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Thoughts on Blackberry Fail
If a company has 1000 or 10,000 sales people in the field, those folks need fast access to data to prospect and manage. Integrate this into Salesforce.com or a like CRM for a premium offering, and given the social aspect of it, it's a winner. The closest I've seen is http://www.salesfuel.com/ and it has no free version, and buys its data (I believe) from a limited number of sources.
Buying good data is expensive. For us small business owners out here, this is a much needed tool, and gives me dashboard flexibility Yahoo Finance and OneSource do not.
A note to users: As for record accuracy, ALL research databases are only as good as the information that is confirmed by principals in the company. You can't modify data based upon anything other than a company authorized principal confirming the modification. All databases - Hoovers, OneSource, D&B, etc. will have inaccuracies even in their premium pay subscriptions - it's the nature of the beast.
We're glad to hear you're enjoying the site. Please continue to send us your feedback either here or on Tracked.com.
Your insight into record accuracy is dead on. We spend many cycles on creating new ways to curate data both algorithmically and manually. Although we're striving for near-perfect accuracy, we understand that sometimes incorrectly reported data will hit the site. That is the nature of the beast, but it's one of the many reasons this project is so intellectually stimulating.
My blog post about you: http://bit.ly/14C9Bx
Congratulation to all the member of Traked.com
After you poke around, feel free to shoot us your thoughts, comments and/or suggestions either here or on the Tracked.com feedback form.
Enjoy!
Good question. We are completely source agnostic and platform agnostic. We crawl thousands of news sources, press releases, blogs and other sites to find information about the people and companies in our database.
We're always taking new submissions for blogs/news sources via the feedback/contact us form on Tracked.com, so feel free to send us your blog name, URL and RSS feed.
"An internal server error occurred. Please try again later."
But seriously, it is not great for a brand new service to struggle under the load
I think it is back to normal
If you want to submit your company to Tracked.com now please contact us via the feedback form, giving us your company name, description, industry, executives & titles, full HQ address, website, and any other information you think is important.
Soon we'll have a template that users can autonomously fill out to add companies to our growing taxonomy.
Kevin - great analogy!
In regards to the layout, please send us your feedback if any thoughts or suggestions come to mind. We deal with a lot of data and functionality so UI is one of our favorite challenges :)
We're glad to hear you enjoy the site.
If I were a power user- how do I make the top 5 things I need to do accessible in 5 seconds or less. (that's all you have, usually you have even less than that)
I would suggest talking to the hardest of the hard core traders/investment bankers/people who desperately need something like this, and monitor their usage with a camera. One of the things I suspect is that my original Landing page has way too much going on, and the important stuff is not highlighted. All the news stories are the exact same size- and which ones relate to what I am interested in? Why is the only chart on the page tiny, and why does it feel like it is missing information? Can I get charts early on that relate to me? Where are my lists? Why are they hidden away? How quickly can I add/subtract from my lists right now?
Name your character who is most likely to use this, then name what he is going to do with it, then name his top 5 priorities. Now design around those priorities. Then do the secondary, then the tertiary.
Hope this helps.
I happen to like Yahoo! Finance, particularly the portfolio feature. I go right there and skip the other stuff.
Also, I could see huge amounts of syngery with Covestor (I never thought I thought I would say that word). Could someone plug in Covestor's trading module into Tracked so that someone can execute based on what s/he finds? Two pieces of the same puzzle here working very nicely, if someone can figure out how to make then fit....
(This is largely due to the fact that I have given up on items like Google reader and rely on aggregators like Techmeme..which are good for short terms looks sees, but really can't help you track anything long term. So Now I have no idea what I should look for...*sigh*)
What is their target market? If it's the hardcore investors / analysts, my experience at a bulge bracket bank leads me to believe that tracked would have a difficult time grabbing attention away from Bloomberg, Institutional Equity Research, and GOOG Finance.
The thought of mentioning twitter as a source is akin to using wikipedia as a reference for a term paper.
It's not just what people are saying as when and how many people are saying it- I made a similar point about twitter to a high frequency trader at a career fair and made him more than slightly uncomfortable about the firms' trading practices and how I was getting my information- clearly something we all know is that information is the end all be all, and getting the freshest source is extremely difficult.
That's why I think Covestor and/or something similar needs to be built in, especially at the premium levels. Trading platforms today are horrible. Someone would be all over this if they could have a premium walled or partially walled garden with the ability to trade, especially at the bulge bracket level. Data gathering and sorting is a waste of time-which is why if the UI can be improved upon, they'll have struck while the iron is hot.
The target is the every day business person. Anyone who reads the WSJ, uses LinkedIn, Yahoo Finance.
Looking forward to their information stream filtering, thanks for pointing it to us Fred.
That being said, I think for a site like Tracked to really thrive they need to bring something to the table that Yahoo Finance / Google Finance does not have while also offering most of the same features.
The financial information is often pretty limited when compared to Google or Yahoo and there's no stock screener. I think that these would be pretty key, I'd rather see these types of metrics than see overlapping board relationships.
Twitter and Facebook integration are going to speed up adoption I'm sure... what about Stocktwits or Covestor? Any plans there?
Enjoy!
Looking at my own firm, the info is all over the place. Wish we'd made 58bn USD in interest income last year, or any year!! I'd have retired...
But even basic things, like the sign saying we haven't filed with the SEC in 6 months - our last filings were August... Or the names of current execs (hey in banking it changes fast at the moment, but)
Nice idea, but garbage in garbage out!
Stocktwits is good at getting a lead on companies to look into. If I see a guy talking about the ship leasing industry, an analyst who I think is good, I can send him a tweet asking for what else is worth looking at.
But for the actual sharing and discussing research, twitter's pretty limited.
"Yahoo!/Google are ticker driven."
I think an important consequence of this "ticker driven" is that it makes these services (close to) real-time services.
"LinkedIn and CrunchBase are company and people centric services."
I do think that both LinkedIn and Crunchbase are still far from being real services, both being human edited with almost no real-time aspect. And I'd speculate that the value would be in having these transformed in real (close to) real time services.
Imagine Crunchbase being able to present you with real time data about the company: latest news, latest press coverage. Add to that news related to the market/product/resources and competitors. Combine that with ticker driven data and Tracked.com social aspects and you'd probably have a good tool to operate in the financial market.
As long as any of these aspects is separated or available only to a limited number of people, understanding or acting on the financial market will continue to involve a lot of guessing.
http://www.form4oracle.com/company/google-inc-g...
agreed. but i think the following is also true:
The opportunity is simply to redefine what a [INSERT NICHE] information service should be on the open internet.
what i mean is that i think we will see a lot of businesses like tracked, all built around the notion of filtering and remixing the web for a given niche, and using this as the foundation to create a niche community. i love the strategy in many ways and employ it myself. however i think all of us working on such ventures would benefit from identifying the standards that enable you to build this type of web service. standardizing how data is transferred from app to app (i.e. RSS, microformats, standardization of APIs), and the standardization of social networking features these types of services utilize would help us build these types of niche communities at a lower cost. i suppose it could be argued that these web services can't be standardized like that, but i think the economic advantages of standardization will prove to be too good to ignore.
but, i can see how tracked could make a lot of money, and of course this fits into standard USV logic, which is where it's at. so it's all good.
Played around with Tracked.com and I totally agree that its an awesome product. I felt the same about ZoomInfo when I first saw it but I think it didn't evolve to fulfill its real potential. Having said that, I really believe that the success of such data services lie in how their data can be leveraged by other applications via an API. I was surprised to see no information of API on the tracked.com website. I hope it is coming soon because developers would truly be able to make the most use of the Tracked.com data by pulling and putting it in context for users across a wide range of applications. ZoomInfo, Hoovers, LinkedIn all are really limiting their potential by not opening up their data and I hope Tracked.com doesn't do the same.
As far as Tracked.com, I'm not sure what to make of it. The site's very well-executed for such an early stage and kind of feels like Hoover's or Google Finance with a better news feed and better info on people. What's the primary use case? Is it supposed to essentially replace my Google Alerts? That's what I get from the name, anyway.
I doubt if that makes sense, but seeing services like this, that as you say are "company and people driven", makes me think that all the social thing trend makes sense in the long term and that we have to experiment...
screen or personalizing the data you want to see
if it is the latter, then that is exactly what Tracked.com is working on
delivering to the market
(1) Building a massive database of Private and Public Company Data --- we already have much much more than Google Finance and are on par with Yahoo in many areas. Here's a prime example of data we have but they do not --- http://www.tracked.com/company/goldman_sachs/in...
We already have more than 5 million pages already!
(2) We've built a communications platform called Messages --- we support groups (public or private) and a host of other types of filters. We will soon give people a way to communicate business information across the site and all over the web. We think this will be useful.
(3) A connections layer --- think Linkedin but again with more controls/pirvacy if that's what you require.
We think the big idea is to bring all of these concepts together into one site and it isn't easy but we're trying hard. Let me say one thing about our Data. We are only as good as the original data source is. We're here to tell you that a lot, too much, public and privately-available data is *dirty*, which means that it needs to be fixed. We are doing a lot of the cleaning but will eventually ask the citizens of the web to assist. With a little bit of effort from all of you our database can be the most accurate and useful out there.
Please keep the ideas coming. We have a good team and we will be very responsive.
Sincerely,
Michael Yavonditte