Tag Archive for 'hawkee'



Close look at Mallicious, a newly launched deal site

Mallicious LogoMallicious is a new project by Scott Aikin, the entrepreneur I interviewed back in May who also runs a popular portal Hawkee for web developers to exchange code snippets. Mallicious has been in testing for some time but the official launch was just announced earlier this week.

From the first glance, Mallicious looks like a deal aggregator similar to Boddit or Roosster, however a closer look reveals social functionality that put its in the same niche as these other social deal sites.

Back in May Scott already dipped his toes into social shopping niche when he plugged in a price comparison engine into Hawkee. Back then the social part didn’t go far beyond the ability to see what products your friends recommend or wish to buy. Also, I have a feeling that Hawkee developer community wasn’t really a good fit for the shopping portal so this time around Scott seems to be building on the old idea and expands it by launching under entirely new name.

How different is it compared to other deal sites? Does it have a chance to survive? Let’s have a closer look at Mallicious.

Deals and real deals

Mallicious is flooded with products. These come from feeds merchants provide daily. In the sense these are not really deals but rather what marketing department at these companies want to present as such. The true bargain hunter’s goal is to separate real deals from the noise. This is not a simple task and while I don’t deny that some day an algorithm will be implemented that does just that, right now this job is best done by human bargains hunters.

Despite all said, Mallicious provides some interesting tools for picking those gems out of the sheer variety of products. One of them is Price Drops which is ironically the last item in the menu. In theory Price Drops allows you to pick bargains by sorting products by the amount of price drop from regular to sale price. Sounds good however merchants often inflate the original price to make the sale price look better which renders bargain hunting based solely on Price Drop useless.

Mallicious Screenshot

Friends help friends find deals

Here is how it works on Mallicious. Registered users “pick” deals in essence voting for them. Deals that get most “picks” get to the “Top Deals” list. This is very similar to how other social sites work and is only useful if there are actually people behind who routinely pick deals. Unfortunately the common problem is the lack of support for this model to survive. Shopping deal sites have very narrow niche and building a devoted user base takes time and effort.

Modoshi has attempted to tackle this problem differently but ran out of steam too soon. For the most part, with deal sites only those sites that established themselves a while ago (check this list) can claim a large enough community to really make use of social functionality.

Riding the social wave

One thing Scott did right from the start is integration of Facebook API into the overall design. This should in theory widen the user base and get things started faster. It is very hard for me to judge however I tend to believe that social networks are a very unpredictable type. Here is an interesting study which suggests that to become popular on Facebook you really need to hit the jackpot as to providing whatever functionality is hot with the network community.

…of the more than 5,000 Facebook apps available today, only 84 account for nearly 90 percent of all the usage. Of those, only about half boast more than 100,000 active users, and only three have more than one million active users

I did a quick search of deal & coupon related applications on Facebook and the only one that stood out was Coupons by DealsPlus (135 daily active users). None of the rest had more than 20 users, and majority had less than 5.

Will Mallicious be successful

I clearly see a niche for Mallicious. It is so to say an advanced price comparison website with some bargain hunting functionality. One thing I would like to have added is price history charts for individual products or categories of similar products. As far as the social part goes, I really have doubts it picks up and becomes a useful part of Mallicious anytime soon. What do you think?

See also: Official press release (via PrWeb)

Social price comparison shopping at Hawkee

HawkeeScott Aikin is the heart and soul behind Hawkee, a social portal which is steadily making inroads into the busy price comparison niche. Scott frequently comments on ProBargainHunter and I asked him to tell us more about his online business.

You launched Hawkee in 1997. What was it like to run a website back then?

It was just as exciting as it is today. Technology was impressive for the time and online communities were going strong. Everybody wanted a forum and many successful communities relied on them. Despite the lack of comments, feedback forms were very common and supplied a steady stream of compliments and accolades. It was just as exciting to receive feedback as it is to receive comments today. Internet communities were very new, but remain to this day to be just as cohesive and supportive as they were in the past. You didn’t need to think about monetizing your site because CPM ads paid very well under any niche. In retrospect that was the major flaw that burst the bubble, but times have changed and webmasters have learned from their mistakes. What made a successful website 10 years ago still makes one successful today. The only difference is the technical bar has been raised.

Hawkee has always been a place for developers to share code snippets. Why expand to shopping?

This is part of our plan to become a fully featured technology network. Since we are self sustained we need to work on our bottom line to remain profitable. Shopping directly affects the bottom line and has managed to sustain our company without any outside support. We use this freedom to implement social features requested by our community. Their suggestions and ideas are invaluable to us so we strive to give them exactly what they want. Without a sustainable business model we couldn’t do this. In the future we plan to balance out our offerings with more technology based features that won’t necessarily have anything to do with shopping or scripting.

There are a lot of price comparison websites out there. What makes Hawkee special?

Our price comparison is entirely unique. We establish our own relationships with sellers and do all of the maintenance and price matching on our own. We don’t use any API services like Shopping.com so our results are one of a kind. We’ve also been aggregating reviews from major retailers and offer a very comprehensive database of reviews. Our unique review system allows customers to vote on the reviews they find most helpful and leave comments. Customers can browse reviews by category rather than by product. For example a customer can read reviews on “black Mp3 players” or “32in HDTV LCD” TVs without choosing a specific model. We also have a unique tagging system that automatically tags products based on their technical specs. For example a 17in LCD monitor might have the tags “17in lcd black”. This allows for very specific filtering and digging through our product offerings. Besides these key features we also maintain current coupons and deals to ensure our customers are finding the latest discounts.

Hawkee Screenshot

You officially launched the shopping engine at the end of 2006. What has been the feedback so far? Do people like what they see?

The feedback has been very positive. Customers have no problem finding what they’re looking for and we’re seeing a month by month improvement in our search usage. Our merchant partners love the site and have nothing but praise for it. We’ve become very attractive to many major online retailers and will leverage this in the months to come with more exclusive content.

What were some of the technical challenges as to adding the shopping functionality?

The most difficult challenge is organizing all of this data quickly and efficiently. With every new seller we increase the size of our database and the need for more server resources. When traffic is high during the holiday seasons we need to ensure that we can produce results quickly without any lag. Keeping the site snappy has been a focus since the beginning. Another challenge is organizing all of this data well enough that customers can browse, search and find exactly what they’re looking for. The data we receive from our sellers is not very cohesive and it’s up to us to bring it all together in a way that people can understand.

It is people who make social websites work and looking at product comments there doesn’t seem to be a lot of participation. What makes you believe Hawkee will succeed?

We will succeed because we’ve got the relationships and community to make this work. We’ve got partnerships with many major brand names and we’ve got a thriving community that’s growing monthly. As they become more aware of our newer offerings they’ll begin to adopt and utilize them more. And most importantly we’ve got the technical know-how to evolve and build a product that’s truly spectacular.

Do you run the website for living or is it a hobby? If you have another job, what is it?

Hawkee is a full time business. This website is our primary property, but we’ve also got a handful of smaller sites as well as some upcoming projects.

What are you like outside of Hawkee? Please share some fact from your personal life.

I’m a very laid back individual. I enjoy my peace and quiet most of the time, but I love to travel and socialize. You might catch me at events like the Linkshare Summit or Affiliate Summit. I’m a gamer at heart and put a lot of time into my Wii while I’m not working. I enjoy camping and visit the mountains several times a year to get away from my computer. Sometimes I tend to overwork myself, so if you catch me sending emails late at night please remind me to take a breather.

If you were to give just one money saving advice to ProBargainHunter reader, what would it be?

Definitely shop around. Don’t just check just one price comparison site, check them all. Find the lowest price between them and always double check the sellers for fraud reports. Keep an eye on the current promotions and check sites like SlickDeals and FatWallet. Don’t forget your local stores. Sometimes you can avoid high shipping charges by purchasing at a lower price online and picking up your purchase in the store. Keep a close eye on free shipping offers and always check for rebates and special offers. For example you can sometimes get a free notebook case when you buy a new notebook computer. And lastly always compare online and offline prices.

Popular price comparison sites — December 2006

This is December 2006 revision of the Popular Price Comparison web sites list. You can find the last month revision of the list here.

Hawkee enjoyed a nice ride this month (up 34.16%) after it was featured at TechCrunch. It is amazing what difference a single post on a popular blog can make.

The next best performer is TheFind with 29.68% increase. I will attribute this rise to their active advertisement campaign (including that on TechCrunch as well).

Sortprice is the worst performer. The change is not that significant though, only 9.76% down. On average price comparison sites seem to be doing much better than the bargain hunting sites that I reviewed recently.

# Web Site Alexa Rank Page Rank Online Since
1 shopping.yahoo.com 1(*) 9 18-Jan-1995
2 shopping.msn.com 2(*) (n/a) 9 (n/a) 10-Nov-1994
3 froogle.google.com 3(*) 9 11-Sep-2001
4 shopping.aol.com 44(*) (n/a) 0 (n/a) 22-Jun-1995
5 shopper.cnet.com 108(*) (0.92%) 8 05-Jul-1996
6 nextag.com 408 (6.42%) 7 15-Oct-1998
7 shopping.com 422 (2.99%) 8 03-Jul-1997
8 pricegrabber.com 477 (1.65%) 8 10-Mar-1999
9 bizrate.com 493 (5.92%) 8 24-Apr-1996
10 shoplocal.com 702 (n/a) 7 (n/a) 24-Sep-1998
11 dealtime.com 855 (18.34%) 8 07-Oct-1998
12 epinions.com 999 (1.48%) 8 12-Feb-1999
13 shopzilla.com 1004 (2.43%) 8 04-Jul-2002
14 pricerunner.com 3452 (5.55%) 3 19-May-1999
15 smarter.com 3647 (13.08%) 6 28-Apr-1998
16 mysimon.com 4654 (1.08%) 8 15-Apr-1998
17 pricewatch.com 4697 (-6.41%) 7 26-Sep-1995
18 ebates.com 5430 (-3.39%) 6 29-Dec-1998
19 like.com 5976 (20.05%) 3 22-Feb-1995
20 become.com 6099 (8.08%) 6 20-Jan-2004
21 jellyfish.com 11366 (23.9%) 4 26-Jun-2006
22 mpire.com 12894 (8.37%) 5 03-Aug-2000
23 pricescan.com 16612 (-1.8%) 6 03-Sep-1997
24 thefind.com 16938 (29.68%) 0 19-Oct-2006
25 sortprice.com 19925 (-9.76%) 5 15-Jan-2004
26 shopwiki.com 23897 (4.48%) 5 15-Dec-2004
27 pronto.com 26164 (17.21%) 3 01-Jan-2006
28 activeshopper.com 29501 (6.28%) 4 12-Jan-1999
29 streetprices.com 34116 (-9.05%) 6 16-Oct-1997
30 retrevo.com 46760 (18.4%) 4 10-May-2006
31 mytriggers.com 46933 (n/a) 1 (n/a) 09-May-2005
32 hawkee.com 47019(**) (34.16%) 2 02-Jan-1997
33 ugenie.com 56496 (11.46%) 2 02-Nov-2006
34 salescircular.com 66524 (-5.36%) 6 09-Jun-1998
35 bottomdollar.com 67287 (-0.7%) 0 04-Jul-1997
36 pricefight.com 73966 (n/a) 0 (n/a) 17-Nov-2006
37 pepperjam.com 90760 (6.64%) 2 21-Feb-2000

(*) Note: traffic stats for these sites is the aggregate of all traffic to the top domain (e.g. Yahoo.com or Google.com) and thus cannot be used to judge how popular this particular price comparison service is.

(**) Note: the web site is a portal with price comparison engine being one of the offered web services. Alexa rank cannot be used to judge how popular this price comparison engine is.




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