-
Website
http://mashable.com/ -
Original page
http://mashable.com/2008/10/23/coolspotters/ -
Subscribe
All Comments -
Community
-
Top Commenters
-
Robert Basil
142 comments · 8 points
-
Jennifer Van Grove
149 comments · 23 points
-
r0cketman22
317 comments · 52 points
-
rajagiri4
160 comments · 2 points
-
barringtonarch
150 comments · 4 points
-
-
Popular Threads
-
Enter the Zappos Sharing Happiness $3,000 Shopping Spree Giveaway Contest
6 hours ago · 96 comments
-
Head to Head: Chrome for Mac vs. Chrome for Windows
1 hour ago · 13 comments
-
Google Launches Chrome for Mac
7 hours ago · 29 comments
-
Your Next Car Radio Might Be Pandora
5 hours ago · 23 comments
-
iPhone App Offers Instant Speech-to-Text Transcription
4 hours ago · 17 comments
-
Enter the Zappos Sharing Happiness $3,000 Shopping Spree Giveaway Contest
It took me a few visits to CoolSpotters to realize that they have a novel way of tagging and associating photo and video content that may end up being the really cool/valuable part. It also seems like given that tool, pop-culture associations could be just the tip of the iceberg.
coolspotters dudes - i'm a fan... well done.
So is this yet another service that profits off the IP of photographers until such time that the photographer alerts them that their copyright is being violated?
I love these companies that hide behind the "We take it down as soon as we're notified" BS.
It takes celebrity worship to the next level.
We already know that people love to drool over what celebrities are doing, and what they're buying and using. My wife watches the Oscars just to see the red carpet criticism of what everyone is wearing.
This site cuts through the crap and goes right to the heart of what these celebrity worshipers really want to know: What can I buy to be like Celebrity of the Week?
Do I personally like the site? No. Celebrities aren't my thing. I just like to watch their movies and tv shows.
But I can see how people who read US Weekly and watch Entertainment Tonight would love this site.
The whole site is about crap that people want to buy and own, so of course you can figure out how to monetize it.
I give it thumbs down for appealing to me personally, but thumbs up for startup potential.
With a soft ad market, a site like this opens up new ways to monetize TV shows, movies, and photos in magazines.
I like it. It's different and it's got major promise IMO.
A company that appears on an association engine like Coolspotters will definitely have an attentive and motivated consumer. This is just a new channel to reach a very sought after demographic (albeit trendy over-consumers). I wouldn't say finding out what products celebrities are using interests me in the least bit, but the celebrity industry is big money and I wouldn't scoff at Coolspotters business case.
And, whether we like it or not, consumers are influenced by celebrities and what they are wearning and using. I think once Coolspotters figures out how consumers can buy every "spot" on the site then the revenue potential for them is endless.
Good luck! I'm a big fan of the site.
It's a good site. refreshing to see something a little different.
"Gee, they swore it wasn't stolen property. Well, look around the house and if you prove anything was yours take it back with our apologies."
I should be able to enjoy life making new work not hunting down illegal uses of past works.
- seen a TV ad with some "celebrity" promoting some makeup or burger :)
- create a web site with similar info/content
- let users find and uplaod content, so that your cost is next to nothing
- hope enough celebrity-crazed visitors will come and see your site
- advertizers will pay you to show their ads featuring the mentioned "celebrities"
- make some money on ads
- sell to some being player and profit$$$!
Not a bad idea indeed! But, they have to act quickly, because people will soon loose interest to watch (on web) the same commercials they are trying to avoid on TV.
Next: add geotagging for the product the "celebrity" is using/promoting, find nearest store! Crate your profile, tag the stuff you're interested in, turn your Bluetooth on, and as you're passing by an interesting store, you'll receive a message "hey, based on your profile, you might be interested in product XYZ!"
Not bad, they just have to play it well.
While not applicable to my interests I can see this being a great platform beyond just the celebrity fashion and goods marketing.
However as many people have noted here there are some strong - compelling pieces of marketing genius here. Links to ads, tied to celebrities, retails goods and online ordering.
Carry this to the next level of also starting to promote where you can get the knock off of the Armani dress and how to look like such and such a celbrity on the cheap and then you have what everyone does on TV after the Oscars.
People want the fantasy and would love to try and pull that off.