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REALNAMES IS ON A MISSION
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New York, NY May 4, 2000 (ICB TOLL FREE NEWS)
In November 1998, RealNames CEO Keith Teare planned to have Microsoft (MSFT) and Netscape announce on the same day that they would be integrating his company's technology into their Web
browsers. Microsoft Senior VP Brad Chase had already committed when Teare reached an agreement with Mike Homer,
Netscape's executive VP of sales and marketing. The next week, America Online
(AOL) bought Netscape, and the Netscape deal was off.
The Standard reports that eighteen months
later, AOL remains a
holdout. Microsoft, however, is more
committed than ever, and that might be
enough to ensure that RealNames will
change how people navigate the Internet.
RealNames, based in San Carlos, Calif.,
markets a technology for using common
words instead of URLs to navigate the
Web. After a deal in March that gave
Microsoft 20 percent of RealNames, the
software giant will integrate the
company's
keywords more deeply into both its
Internet Explorer browser and MSN
service. With the RealNames address
system built into every PC that ships, the
current domain-name system of URLs could
become invisible to surfers, buried
beneath
a more user-friendly layer of common name
addresses.
Beyond the friendliness, though, is a
controversial ambition. RealNames'
business plan hinges on the convergence
of online and offline advertising; it
focuses
less on everyday language than on
branding. In Teare's vision, common names
will be bought. Last weekend, for
instance,
in movie theaters across the U.S., the
trailer for 15 Minutes, an upcoming movie
from Time Warner (TWX) (whose merger
with AOL is pending) quoted the
RealNames Internet keyword for the
movie's Web site, not a URL.
If the branding of cyberspace raises
hackles among die-hard Web idealists,
consider the implications of a private
company achieving near-monopoly control
of Web navigation. Teare, who filed in
October to take RealNames public, does not
rule out a future in which
a surfer who types "books" will be taken
straight to Amazon.com
(AMZN) .
"Monopolies are not bad things unless they
are abused," he says. A
standard address system, less cumbersome
than the current
"www.whatever.com," would undoubtedly be a
blessing. The question
is, would RealNames own that standard?
When someone types a keyword or phrase
into the browser address
field of Internet Explorer, the request is
routed through a RealNames
server database and then directly to the
URL linked to that keyword.
Although RealNames allocates free keywords
for a few small personal
sites, most keywords will be sold on a
yearly subscription basis at the
low end ($100 per keyword per year) or
licensed to major-brand
customers at several hundred thousand
dollars per keyword.
On top of the keyword fees, RealNames will
get a processing fee for
each visitor delivered via its routers.
The per-visitor fee will range
from 1 cent to 60 cents. Each time
Internet Explorer delivers a page
to a user who types a keyword, both
RealNames and Microsoft will
get a cut.
The upshot: For the first time, Microsoft
is getting direct,
nonadvertising revenue from its
expensively developed browser.
Teare says RealNames' commercial focus is
simple: meeting the needs
of marketers. "We're giving brand managers
a way to spend money
really wisely," he says. The Holy Grail
for brand marketers is
"convergence," in which an offline brand,
established in traditional
broadcast and print media, transfers
online, unmodified. Until now,
that's been nearly impossible, hence the
plethora of awkward URLs in
offline ads.
Arguably, this issue has held back
advertising dollars from the Web. Teare
plans to tap into a reservoir of unspent
ad
money, sharing the revenue with his
partners, including, along with Microsoft,
such search services as AltaVista, Google
and Inktomi (INKT) . "There are no losers"
in this arrangement, he says.
Nevertheless, even Teare agrees that in
an ideal world the Internet keyword
system should be a type of public service,
but not in the Internet economy.
"The Internet is not about to be governed
as a public service anytime soon," he
says.
"Not until there is such a thing as a
world
government, anyway."
Instead, Teare positions his company as a
trusted neutral party, committed "not to
treat Microsoft better than you would
treat Netscape, not to treat the United
States better than you would treat Libya"
(or as general manager of MSN Search
Bill Bliss puts it, a "Switzerland of the
Internet").
To that end, the company has established
an independent "policy advisory board" to
administer the allocation of keywords. The
guiding principle will be "user
expectations," and unlike in the current
domain system, cyber squatting will not be
possible.
But can RealNames remain neutral without
AOL on board? AOL has its own proprietary
keyword system similar to RealNames'
except that it covers only its own
network. RealNames says it has nearly 2
million keywords already
linked to URLs; AOL's universe only
contains 15,000. (That movie
trailer for 15 Minutes also featured an
AOL keyword, in larger type.)
In addition, AOL/Netscape's Navigator
browser has an address-line
keyword system called "smart browsing."
The major difference with
RealNames is that the Netscape system is
free. No one can buy a
Navigator keyword.
"It comes down to a difference of money,"
says Darius Paczuski,
director of worldwide search and
navigation for Netscape. "It's very
hard to do the right thing by the user and
make money." While it
sounds ideal user-friendly, yet not for
sale the failure to build in
direct revenue is simply naive as far as
Teare is concerned, proof
that Netscape's system would never
challenge RealNames'. It's too
expensive, he says, to maintain a service
that's both comprehensive
and free.
Despite Microsoft's 20 percent stake in
his company, Teare declares
his independence from the Redmond, Wash.,
behemoth and says he
expects AOL to sign a deal with RealNames
eventually. "I do feel
there is an egotistical 'not invented
here' reason behind Netscape not
currently partnering with us, rather than
a rational business reason,"
he says.
If Teare is right, cyberspace increasingly
will become a branded
universe. Even though RealNames does not
yet sell generic keywords
such as "books" or "music," that's next on
Teare's agenda. "We're
committed to getting there eventually," he
says. "We just think it's
good citizenship not to do it yet."
He points out that no one objects to the
ownership of the number
1-800-Flowers. So why should the Internet
keyword "flowers" be any
different? If Amazon.com were to fill the
airwaves with ads that
concluded with "Internet keyword: books,"
that could justify giving
Amazon the word under the "user
expectation" criterion.
Shep Bostin, COO of Gaithersburg,
Md.-based Netword, which has a
technology that rivals RealNames',
derisively suggests that with
generic keywords for Internet Explorer,
Microsoft might need to
change its slogan to "Where do we want to
tell you to go today?"
To make the system useful to consumers,
RealNames seeds its
database with well-known brand names, many
of which aren't paid for
yet. For example, the most-used keyword in
the database:
Yahoo.com. Millions of users get to Yahoo
through RealNames servers
even though Yahoo doesn't pay a cent to
RealNames. What can
Teare, heading a company with about 260
employees and $1 million in
revenue for the last six months of 1999,
do about that? "We try really
hard not to have to," he says, "but
ultimately you do get to a point
where we switch the free ones off."
Welcome to the future of e-marketing. The
losers in this future are
not yet clear, but Teare is playing to
win.
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