Welcome | Sign In
CRMBuyer.com
Startups to Watch

STARTUP TO WATCH
Stockhouse.com: Staking Its Future on Users' Reputations

Print Version
E-Mail Article
Reprints
Stockhouse.com: Staking Its Future on Users' Reputations

"The wire services and newspapers all have online business journals, but there's still a big gap in the market for information," said Stockgroup CEO Marcus New. "If you look at the top 2,000 stocks in the U.S., you'll see retail investors don't have access to that content. So, our community is all about users going there, and it's created by people like you and I."


eMarketer Whitepaper: Optimizing the E-Commerce Experience
From the Web to the Contact Center, are you prepared to proactively engage and keep your savvy customers? Read how e-commerce leaders are optimizing their sites with ratings, reviews, live help, Web analytics, mobile and more.

When in doubt about buying a stock, ask a friend -- or rather, a million friends, Marcus New says. New, 38, has launched -- relaunched, actually -- Stockhouse.com, a community of investment experts who provide input on stocks that are hot, lukewarm or downright pestilent.

Stockhouse.com, a product of Stockgroup Information Systems, has been around 10 years. However, New, who founded Stockgroup Information Systems in 1995, has reformulated Stockhouse.com to conform with his vision of a wellspring of investment expertise.

Stockgroup purchased Stockhouse.com in 2002. New considers the site a marriage of eBay (Nasdaq: EBAY) and iGoogle. "This is a tool for a retail Increase Customer Sales with Email Marketing -- Free Trial from VerticalResponse investor who is not a professional like a broker or buyer," he told the E-Commerce Times. "This is for every guy that owns stock -- that has a 401k."

The site averaged 800,000 unique visitors per month during its testing phase, and that is likely to increase to more than 1 million when it moves to its final market-ready format in the spring, said New.

Developing a Reputation

It will provide a unique forum for active market participants to provide qualified investment analysis, he noted. "When you look at retail investors, very few make their own decisions anymore. We create content for retail investors. We also have brokerage firms and media companies that like what we do."

A number of large companies have licensing agreements with Stockhouse.com: Facebook, iGoogle, Raymond James, Reuters and CanWest are among Stockgroup's corporate partners.

There are a number of investor communities already up and running, including The Motley Fool and TheStreet.com; however, Stockhouse.com has taken the idea of community in a new direction, New said, with its investor reputation system. The idea took two years to implement, and much of that time went toward developing the reputation-filtering system.

That feature is crucial. "With some sites, you don't know what information is good and what is spam," noted New, whose company has 85 employees. "Now, investors can share what they know and rate content for quality."

Citizen Journalism

Citizen journalism is the foundation of the plan, he added. "The wire services and newspapers all have online business journals, but there's still a big gap in the market for information. If you look at the top 2,000 stocks in the U.S., you'll see retail investors don't have access to that content. So, our community is all about users going there, and it's created by people like you and I."

Even the largest business organizations have the manpower to cover perhaps just 60 or 70 of the top stocks; however, the Stockhouse community can provide much wider coverage, New commented.

"Obviously, the cost structure for creating it is very, very low; the problem with user-generated content is quality. You get a bunch of spam and a lot of really good stuff all mixed in a big pot," he added.

Filtering out useless information became the challenge, New said. "We said if we could solve the quality problem, we could create the biggest stock information site in history."

All information entered is rated for quality. "We created the first reputation system on the stock market for investors that was very similar to eBay," he added. "If you go there, the buyers and sellers are all rated by experiences. The people with the lowest quality will either disappear or improve their quality."

A Catchy Concept

The idea is a good one, although it will take some time to see how well this particular system works, said Ron Shuttleworth, a technology analyst with Jennings Capital.

"The impact could be substantial," he told the E-Commerce Times, adding that it helps that Stockhouse.com already had a community on which to build.

"Unlike other sorts of social communities that are formed from scratch, these guys have had this community for quite awhile," Shuttleworth noted.

However, that's also a risk. "When you introduce change to a community, there are always bumps in the road. Some people don't like change," he remarked.

Nevertheless, the concept of building reputation-based communities is gaining steam. "The whole sector is probably heading toward improving the overall value of the content," Shuttleworth concluded.


Print Version E-Mail Article Reprints More by Jim Offner


Related News Alerts

EBay Activate Alert | Search Archives

More by Jim Offner

Enterprise Sponsors and the Open Source Community: An Uneasy Symbiosis?
February 13, 2009
The open source community is not quite as free-wheeling as it was a decade ago. Now, industry titans like IBM and even one-time nemesis Microsoft are part of the ecosystem, blurring the lines between open and proprietary models.
Standing Out in the App Store Crowd
February 10, 2009
iPhone users are crazy about all the slick new apps they can uncover at the App Store, but the size of the catalog means that most developers -- and their precious creations -- are languishing in the cobwebby corners. How does the creator of the coolest app ever get the word out to the legions of iPhone and iPod touch users who might want to part with a few bucks to own it?
Alternative-Alternative Energies: What's Next?
January 28, 2009
Alternative energies such as biofuels and solar and wind power aren't very alternative anymore. Now, there are "alternative-alternative" or "operational" technologies to take their places on the fringe: geothermal, tidal and passive nuclear energies, for example.
Don't miss a story -- sign up for our FREE e-mail newsletters and view the latest headlines at a glance.
Tech News Flash [ View Sample ]
E-Commerce Minute [ View Sample ]
ECT News Network Weekly Newsletter [ View Sample ]
Shortcuts
ECT News Network Information
Reader Services
Corporate
ECT News Network