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Maybe_Women_Should_Run_the_Web
| Maybe Women Should Run the Web!
We all know that the idea of business on the web came on with a
roar and now lies whimpering and licking its wounds in the
safety of the shadows. Who was the enemy? Who or what was it
that clawed and scraped the potential of online business so
brutally that early enthusiasts are now seen as foolish, wild-
eyed dreamers? What brought down an idea that was bigger and
more powerful than a raging beast at full roar?
The Greed Monster. Greed and fear always do this to us.
Greed drives the spammers that clog the in-boxes of even the
most casual email user. They promise instant gratification of
our every desire -- financial or erotic. Just send your money.
Greed drove the venture capitalists that dumped huge amounts of
cash into poorly conceived ideas for internet businesses. Early
VC losses can be directly tied to the greed factor in investing.
"Gimme your money and fast!"
Greed drives the multi-level marketing programs that quickly
sprouted wings online as more promises of instant wealth were
strewn across the web. "Just send your money, hurry while there
is still time to get in on the ground floor!"
Greed drove the corporate behemoths to launch "web initiatives"
so they might beat their competition online. "Hurry before our
competition kills us and drains our profits!" But to what end?
So now that we know the enemy. What do we do to vanquish him? I
use the masculine here because it evokes the warrior image.
Maybe the failure is in applying traditional male attributes to
the web. Power, fighting, hunting and killing don't work on the
web. What does work?
Co-operation, community building, helpfulness and sharing. All
attributes that are applied most often to women and are seen as
feminine qualities.
We may be better off seeing this medium as a feminine one. When
looking for valid business models online, just take a look at
what works and who is making it work.
Membership models proliferate online where sites seek our
opinions and want us to "join in." Most successful web sites
encourage visitor participation and feedback in discussion
forums.
Ebay asks for ratings of active sellers from the buyers of their
products. The highest ratings earn more business. Amazon
publishes reader reviews of purchased books and encourages you
to "Be the first to review this book!" People read those reviews
and appreciate them.
Personalization and community building are incorporated into all
of the major portals. Discussion forums are available at every
one of the major online publishers. The web encourages
communication and sharing of knowledge - not hoarding, hiding
and greedily seeking to outsmart the consumer.
America Online pioneered in community building and was rewarded
with rapid growth and customer loyalty. I believe they have lost
their way now as greed leads them to keep a fence around their
technology, refusing to allow their AIM instant messaging system
to be accessed by non-members.
Greed, exclusion, proprietary systems and monopolistic
megacorporations are giving way to community, inclusion, open
source code and peer-to-peer sharing and swapping of
information. As long as old ideas are applied to the web it will
go nowhere. Napster was killed by the monster.
Online content providers are talking "Digital Rights Management"
and seeking ways to "monetize content", which simply means
monopolizing information. Scarcity doesn't work online.
Community building, cooperation and being helpful, open, giving
and sharing does work.
Businesses that work those traditionally feminine ideas into
their online vision will be the winners on the web.
About the author:
Mike Banks Valentine WebSite101 "Reading List" Weekly
Netrepreneur Tip Sheet Weekly Ezine emphasizing small business
on the Internet Subscribe by e-
mailto:WebSite101-subscribe@listbot.com e-tutorial online at:
http://website101.com/shortcourse.html By week's end you're
ready expand your business to the web!
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