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January 23, 2008 3:00 AM PST

ShareThis and the stealth business model

by Rafe Needleman
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ShareThis makes a very useful service that might be sheltering a real business.

Let's deal with this product first, since it's quite good. ShareThis makes a widget that any content publisher can use on his or her sites. It gives users a very easy way to share a story they are reading with a site like Digg or Reddit, or with individuals via their social network, or through e-mail or instant message. And it beats littering a blog template with a dozen buttons that appear on every story.

Press the little button for sharing options.

(Credit: AllThingsD Web site)

ShareThis takes this feature to gratifying extremes. If you want to share a story via Facebook, ShareThis can read in your Facebook contact list, so that addressing a message is a simple matter of selecting a user from a drop-down friends list. Users can also save ShareThis profiles, so that no matter where on the Net they go, if the site uses ShareThis, their preferences and their address books copy over. (There's also a ShareThis bookmarklet, which can be used on any site anywhere).

It's handy, but so far, maybe not so exciting. Where ShareThis becomes more than just a fancy widget, and edges into possible business viability, lies in its collection and treatment of data about its users' activities. ShareThis knows which stories users engage with--the ones they forward and save. Compared with Google, ShareThis gets more interesting data from Web surfers. Although somewhat less of it.

You can tell which of your content is getting shared.

CEO Tim Schigel is giving ShareThis away to publishers, along with valuable tracking and usage data. He hopes to monetize this function via very targeted advertising. "We're not doing it yet," Schigel told me, but he's an experienced online ad man, and convinced that the deep data he'll get from ShareThis widgets will equal big bucks.

Given mass adoption of his service, he'll be proven right. ShareThis will be able to deliver ad messages at the point of action--when a user is about to share a file--and with full awareness of the content they are most interested in. Of course, there's mass adoption and there's mass adoption. ShareThis may lock up some big accounts (major publishing brands) which will earn it a nice income, but the really big play requires ubiquitous presence everywhere, from the New York Times to the "long tail" of all online content.

See also: Addthis. Compare with content recommendation widget Sphere. And see our previous coverage of ShareThis, back when it was called Share2Me.

I've embedded the ShareThis widget for this story here:

Rafe Needleman writes about start-ups, new technologies, and Web 2.0 products, as editor of CNET's Webware. E-mail Rafe.
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by MicroPat-217678755203161367698 January 23, 2008 12:47 PM PST
Don't forget about Add to Any, the first mover in this space:

http://www.addtoany.com/

Let's you share/add to a number of services, lets you find your service by typing, and never requires login. Add to Any also a similar "Subscribe" button that works for RSS feeds.
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by rihallix February 10, 2008 5:40 PM PST
This statement is a bit of a giveaway isn't it:

"ShareThis will be able to deliver ad messages at the point of action--when a user is about to share a file".

Won't clickthrough (and $CPM ) be incredibly low? The user has just clicked a button saying they want to share something, they simply want to get through the sharing operation, they're much more unlikely to divert by clicking on a banner ad.
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by sauravp November 3, 2008 3:05 AM PST
Now Tell-a-Friend from
http://www.Socialtwist.com

can also be added in the race.
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by dimple547 April 8, 2009 3:43 AM PDT
Looking at this now because it could be a huge help for us in terms of quick/easy design work. I agree, at this point most in house marketing departments have CS or something similar in which to work with templates like <a href="http://www.probabilites-du-poker.fr">meilleurs jeux</a> . Would love to hear from anyone who has gone ahead and used the service.Guess ?stealth? naturally gets people wanting to see it and creates some hype :).
Reply to this comment
by dimple547 April 8, 2009 3:45 AM PDT
Looking at this now because it could be a huge help for us in terms of quick/easy design work. I agree, at this point most in house marketing departments have CS or something similar in which to work with templates like http://www.probabilites-du-poker.fr . Would love to hear from anyone who has gone ahead and used the service.Guess ?stealth? naturally gets people wanting to see it and creates some hype :).
Reply to this comment
by dimple547 April 8, 2009 3:46 AM PDT
Looking at this now because it could be a huge help for us in terms of quick/easy design work. I agree, at this point most in house marketing departments have CS or something similar in which to work with templates like http://www.probabilites-du-poker.fr . Would love to hear from anyone who has gone ahead and used the service.Guess ?stealth? naturally gets people wanting to see it and creates some hype :).
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by JustinHunter July 10, 2009 5:54 PM PDT
Good article. I was wondering how ShareThis (with its presumably expensive high-powered management team) could be offering its service for free.

We'll be trying out ShareThis and Social Twist's similar "tell a friend" service in the next few weeks.

- Justin
________________
Justin Hunter
Founder and CEO
Hexawise - http://www.hexawise.com
"More coverage. Fewer tests."
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by opielina July 16, 2009 3:34 AM PDT
visit me at http://jutawanklik.com?a_aid=26bbe98b
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