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Archive for the ‘Media’ Category

May
21

Number1

What happens when you challenge travel experts to see who really has traveled the most miles? The answer: The Ultimate Jetsetter - Blogger’s Edition!

Two weeks ago VibeAgent decided to challenge some of the most respected travel experts in the Blogosphere to log their trips on our recently launched Facebook app - Jetsetter. With nearly 20 bloggers vying for bragging rights as the Ultimate Jetsetter, the contest proved to be a telling and grueling competition!

So which blogger has truly traveled the most in the past year?

The winner is…

Tim Hughes from The BOOT (Business of Online Travel)! At a whopping 144,142 miles traveled, Tim easily surpassed his fellow bloggers. With all that traveling across the world, it’s admirable that Tim still finds time for his blog (though, we hope that he hasn’t suffered from too much jet lag!).

How did the other bloggers fare? Listed below are the rankings of the top ten Jetsetters of all the bloggers that participated in the competition.

1. Tim Hughes - The BOOT (144,142 miles)
2. Jens Thraenhart - Tourism Internet Marketing (113,828 miles)
3. Ben Mutzabaugh - USA Today’s “Today in the Sky” (56,202 miles)
4. Juliana Shallcross - Hotel Chatter (49,506 miles)
5. David Molyneaux - Travel Maven (34,250 miles)
6. Gil Zeimer - Vagablond (19,370 miles)
7. Kevin May- Travolution (18,903 miles)
8. Patti Mangan- TangoDiva (17,649 miles)
9. Chris Clarke - Vacant Ready (15,520 miles)
10. Guillaume Thevenot - Hotel Blogs 2.0 (15,050 miles)

The true question is whether or not miles traveled is any indication of blogger’s expertise in travel. You be the judge. Until then, keep Jetsetting!

Mar
28
at 16:06 by Adam Healey

We love media, yay! VibeAgent was featured today as one of seven web sites on Forbes.com that helps bring personalization to the travel process.

The inclusion featured VibeAgent as the site that helps travelers find the best hotel for their needs. For you newbies, VibeAgent provides honest hotel recommendations and compares rates from more than 30 sites to make sure you get the best possible deal when booking your hotel.

Other sites featured were TripAdvisor, Kayak, Farecast, TripIt, IGoUGo, and Inside Trip. We’re happy to be in such good company!

Feb
21

Power to the traveler!

Rob Lovitt of MSNBC wrote an article earlier this week discussing the increasing relevance of price comparison (i.e., meta-search) sites empowering travelers to filter and customize their search results - an advantage over traditional online travel agencies.

Enter VibeAgent. Not only can you can tag your search (e.g., romantic or boutique hotel), you can also use our maps to narrow your hotel search to specific city blocks.

We’re excited to be continually recognized for our efforts to help travelers make the best hotel choices! The innovation hasn’t stopped. There’s more to come!

Feb
5
at 11:06 by Adam Healey

And the press just keeps on coming!

This Sunday’s Washington Post declared VibeAgent one of five up-and-coming travel sites you should know about - we appreciate the shout out WashPo!

The Washington Post also featured VibeAgent in their travel blog last September as a hip new hotel review site that was taking TripAdvisor to the next level - we dig it!

This week PhoCusWright, the market leader in travel industry research, launched a new feature called Innovation Snapshot, where they seek to present “fresh new companies, products, and ideas.” We’re excited that PhoCusWright chose to feature VibeAgent as the subject of their first feature.

“In short, VibeAgent is a metasearch tool for consumers to research and book hotels online. While there are certainly enough Web sites that facilitate direct and intermediated hotel reservations, this Web site pushes the envelope by integrating filters, user reviews and a robust social networking component that simplifies and personalizes the entire hotel booking process. In doing so, VibeAgent has created an engaging experience for reserving hotel rooms by encouraging travelers to envision the experience they seek – before the trip is ever taken…While its footprint is still fresh, VibeAgent is helping to mitigate the risk associated with hotel selections by leveraging the affinity and trust of social networks and creating an experience around hotel booking. Now, the hotel decision is more about its true fit for the guest and less about the amenities and price of a hotel/room. The pulse of this small travel firm is palpable and creating a vibe of change in online hotel marketing.”

Thanks PhoCusWright, we couldn’t have said it better ourselves!

Subscribers to PhoCusWright research can log in and access the full report online.

Sep
25

VibeAgent has been picking up steam as we get closer to the site’s launch. I’d like to highlight some of the mainstream media coverage we’re receiving and thank those that are taking notice of what we’re up to!

Jeri Clausing, over at Travel Weekly, nailed it in this week’s cover story on user-generated content:

    A new site launching next month, VibeAgent, will take the TripAdvisor concept to another level by marrying hotel reviews, social networks, personal preferences and competitive pricing…the site uses a user’s personal profile and reviews by people in the user’s personal network to find the hotel that best suits him or her. It also lets users specify during a search if they are looking for something specific, such as a romantic hotel with a luxurious spa. It then uses an algorithm to find the right personal option and does a meta-search of various online booking sites to find the cheapest prices for hotels.

Last week, Gary Lee of The Washington Post called VibeAgent a “hip, new travel site,” stating on the site’s travel blog:

    Vibeagent.com, a new travel site launched not long ago by a couple of young travel entrepreneurs, is positioning itself to be the first trip-planning stop for savvy travelers…It’s a kind of fresher, more youthful version of the increasinging popular Tripadvisor.com.

Rob Lovitt at MSNBC featured VibeAgent as an exciting new travel site, saying:

    Why it’s cool: When it’s time to find a hotel, the site will cross-reference your preferences with its existing database. Factoring in other users’ reviews and any social-network group you’ve created, it will assign each result a “vibe index” based on your parameters and others’ recommendations. “The more information you put in,” says co-founder and CEO Adam Healey, “the better the recommendations will be.”

    Once you’ve selected a hotel, the site then switches into meta-search mode, scouring the Web for the best price through various OTAs and hotel-chain reservation systems. The idea, says Healey, is to provide recommendations you can trust at the best possible prices all on one site.

And Sean Dodson over at The Guardian in the UK named VibeAgent “Best of the Net”, pointing out our advantages over TripAdvisor.

It’s an uphill battle taking on the market leader, but we’re looking forward to the challenge - I’ll be sure to keep you posted as VibeAgent’s star continues to rise!

Jul
11

It’s really great to have the support of the industry pros that write some of the leading travel blogs online. I’d like to give a few shout outs to these folks now, and share with you some of the positive reviews we’ve been getting from the blogosphere over the last few weeks:

Guillaume Thevenot, author of Hotel Blogs 2.0, gave us a wonderful and detailed review, citing the simplicity and ease of use of our site. Thanks Guillaume for this great introduction to your readers!

Marketing consultant and author Bill Geist declared on his blog, ZeitGeist, “If TripAdvisor is an example of Web 2.0, VibeAgent is Web 2.1….very, very smart.”

Business 2.0 travel blogger Lindsay Blakely on Terminal Enthusiam likes our innovating experiential search tool and invited her readers to try out our private beta site to see for themselves.

Prolific hotel blogger Guido, over at the Happy Hotelier, theorized that VibeAgent could be the “ultimate web 2.0 hotel site” - we certainly think so!

Leading French travel 2.0 writer Claude Benard on his blog Les Explorers called us the “new Tripadvisor!”

If you haven’t already signed up for an invitation to VibeAgent, let me encourage you to do so now. We’re moving towards inviting some more members into our private beta community. Feedback so far has been great, keep it coming, and do let us know what you think. We’re listening!

May
16
at 17:31 by Adam Healey

Twitter is like crack for people with ADD.
Which, it turns out, includes like OMG everybody younger than me, several big name bloggers and at least one presidential candidate.

Twitter is like junk food for small, self-absorbed brains.
Because it’s all about telling a group of people what you’re doing right now, all the time…not conversing, mind you; more like shouting at a party to no one in particular about whatever random nonsense that’s popped into your head at that moment.

Twitter is…the perfect storm.
For those of you Luddites that haven’t yet heard of the twitter phenomenon, and it does seem to be evolving into a phenomenon, let me give you a quick update.

Twitter is a new web service founded by Evan Williams and Biz Stone. The two previously collaborated at Pyra Labs, the company behind the blogging platform Blogger, that was acquired by Google in February 2003 (pre-IPO) for an undisclosed sum.

Interestingly, last October Evan was somehow able to buy out venture capitalists Charles River and all the other initial investors into Odeo, which at the time was the company that built and owned the applications odeo and twitter. The new company he formed to do this buy-out, Obvious Corp, in which Biz Stone and other former Odeo employees are also shareholders, then sold the odeo application to Sonic Mountain for about a million bucks last week, allowing them to focus their full resources on the burgeoning twitter phenomenon.

How does twitter work? Well, you add your friends on the site, and then start posting what you’re doing via the web, your IM client, or text message from your cell phone. That message then gets distributed to all your friends and followers through their chosen channel. That’s it. That’s twitter.

So like, you can totally be in touch with all your peeps 24/7, sharing such intimate moments as, “OMG brushing my teeth!” “LOL driving to work!” and “ROFL taking out trash!” Honestly, what could be better than that!

But remember, you’re not only sharing these intimate moments with others…they’re sharing them with you! So you also get notified when anyone in your network is “OMG brushing my teeth!” “LOL driving to work!” and “ROFL taking out trash!” Brilliant.

You can probably tell by now that I don’t get it. But it’s not just me, it’s everyone I know. We don’t get it. We don’t want it. But what really makes this painful for me is….it makes me feel old.

This twitter thing has become a dividing line; generational, to a great extent, but more so, attitudinal and behavioral. How do we view technology? What is our need for connectedness? What is our desire for privacy? How do we seek out human contact? What is the length of our attention span?

For me, the growing twitterati symbolizes the dramatic shift taking place in the way people interact with and consume information in all its forms. The question becomes, what are the long-term implications of our collectively decreasing attention spans and collectively increasing propensity to multi-task?

Danny Hillis is the prescient founder of the Long Now Foundation, an organization established in 1996 to encourage people to think long-term.

    The Long Now Foundation hopes to provide counterpoint to today’s “faster/cheaper” mind set and promote “slower/better” thinking. We hope to creatively foster responsibility in the framework of the next 10,000 years.

One of the foundation’s projects is to build a clock, that “ticks once a year, bongs once a century, with a cuckoo that comes out every millennium.” I’m pretty sure Danny Hillis isn’t on twitter.

New fMRI studies at Toronto’s Rotman Research Institute suggest that as we get older, we have more trouble tuning out background thoughts when turning to a new task. Great. So I am getting old.

Perhaps, deep down somewhere, I secretly wish I could get excited about this twitter thing, and start shooting off messages left and right about each revelation that passes across my synapses. But then again, maybe I’ll just go read a book. For better or worse, this bird don’t tweet.

Mar
26
at 22:38 by Adam Healey

Four tech guys living in an apartment in downtown San Francisco have just launched Justin.tv, a site where you can watch the world through the lens of a camera strapped onto the helmet of one Justin Kan. Live. Twenty-four hours a day. Even when he’s taking a leak. Apparently until either you, or Justin, cease to exist.

Oh, and you can also chat about it in real time with others who are doing the same thing, or watch highlights of his life. Or you could call Justin directly. Go ahead! His number, posted on the site, is 415-948-3219.

Justin was formerly the founder of Kiko, a now defunct online calendaring company that he started two years ago and was funded by Paul Graham’s early stage fund, Y Combinator. They ended up selling the assets of the company for $258,000 on ebay, and now Paul’s back as the financier behind Justin.tv.

So, what’s it like watching Justin’s life? Well, he mostly goes around meeting with Silicon Valley entrepreneurs and other twenty-somethings hanging out in SF. A few days ago the cops showed up at his apartment in response to a prank caller claiming there was some bad sh*t going down. Oh, and there was the night when all his buddies tried to push some site to the top of digg. Not exactly HBO.

But the interesting thing here is that the guys behind Justin.tv are apparently using the web site to test out their technology and garner some publicity so that in the future, when they launch their *real* business, we’ll all be able to stream our lives to the world 24/7 wherever we may be. Think about how awesome that will be. Um… yeah.

Are these guys brilliant marketers? According to Alexa, Justin.tv has skyrocketed after only being live for seven days to a traffic rank of 3,086. Not bad, really. And the media is flocking…who wouldn’t want to write a story about these guys…inevitably it makes us all ask the question, “(Why) Would people want to watch my life 24 hours a day?”

Or is Justin.tv going to end like the story of the man who had his name legally changed to dotcomguy, and locked himself in his house in January 2000 for a year with a few dozen web cams and a laptop with an Internet connection, so all the world could watch him…um…shop online.

Dotcomguy also generated massive publicity, and was reportedly getting about 20 million page views a day on his site the first month he went live. But by the time he finally emerged from his house a year later and rode off on his moped, the sponsors funding his adventure had reneged on their commitments and dotcomguy had become a joke within the tech community.

Mar
26
at 12:24 by Adam Healey

The most popular video in the blogosphere right now is this one by Michael Wesch (see http://www.ksu.edu/sasw/anthro…), Assistant Professor of Cultural Anthropology at Kansas State University.

It’s pretty awesome - worth spending the next five minutes of your life watching, no matter who you are.

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