by Jason Wilk on March 6, 2009

- eBay caused quite a stir in the affiliate community when it ended it’s relationship with Commission Junction in March of 2008. On April 1st 2008, eBay began managing its own affiliates with the eBay Partner Network. As of the launch, they had over 100,000 members globally and continued to grow….until now. While facing a struggling economy, eBay has sealed the door shut to new applicants wanting to get into the eBay Partner Network.
- Managing the program for eBay was expensive. The payouts offered to publishers are very high compared to the industry average, not to mention a lot of the money coming out of the network is paid off to blackhat members.

- Sometime in the last week it seems eBay pulled the plug on allowing new applicants into the network. I received an anonymous tip from a friend in the affiliate space, so I decided to go investigate myself. I applied to their program both directly and through PepperJam (the only remaining partner they have). I applied under two different names and was denied both times, receiving an email that contained the message above. It’s been 10 days now on PepperJam and my account is still pending with eBay’s program (image below). eBay would not comment on the situation, however one of the managers of the program @ PepperJam said that she didn’t know what was going on, and as far as she knew, the program was still accepting applicants.

- So as far as she knows, the program is still on, but as far as I’ve tested, it’s not. What’s the deal eBay, is it true or not?
by Jason Wilk on February 16, 2009

- Didn’t get a chance to head to Barcelona this year for the Mobile World Conference? No problem. We’ll be giving you the happenings. Here is a recap of everything that went on with Microsoft, who laid out their entire plans for the next two years of competing in the mobile arena.
Windows Mobile 6.5: This is latest version of Microsoft’s mobile OS, which is their answer to Apple’s iPhone OS and Google Android. You will begin seeing it appear on new phones starting in the second half of 2009. WinMo 6.5 will have an entirely revamped user experience including touch-screen support, an entirely new homescreen, mobile browser (IE 6.1) and third-party marketplace to host those 17,000 WinMo apps spread around the web.
Microsoft MyPhone: A new standard to mobile web application that can “sync text messages, photos, video, contacts and more to the Web.” This is a direct competitor to Apple MobileMe, which Apple charges $100 a year for. MyPhone will be free considering this will be Microsoft’s central hub for WinMo phones as iTunes is the hub for the iPhone (just more features). Apple should have rolled MobileMe into iTunes.
Windows Marketplace for Mobile: Microsoft describes it as “a rich and integrated marketplace for searching, browsing and purchasing mobile applications from Windows phones or from a PC by simply using a Windows Live ID.” The Marketplace goes live this fall, and will be competing for the attention of third-party mobile developers just as Palm, Apple, Google, Nokia, RIM and others are currently doing. The one big ball Microsoft has in their corner here, is that there are currently 17,000 mobile applications that have been created for WinMo phones. This will just be the first time developers will have a home on deck.
Recite: Microsoft’s attempt at re-inventing the voice recorder. Windows Mobile phones will allow users to record short notes and recall them using voice search.
Skyline: Another new Windows Mobile service and the successor to OutLook. Users can push both work and personal mail, contacts and calendar items to the phone sesamlessly.
Zune Mobile: Let’s face it the Zune isn’t going anywhere, but at the end of the day, it’s a decent music player. It belongs on the phone, making Microsoft phones a big step ahead of Google, Nokia, RIM and the rest of the gang who are using the Amazon music player or worse. It is rumored to have music and video purchasing/sharing/playback services. Keep an eye out for this next year.
Windows Mobile 7.0: The next version of Windows Mobile, which I’ve heard will be available on new phones by April 2010.
A Microsoft-branded phone: While many company watchers believe Microsoft is readying its own branded phone, I hear that — at least for the next couple of years — there won’t be a Microsoft-branded phone coming to market. Microsoft is working on a chasis reference design but, at least for the near term, Microsoft is leaving the smartphone manufacturing and branding to its phone partners. Do expect Microsoft to do more joint R&D and investment on Windows phones (like it announced on February 16 with LG), however.
More must read mobile news from the past 7 days:
Microsoft’s Attempt At The iPhone OS Debuts At MWC
Two Things To Get Excited About For The Palm Pre
Debunked: Apple Is Not To Blame For The G1 Missing Multi-Touch
Update: Why Apple Will Not Pursue A Palm Lawsuit
by Jason Wilk on January 23, 2009

- Microsoft Corp is expected to miss internal revenue projections when their earnings come out tomorrow. Wall Street is looking for quarterly revenue of $17.1 billion, according to Reuters Estimates, short of Microsoft’s own target of $17.3 billion to $17.8 billion.With that, there is further confirmation that the rumors of Microsoft announcing job cuts tomorrow are true. 6,000 to 8,000 employees or 6 percent to 8 percent of its 95,000 are expected to be getting cut.
- Although Microsoft could hardly help this past year’s economic outcome seeing as global sales of software and video games have slumped, investors will be pressing Microsoft for what is to come of the still reigning software giant. In the last 5 years, the company has taken a few significant blows that put a grim outlook on the company over the next decade.
1. Zune. Microsoft missed an opportunity to be the top music player and application provider, having to settle for the mediocrity of the Zune player.Expect layoffs in this department, the game is over. Update: “Zune platform revenue decreased $100 million or 54% reflecting a decrease in device sales.”
2. Windows Mobile. Used to be ahead of the game, just not ahead of the times. Microsoft really missed the boat to be the first player in a standardized mobile platform for WinMo phones without a locked deck. Apple stormed onto the scene with a phone for consumers, combining the ease of the iPod with the user experience of a real internet browser. A year later the phone opened to third party developers to sell applications creating yet another billion dollar marketplace for Apple, The App Store. This could and should have been Microsoft. by the time the App Store came out, over 18,000 mobile applications for Windows Mobile existed around the web from third party developers that never had a home on deck where their creations were aggregated, promoted and sold. Investors will be hounding Microsoft about the upcoming release of Windows Mobile in Barcelona, which finally will feature an applications marketplace (Screenshots here).The iPhone has passed WinMo is market share, and faces increasingly stiff competition from new comer Google Android, Palm’s Pre and of course Blackberry. The question is, can they jump back into the game or is it too late?
3. Search. 2008 could have been the beginning of a prosperous new search brand combining Microsoft and Yahoo. Microsoft Live is down to a measly 5.56% market share against Google’s 72%. This is yet another market Microsoft was too late to get into and the future doesn’t look bright. The only real hope is to buy Yahoo, which will most likely happen in 2009, although even Yahoo’s market share is declining and may be on the fritz for good. Yahoo market share is down to 17% from 21% last year. Investors will be asking some serious questions tomorrow regarding the future of this deal and if it’s likely to happen. I hate to say the search game has been won, but has it?
4. Software. Sales of Windows software for PCs and laptops are expected to drop 3 percent from a year earlier, making it the toughest quarter in eight years. The popularity of netbooks using Linux based software in 2008 and increasing market share from Apple Laptops is seeing Windows left in the dark. It’s tough to bet long term on Microsoft Software as you can see where young computer users are adopting Apple products. Let’s not forget the conversation about the shift of software into the cloud, making desktop applications extinct for 90% of us that don’t need encrypted enterprise desktop apps. Windows 7, which just released in Beta will be a big topic tomorrow, as Vista contained many bugs and dissatisfied many loyal users. Needless to say, I am down all the way on Microsoft.
Update. Microsoft outed their earnings. Here is what happened. You guessed it, TinyComb was right on again. Microsoft Corp. today announced revenue of $16.63 billion for the second quarter ended Dec. 31, 2008, a 2% increase over the same period of the prior year. Operating income, net income and diluted earnings per share for the quarter were $5.94 billion, $4.17 billion and $0.47, declines of 8%, 11% and 6%, respectively, compared with the prior year. Client revenue declined 8% as a result of PC market weakness and a continued shift to lower priced netbooks. However, strong annuity licensing drove Server & Tools revenue growth of 15%. Entertainment and Devices revenue grew 3% driven by strong holiday demand for Xbox 360 consoles with a record 6 million units sold in the quarter. As part of this plan, Microsoft will eliminate up to 5,000 jobs in R&D, marketing, sales, finance, legal, HR, and IT over the next 18 months, including 1,400 jobs today. These initiatives will reduce the company’s annual operating expense run rate by approximately $1.5 billion and reduce fiscal year 2009 capital expenditures by $700 million.
by Jason Wilk on January 21, 2009

As Apple (AAPL) rares up for it’s Wednesday Q4 earnings report, many investors are weary. In the past few weeks, the economy has stayed sluggish, Steve Jobss has left on medical leave and the usually exciting product debuts at MacWorld from Apple showed little to get excited about.What to look at against Wall Street expectations.
- Expect 20 million+ iPods shipped during the December quarter for the holiday season, beating the 18.6 million expectation.
- Expect a standard 2.5-2.6 million Macs shipped or even with the Street’s 2.5 million expectation.
- Wall Street is expecting 5 million iPhones to have shipped. Keep in mind September numbers showed Apple shipped 6.9 million phones, and that wasn’t even the holidays.
- Wall Street expects $9.7 billion in revenue and $1.32 in EPS. I couldn’t find an Apple store that wasn’t overcrowded this holiday season. People are excited about the iPhone, the new Mac computers are light years ahead of the competition and margins are consistently solid through the whole family of products. The 6 month old iTunes App store on the iPhone has already surpassed 500 million downloads, on its way to being the billion dollar marketplace it was projected to be when it debuted this summer. I expect Apple to be north of $10 billion in revenue this quarter, adding to that $20 billion in cash flow the company is sitting on. Why so bullish? Investors looking to the wrong reasons why Apple will slow down. Things like the popularity of netbooks this winter compared to the pricing of Mac, as well as lack of attention to the app store’s success will offset earnings predictions.
Official Numbers Are In: The Company posted record revenue of $10.17 billion and record net quarterly profit of $1.61 billion, or $1.78 per diluted share. Apple sold 2,524,000 Macintosh® computers during the quarter, representing nine percent unit growth over the year-ago quarter. The Company sold a record 22,727,000 iPods during the quarter, representing three percent unit growth over the year-ago quarter. Quarterly iPhone units sold were 4,363,000 representing 88 percent unit growth over the year-ago quarter.
by Jason Wilk on December 2, 2008

- Months ago, Facebook distributed a request-for-proposal to a slew of classified sites earlier this year to redo and rebrand the Facebook Marketplace (see Craigslist)
- Speculation was that Oodle, the classifieds provider that powers Wal-Mart had the job. Well, today the speculation comes true.
- The marketplace needs serious help. In Silicon Valley, New York City and San Francisco combined, the amount of new listings to the Facebook Marketplace was less than 30 yesterday!
- Classified listings is a business that never needed to make it out of the web 1.0 era. Craigslist is simple, efficient, and everything you need to find/buy things or services. Adding social features around it just doesn’t make sense. Most people agree that they’d rather not know the person they are buying something from as then it brings some sort of history with it and never feels like ‘your own’.
- Chegg was first on the scene in 2005 to launch a mildly successful social classifieds site (for college students) up until Facebook decided to take them on. Now Chegg is a successful textbook rental company making serious dollars. Maybe Facebook should have copied that model instead of trying to kick the dead horse back to life (i’m kidding, but seriously social classifieds wil never kill Craigslist)
- It will be interesting to see what Oodle can do with the classifieds business for Facebook. They certainly have the audience, now they need to engage. My thoughts are that their audience doesn’t care. TC