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Rory Cellan-Jones

Tech heaven or hell?

  • Rory Cellan-Jones
  • 21 Jan 08, 14:18 GMT

In my very first post on this blog, way back on New Year’s Eve 2007, I wondered whether we were seeing another bubble in technology stocks and, if so, whether it might burst in 2008. Now I’m hearing two things at once – a lot of excited noise about a whole rash of start-ups, coupled with the sound of air escaping from that bubble.

So into my e-mail this morning drops a note about a company called , offering customers the chance to start their own online shops - β€œan interesting concept that's already taking off in France and the US, and is now coming to the UK".

It boasts backing from the venture capital firm that put money into Skype. So one reason to be cheerful - new web ventures are forming and finding VC backing.

Mark Zuckerberg with one of his Crunchies internet awardsAnother sign of the continuing buzz around web 2.0 businesses comes in the results of the Crunchies – the awards for start-ups sponsored by the leading technology blogs and .

The predictable overall winner was Facebook - but the awards give a useful feel for what is exciting technology investors right now.

So - the latest in a whole raft of online video sharing sites, and another to promise β€œpremium content” - is named best video start-up. - whose environmentally friendly sports car is released later this year - is the best clean tech start-up.

- the mobile social network that many of us already find annoying rather than addictive - gets the best mobile start-up award. And the best international start-up is - a personal web portal reinventing what so many of the big internet players tried and failed to achieve a decade ago and doing it much better.

But just as the blushing winners step forward and accept their Crunchies, the world’s stock markets are going into meltdown again.

The darker mood that infected many financial stocks in the second half of 2007 left technology shares virtually untouched - but in 2008 they have succumbed to the general gloom.

In late December, Google was somewhere around $700, and Apple was breaking through the $200 mark. Three weeks on, Google is back to $600, Apple to $160. And one of Britain’s top technology stocks ARM, maker of the chips that go into smart mobiles like the iPhone, has fallen more than 30% in two months, despite the absence of any bad news.

But why does this matter to the start-ups? Because the venture capitalists who back them have always got an eye on the exit, recouping their investment by selling up to stock market investors. Back in 1999, every bright young dot com was rushing to float, with the IPO exit door providing healthy piles of cash for them and their backers. But in 2000, that door closed, and very soon the supply of venture capital dried up.

Now the market has turned, it will get a lot harder to make that journey to IPO heaven. Mark Zuckerberg of Facebook - and his backers at Microsoft - may never see that $15 billion valuation put on the infant business last autumn turned into hard cash. And the inventors of the next Hulu or Netvibes may find that 2008 is not the greatest year to do that elevator pitch for a venture capitalist.

Comments

I don't see sites like zlio.com (not zilo) making much of an impact. They say leading affiliates are only making Β£1500 per month and if you want to make more than a tiny income it is just as easy to set up a basic CMS.

Also promoting a white label store is hugely difficult and will swallow up far more of your time than the extra cost of a bespoke affiliate site.

Rory: I wrote an article back in October on my site which related heavily to this same subject to some degree (mostly in relation to the Web Design Industry), I called it 'Dot Com Crash 2.0'...so this topic seems strangely familiar.

It really doesn't surprise me that the venture capital cash has started to dry-up - the economic climate as it is, plus the massive saturation of Web 2.0 Start-ups on the Web, can only point in one direction! My article went on to suggest this was all the more reason for the Web Design Industry to become more united and professional at large (but that's going off-topic from this article really!)

From an internet entrepreneur's point of view, I have assessed the possibilities of another dot com burst. While it is entirely possible, the fact that we now rely on the internet more than ever before makes this "worst case scenario" sound like someone saying "Microsoft will go bankrupt by the end of 2008".

The strength of the web and the billions of revenue generated online has secured its future for a long time to come.

In 2000 people were sceptical of the security of online transactions and people continued to shop offline. Now the tables have turned and the chosen shopping mall for many consumers begins with a "www."

Just my two cents,

Khalid.

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