sure, and Lycos...

17.08.2009, admin

sure, and Lycos was unheard of when we started the business.
Bob Davis 421
Livingston: What did you find people misunderstood?
Davis: I think it was more of a lack of a clear vision as to what the Internet
would become. There was very little appreciation that it would ever become a
household tool. But bear in mind, at this point in ’95, even computers in the
home were somewhat unusual. We had them on our office desktop, not at
home with our kids using them. We look back retrospectively at the Internet
and say it’s the greatest medium that’s ever existed. But in ’95 email was
unheard of other than in the office.
Livingston: How did Lycos get its first traffic?
Davis: We were fortunate in the sense we had a good product at that point in
time, despite the fact that there were others ahead of us. We promoted, we
advertised, we aggressively sought PR. Over the years we got a lot of press. We
evangelized in a big way. We encouraged our employees to tell their friends,
families, and neighbors about Lycos and how they could utilize it. Eventually
over a period of about 18 months, we had this snowball that had become a giant
snowball rolling down the hill with a lot of momentum that was very difficult
to stop.
Livingston: So who were your first customers?
Davis: We talked all the time at Lycos about the three customers we had:
employees, our advertisers (the paying customers), and our users. From my
standpoint, users were on the top of the list because without the users, we’d
have no company. So it’s interesting that those who were most removed, in the
sense that we had no formal interaction with them—the viewers of our
product—were the most important to our success.
And we didn’t know who was watching, especially early on. We didn’t know
when they were watching, but we knew they were watching. We knew from the
logs the audience was growing rapidly.
AT&T was our first paying customer—an advertiser. It was tiny: a $5,000
insertion order. But it was euphoria—our investors were excited, employees
were excited. And then we took the order and quickly realized that we didn’t
have any technology to place an ad on our server! We had the technology guys
going crazy for about a week and a half, but they figured out a way and we got
that first banner ad for AT&T running on Lycos.
Livingston: What was Lycos doing that was different from its competitors?
Davis: We did an awful lot that was similar to one another in terms of the products
we sold. If you went to Lycos, Yahoo, Infoseek, or Excite, the products had

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