Tag Archive for 'indextools'

Web Analytics Wednesday – Hungary is ready

In 2006, I asked the question “Is Hungary ready for web analytics?”. The web analytics market was booming in the US, and Google had only just launched its free Google Analytics service. I was the marketing director at Indextools (later acquired by Yahoo!). Based in Budapest, we were competing in North America with the likes of Omniture, Coremetrics, HBX and WebTrends. At that time, Indextools only had one Hungarian customer – a personal friend of the CEO.

Three years later, that time has arrived. Last week, I attended the Budapest chapter of Web Analytics Wednesday. Hosted by local online marketing maven and blogger, Anna Sebestyén, the meeting was well attended. The meeting was held in English, and featured presentations by András Rung (web ergonomy), Zoltán Balázs (usability & analytics) and Tamás Ács (Gemius for competitive insights). We had about 20 attendees, mostly 20-somethings, nearly all of them active, professional analytics users (I asked).

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Get your free Yahoo Analytics account in August

I received numerous requests for a free Yahoo Analytics account, following my last post. Receptional originally offered me just two accounts for nowEurope readers, but they liked the response so much they decided to extend that offer.

Unfortunately, Receptional have already run out of free accounts for July (Yahoo provides a monthy quota to their web analytics consultants). If you want to claim your account, you need to hit this page early in August.

Apparently, the service is in beta while Yahoo upgrades its server infrastructure to meet the anticipated demand of free, real-time web analytics. When I was a part of Indextools (now Yahoo Web Analytics) back in 2005, we all watched with glee as Google’s free analytics service collapsed under the unexpectedly high demand. I haven’t seen any announcement, but presumably YWA will be launched to the public this Fall.

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The secrets of successful Baltic ICT startups

I delivered this overview of the Baltic and CEE startup climate at the TechCrunch Nordic meeting in Stockholm on May 27. Thanks to Vlastimil and Steve, who contributed their insights to my presentation.

Two key findings from the event:

  1. Even Scandinavian startups struggle with breaking out to the world, having much better technical and production than sales and marketing talent there. The few that do, often have US people or previous experience from US as part of the team.
  2. The Scandinavians still view CEE countries as something strange and distant, even when we do a lot of cross-border business together. What’s more, even Finland and Sweden are very distant from each other and there is almost no cooperation.

If someone would like to hear more about Baltic startup web and product development opportunities, feel free to get back to me. Besides our company there are tens of great software development companies, small and large, and hundreds of great private developers available.

Continue reading ‘The secrets of successful Baltic ICT startups’

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Indextools: How to maximize your strengths (part two)

The old Indextools website is gone. The new Yahoo! Analytics website is minimalistic, offering just the home page and a second page describing the features. That’s appropriate, because this incarnation of Indextools doesn’t have to sell. It’s Yahoo! And it’s free.

However, the technology behind the screens is still 100% Indextools. They probably have four or five times more server capacity, but the features are essentially the same ones I described on the original site. (Disclosure: I was the marketing director in 2004-2005.)

In the first part of this case study I described how Indextools minimized its weaknesses to compete with VC-funded US companies. This time around I’ll talk about how this scrappy Hungarian startup maximized its natural strengths to build a world class business.

Continue reading ‘Indextools: How to maximize your strengths (part two)’

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Is Central European software ‘cool’?

In late 2005, we published a list of Central European ‘companies to watch’ which you’ll find at the top of the nowEurope links page. The list consists of technology companies based in the Czech Republic, Slovakia and Hungary. The main selection critera was the subjective opinion of the NETIES consortium team members in each of these countries.

It’s now time to review the list and consider whether those companies are still worth watching. And what better way than CoolSW, a new service launched by Intel which Wired Magazine describes as a DIGG for software companies.

The burning question: Are Central European software companies ‘cool’?

Continue reading ‘Is Central European software ‘cool’?’

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