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Heavyweight battle pits Google’s financial muscle against Facebook’s social …

ANNUAL REVENUE: Google, $38 billion; Facebook, $3.7 billion.

ADVERTISING REVENUE: Google, $36.5 billion; Facebook, $3.2 billion.

ANNUAL NET INCOME: Google, $9.7 billion; Facebook, $668 million.

SOCIAL NETWORKING USERS: Facebook, more than 900 million; Google, more than 170 million.

EMPLOYEES (as of March 31): Google, 33,100; Facebook, 3,500.

CEO: Google, co-founder Larry Page; Facebook, co-founder Mark Zuckerberg.

AMOUNT RAISED IN IPO: Google, $1.67 billion; Facebook, $16 billion. Figures include shares sold by early investors and exclude bankers’ option to sell more shares.

IPO STOCK PRICE: Google, $85; Facebook, $38.

MARKET VALUATION AT DEBUT: Google, $24.6 billion; Facebook, $104 billion.

DATE OF STOCK MARKET DEBUT: Google, Aug. 19, 2004; Facebook, May 18, 2012.

CLOSING PRICE OF STOCK ON FIRST DAY OF TRADING AND PERCENTAGE GAIN: Google, up 18 percent to $100.34; Facebook, up less than 1 percent to $38.23.

CURRENT MARKET VALUE: Google, $196 billion; Facebook, $105 billion.

Source: Regulatory filings, Associated Press research

Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

The 5 Best Online Marketplaces for Selling Handmade Goods

The 5 Best Online Marketplaces for Selling Handmade GoodsOnce upon a time, it was considered insane to compete against eBay. If you sold custom-made goods like clothes or jewelry, you sold at flea markets on weekends, and eBay the rest of the time. The idea that anyone would shop anywhere else for your handmade merchandise was silly.

But anyone who’s shopped on eBay knows how tough it can be to find certain goods. A search for “vintage t-shirt” may turn up more than 300,000 results, very few of which are either vintage or t-shirts. As a merchant, sellers find themselves competing with a huge number of competitors, ranging from junk resellers to mass producers peddling knockoffs.

Sensing an opportunity, Etsy launched quietly in 2005 and has carved out its own little empire in the form of an alternative marketplace devoted to the sale of handmade (and vintage) items only. Without all the riff-raff, sellers have a better opportunity to stand out–and hopefully make more sales.

While it’sThe 5 Best Online Marketplaces for Handmade GoodsWith more than 300,000 t-shirts for sale, what are the chances an eBay customer will find the one you have for sale? quite large, Etsy’s 12.3 million listings are dwarfed by eBay’s 300 million. In the relatively small realm of homemade and vintage sales, however, Etsy has become a juggernaut in its own right–and is attracting competition of its own. For now, though, Etsy remains considerably larger than all its major competition combined.

We looked at five marketplaces–both big and small–for sellers of homemade, handcrafted, and vintage items. Here’s how they measure up, and which ones are where you might consider offering your personally carved tiki idols and handmade bridal veils to the masses. And don’t forget: No rules prevent you from cross-listing items on several sites–you don’t have to choose just one.

Etsy

The 5 Best Online Marketplaces for Selling Handmade GoodsEtsy has the longest track record for selling handmade goods online.If you’re a crafter, Etsy should need no introduction. More than 875,000 merchants run shops on the site, with 12.3 million products available at any one time. Visit Etsy, and you’ll find getting around is pretty easy. A list of major categories (Candles, Quilts, Geekery) runs down the left rail, while a selection of hand-picked, curated items can be found in an ever-evolving grid on the home page. Listings are clean and easy to understand, and shipping costs are clear and visible. A variety of checkout systems are supported, including Etsy’s newest, homegrown payment processing option. And if you want to go mobile, Etsy has both an iPhone app and a Web-optimized version of the site ready.

Etsy has set the bar for what is and isn’t allowable for sale on most sites for handmade goods, and most of the sites we looked at follow Etsy’s lead pretty closely. Merchandise falls into three main categories: handmade items, vintage items, and crafting supplies that can be used to make items in the first category. While it’s not a major focus of the site, food sales are also allowed (consisting primarily of cookies).

Etsy is the only site in this roundup to charge listing fees, but at a flat 20 cents per item, they aren’t significant unless you’re selling very inexpensive merchandise. When the sale is complete, Etsy collects an additional 3.5 percent commission.

The bottom line: Etsy is clean and easy to use, and it’s obviously beloved by both shoppers and sellers. If you’re selling handmade merchandise, you almost certainly need to be on Etsy.

DaWanda

The 5 Best Online Marketplaces for Handmade GoodsAlthough it’s based in Germany, DaWanda has grown to be the second largest player in this market.DaWanda, based in Germany, is the second-largest marketplace in our comparison: It features 130,000 registered merchants, compared to Etsy’s 875,000. While there is certainly a critical mass of shoppers from all over the world here, you’ll note that all items are priced in euros, not dollars–even if both buyer and seller are in the United States. That may be a plus if you’re trying to build a European audience, but it will probably turn away domestic buyers concerned about getting hit with foreign currency charges on their credit card.

DaWanda has no listing fees–though the company says it will be adding them this year–but it does charge a 5 percent closing fee on sold items, which is considerably higher than the 3.5 percent you’ll pay at Etsy.

As Europe’s largest marketplace for handmade items, DaWanda is a growing company with an expert understanding of the complicated legal, taxation, and business considerations of the Euro region. That might not matter if you just want to sell baby bibs to Midwest moms; but if you’re a crafter with your eyes set on a bigger prize, it’s worth a look. After all, what business–large or small–doesn’t want to “go global” these days?

Bonanza

The 5 Best Online Marketplaces for Handmade GoodsIf your merchandise gravitates to the high end of the market, Bonanza might be a good showcase for it.Heavily focused on higher-end clothing and fashion, U.S.-based Bonanza has just 25,000 registered businesses. But its 4 million listed items put its total inventory at about a third the size of Etsy. Even though that means your store might have more trouble standing out, that’s good news for shoppers, as deep racks may keep customers browsing the site longer. Just as in the real world, no one wants to shop at a store where the merchandise looks thin and picked over.

Bonanza supports copious checkout options and has no listing fees, but it does charge a 3.5 percent closing fee. Another option unique to Bonanza is its Managed Merchant program, which the company describes as “a valet service for your booth.” Sign up for it, and Bonanza will do some of the heavy lifting of creating listings for you, adding metadata such as color, brand, and material information.

Next page: More on Bonanza, plus Zibbet, iCraft–and site stats and data.

BioTech Medics, Inc. to Penetrate $20 Billion Energy Drink Market by …


DALLAS, TX, May 18, 2012 (MARKETWIRE via COMTEX) –
BioTech Medics, Inc.(pinksheets:BMCS) announced commencing an
Internet Advertising and Awareness Campaign on Facebook and Google.
BioBody Balance is a caffeine-free Energy Spray nutritional
supplement. BioTech’s existing BioBody Balance(R) Concentrate
Supplement has sold over $5 million in gross sales. Now consumers can
enjoy the benefits of a new and improved BioBody’s non-carbonated
BioBody Balance Energy Spray for purchase at
www.BioBodyBalance.com .

The initial BioBody Balance Facebook page is

www.Facebook.com/BioBodyBalance .

“Utilizing Facebook.com and Google as marketing partners is an
essential element to our advertising strategy and furthering the
product branding in the market place,” commented Keith Houser, CEO of
Biotech Medics.

BIOBODY BALANCE(R) is a unique supplement with 10 years RD.
According to a California researcher investigating USA health trends,
one of the top five consumer trends is for natural caffeine-free
energy drinks. The U.S. energy drink industry is anticipated to reach
$19.7 billion in 2013. BioBody Balance Energy Spray is a high quality
pharmaceutical grade vitamin energy supplement with over 14 vitamins,
minerals, amino acids with an aloe vera base for those who are
concerned with boosting energy, alertness and reducing general
fatigue naturally without artificial stimulants. BioBody Balance
ingredients have been clinically tested to demonstrate restoring
natural energy, strength, stamina and defenses.

BIOBODY BALANCE(R) is superior because it is sprayed sublingually
‘under your tongue.’ Sublingual administration has advantages over
oral caffeine drinks because the product is absorbed faster. BioBody
Balance is more economical as the suggested retail price is less than
$.35 per serving compared to a caffeine energy drink at $2.00 or more
per serving.

Safe Harbor: Forward-Looking Statements
This release contains
forward-looking statements within the meaning of The Private
Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995 (the “Act”). In Particular,
in the preceding statements, the words “anticipated” and similar
conditional expressions are intended to identify forward-looking
statements within the meaning of the Act and are subject to the safe
harbor created by the Act. Such statements are subject to certain
risks, uncertainties and actual results could differ materially from
those expressed. The FDA has not evaluated the BioBody Balance
statements. BioBody Balance is not intended to diagnose, treat or
cure any disease.


        Contact:
        Tom Wood
        Phone: 972-274-5533

SOURCE: BioTech Medics, Inc.

Copyright 2012 Marketwire, Inc., All rights reserved.

Facebook’s Debut Sparks A Sharp Sell Off In Online Companies (FB, ZNGA, GRPN …


Facebook’s Debut Sparks A Sharp Sell Off In Online Companies (FB, ZNGA, GRPN, RENN, SVVC, YELP)

A bunch of online stocks hammering today after a weaker than expected debut of Facebook Inc(NASDAQ:FB) on the NASDAQ. The stock opened with a premium of about 12% at $43 and went as high as $45 (may be for a second). However, as expected by some analysts, the stock lost its entire gain in less than 25 minutes of trading and traded at break even multiple times. However, later on the stock started rebounded and was recently trading at $41.11, up over 8%. Volume is amazing with more than 295 million shares traded hands.

Zynga Inc(NASDAQ:ZNGA) is the hardest hit as the stock is down 6% to $7.74, although came off its new low of $7.08. The stock is trading well below its IPO price of $10 in December. In February, the stock went as high as $15.91, but couldn’t sustain and the stock started to retreat once again in April.

Renren Inc(NYSE:RENN) slumped over 12% to $5.49. Last week, the company had reported better-than-expected and a smaller-than-expected net loss per share in line with estimates, but projected the current quarter’s sales below consensus. Revenue in the three months ended in March rose 56%, year over year, to $32.1 million, yielding a net loss of 3 cents. Analysts had been modeling $29.7 million and a 4-cent loss, according to FactSet.

Groupon Inc(NASDAQ:GRPN) also lost 5.64% to $11.71. The stock had an amazing rally earlier this week after it reported a smaller net loss and higher revenue in the first quarter, boosted by increased demand from a growing customer base.

The company posted net loss of $11.7 million, or 2 cents per share, in the January-March period, narrow than a year ago loss of $146.5 million, or 48 cents per share. On an adjusted basis, the company would have earned 2 cents per share in the latest quarter, matching Wall Street’s estimates.

Revenue during the quarter came at $559.3 million, Up 89% from a year ago revenue of $295.5 million, well ahead of analysts’ forecast of $530.5 million. Groupon itself had forecast revenue of $510 million to $550 million.

Other notable losers are Firsthand Technology Value Fund Inc(NASDAQ:SVVC) plunged 20% to $21 and Yelp Inc(NYSE:YELP) slid 6.63%.


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64 lbs. of mercury for sale … on Craigslist?

Talk about it

    A tip from an alert online shopper who noticed an unusual posting on Craigslist allowed authorities to recover 64 pounds of dangerous elemental mercury from a Floodwood resident.

    The ad, offering “instrument grade’’ mercury in four plastic bottles for $650, was posted by a man who said he found it when cleaning out his late grandfather’s garage.

    The alert shopper contacted the Western Lake Superior Sanitary District, which in turn notified the Minnesota Pollution Control Agency, triggering a hurried effort last month to get the mercury out of circulation.

    PCA officials decided the best action was to buy the mercury from the seller rather than begin a lengthy and complicated compliance investigation. WLSSD officials made the purchase for $300 using a state grant and brought the mercury back to the WLSSD Household Hazardous Waste Facility in Duluth for proper disposal.

    It’s believed to be the largest such mercury discovery in Minnesota since state regulations have been in place.

    The seller said his grandfather apparently had planned to use the mercury for mining gold. Mercury bonds with gold and often was used so the gold would sink and settle out during prospecting efforts.

    Mercury is a natural element, but in concentrated form it can be extremely toxic, even fatal. Small amounts of mercury in certain forms can make huge amounts of water toxic to humans. Even small amounts of regular exposure can build up in living organisms and cause reproductive and neurological problems.

    Dealing with a spill of 64 pounds — intentional or accidental — could have been a monumental environmental and human-safety crisis. Direct exposure to liquid or vaporized mercury can be hazardous and cause immediate health problems, officials said Thursday.

    “Exposure to mercury vapors, if it was to become heated in some way, is extremely dangerous,’’ said Carl Herbrandson of the Minnesota Department of Health.

    Most of the concern over mercury in recent years has been about airborne deposition — mercury that goes up in smokestacks and comes back down in rain and snow. But there have been major spills of mercury as well.

    In 2004, an emergency response and cleanup of a spill of about 12 pounds of mercury in Rosemount, Minn., cost nearly $525,000, according to PCA records. Two teenagers found the mercury in an abandoned home, played with it and eventually exposed 49 people, including 18 children. Many outdoor areas at Rosemount Woods and 14 homes had to be decontaminated, but no severe health problems were reported.

    State and federal governments have moved to get mercury out of power plant and factory emissions so the mercury doesn’t fall back to Earth and become toxic to fish, and the animals and people who eat fish. Regulations also have worked to remove mercury from products such as thermometers, blood pressure gauges, thermostats, light bulbs and switches; they even control the mercury released when dental fillings are burned in crematoriums.

    If even one mercury thermometer is broken in a school, it can force the evacuation of the entire building, said Jeff Connell, the PCA’s director of compliance and enforcement.

    Connell said it was fortuitous the seller decided to list the mercury for sale and even more so that someone thought it odd enough to contact hazardous material authorities.

    “Industry spends millions of dollars to keep a fraction of this much mercury out of the environment every year,’’ Connell said “And to think this could have easily ended up in a dumpster.”

    The mercury offered for sale was in four sealed plastic bottles and in its original packaging, WLSSD officials noted. They estimated it was about 20 years old. Although mercury is not illegal to own in Minnesota, state laws do regulate its sale and purchase.

    “It is legal to sell and purchase for very specific, well-regulated purposes, but not for just any reason. In this case we were able to step in and prevent an illegal sale from happening,’’ Connell said, noting no action will be taken against the seller.

    Connell noted that mercury is a naturally occurring element, but human activity releases more mercury to the environment than what is released through natural processes.

    “If you find anything suspicious, please do what this person did and call your local hazardous waste or household waste office, or call us,’’ said Anne Perry Moore, a spokeswoman for the PCA in Duluth. “And please don’t vacuum it up or just throw it out.’’

    For more information go to www.pca.state.mn.us/mercury or contact the state spill hotline at (800) 422-0798.

    Tags:
    news, health, environment, wlssd, minnesota

    Google exec to Facebook: Uh, your users aren’t really shoppers

    File this one under statements of the obvious — though it’s one that may ultimately keep Facebook and its investors awake at night.

    In the wake of General Motors’ decision to dump its paid Facebook ads, the product leader of Google’s European display-ad business virtually thumbed his nose at Facebook — a company that could soon be valued at more than $100 billion thanks to an IPO premised on the strength of its advertising business:

    Of course, there’s no love lost between Facebook and Google, who are both vying to be King of the Internet while raking in the bucks from advertisers. And it’s worth noting that the Google exec in question, Jason Bigler, just heads up display-ad products in Europe — not the company’s entire display-ad business, as others have suggested.

    But Bigler’s tweet isn’t just competitive sniping (though it’s most certainly that as well). Because there really is a fundamental difference between a Google search ad, which is displayed for people who are actually looking for something, and Facebook’s effort to draw the attention of folks who are just trying to catch a look at photos of their friends at the bar.

    Over at Business Insider, Nicholas Carlson likens Facebook’s advertising approach to that of TV networks:

    When an advertiser buys air time for a commercial during a particular TV show, it’s because that advertiser has been told by the TV channel what kind of people watch that TV show, and the advertiser has decided that those kinds of people are the kinds of people it wants to reach.

    Facebook does the same inexact thing: It sells ads targeted based on the kinds of people who will see them.

    In effect, Carlson suggests that Facebook ads are like TV spots without the arresting images — and thus far less effective than either better-targeted search advertising or more emotionally involving video. It’s a pretty neat argument, although it’s incomplete because it leaves out the entire social aspect of Facebook’s appeal.

    From Facebook’s perspective, paid advertising on its site works best as a way to draw people into other forms of “engagement” — visiting company pages, playing with their apps, entering contests, registering for newsletters or updates. More to the point, such campaigns should not only draw in the original viewer of the ad, but also as much of that person’s social network as possible.

    And then they tell two friends, and so on. Or their newsfeeds do. Anyway, you get the idea.

    Still, it can be awfully tricky to hook people into this sort of thing, as GM has learned. For every success out there, there are undoubtedly at least a handful of flops — maybe a whole bunch of them, in fact. “It is not easy for a brand to get Facebook advertising to work,” Hussein Fazal, CEO of Facebook-ad optimizer AdParlor, told me via email. “It is not as simple as just turning on an ad buy.”

    As a result, it’s painfully clear that despite the sums Facebook’s advertising engine is already raking in — $872 million in the first quarter of this year alone — this aspect of the social network’s business is really still a work in progress. What’s more, it’s one that’s out-of-step with much of Madison Avenue and its big-company clients.

    That’s far from saying Facebook will fail, of course. But it’s unquestionably true that its approach to advertising and marketing rests on a huge and still largely untested assumption — namely, that social-network users can be successfully co-opted as emissaries of brand promotion who happily “like” products and widely share company-friendly stories in what Forbes’ Robert Hof calls “a supercharged version of word-of-mouth.”

    That’s at least one conceivable outcome. Is it likely? Facebook’s IPO is essentially a $100 billion bet that it is. So stay tuned.