be willing to pay some taxes,
be it property tax (subscriptions) or sales tax (a cut of
transactions). Or they must be willing to put up with lots
of billboards along the streets and in their frontyards
(advertising).
How all that will work out remains to be seen. For all their
traffic, these businesses are still small. GeoCities expects
to have $5 million to $6 million in revenue for this calendar
year, mostly from advertising. The Globe, though it won't
provide figures, is likely to be well below that; it's
counting on paid subscriptions as its key revenue source.
But if the theory behind these ventures is even close to
being right, they'll naturally take a long time to develop.
After all, neither Rome, nor any other meta-community, was
built in a day.
(Jonathan Weber is technology editor for The Los Angeles
Times business section. He can be reached via e-mail at
Jonathan.Weber@latimes.com.)
(c) 1997, Los Angeles Times Syndicate