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AGORACOM Lands Front Page Of AOL Finance Canada

Posted by AGORACOM at 10:00 AM on Wednesday, July 9th, 2008

Good morning to you all. As many of you know, AGORACOM has been an exclusive provider of small-cap content to AOL Finance Canada since 2003. However, until recently, we’ve only resided behind the “AOL Wall” serving AOL paying members.

Now that AOL has taken down the wall and moved to its free model, our content is fully available to all AOL members and AOL has seen it fit to reward us with front page placement.

This is great news for AGORACOM but even better news for both our clients and the entire small-cap industry. Our clients will have the benefit of reaching a far larger audience when they release important news, while the entire small-cap space benefits from significantly greater visibility.

I have to add that I’m impressed with the Web 2.0 direction in which AOL Finance is moving, a dramatic improvement over their previous offering.

The re-design is paying off in a big way. In the U.S., AOL Finance has now surpassed both Yahoo and MSN in terms of both unique visitors and page views. The Canadian side hasn’t implemented all of the new tools from the U.S. side but it should only be a matter of time.

In the meantime, if Marty Moe is reading this, we’re ready to become a small-cap partner on the U.S. side when you are!

Regards,
George

Small-Cap CEO Lesson: Dell Has An Investor Relations Blog – Why Don’t You?

Posted by AGORACOM at 9:32 PM on Monday, July 7th, 2008

If you need more evidence for the fact that you need a CEO / IR Blog, then look no further than the company whose products you might be using to read this very blog post – Dell.

According to IR Web Report, Dell launched DellShares about 9 months ago for the purposes of educating investors about the company. In fact, the tag line on the front page reads ” information and insight for the investor community”.

TELL YOUR LAWYERS TO RELAX AND ENTER THE 21ST CENTURY

This should also serve to quell the concerns of trigger happy lawyers that are quick to shoot down new communications tools such as blogs, rather than learning to work with them.

Remember – forums, blogs, podcasts, etc. are nothing more than new mediums for communicating with shareholders and potential shareholders. As long as you stick to the rules of full disclosure, they should not be feared any more than fax machines, e-mail and websites when they were first introduced.

If Dell and their multi-million IR budget feels that Web 2.0 tools are valuable IR tools for reaching retail investors, what do you think you should be doing? Calling AGORACOM hopefully 🙂

Regards,
George

SEC Looks To Scrap “Forms” System For 21st Century Disclosure

Posted by AGORACOM at 9:06 PM on Monday, July 7th, 2008

IR Web Report posted a story titled “SEC seeks to ‘blow up’ forms-based system”, the 75-year old system in which pubco’s, brokers, funds, etc. file disclosures via specific forms. That’s right, you may soon be saying good-bye to 8K’s, 10K’s, 15 2C-11’s and other such forms. According to an SEC press release on the matter, a team has been put together to re-think reporting from scratch, free of any attachment to current forms. To this end, SEC Chairman Chris Cox stated as follows:

“To encourage a fundamental rethinking, the project won’t proceed from the premises of the current reporting system. It will start from scratch, from the ground up, freed from any conventions”

TIME LINE

As far as a time line goes, the press release stated the following:

“The first phase of the study will be completed by the end of 2008, when a follow-on advisory committee will be appointed to consider the questions in more detailed fashion through a public and consultative process.”

That is fast. In my opinion, that is too fast for anybody to tear up an existing system of any kind and develop a new one based on out of the box thinking. Nonetheless, if they can pull it off, all the power to them…though implementation is an entirely different matter.

NEW DISCLOSURE SYSTEM WILL BE BASED ON NEW TECHNOLOGIES

What I really like about the 21st Century Disclosure Initiative is the fact that it will be incorporating new technologies for the purpose of providing investors with both an easier and simpler system:

“On the 75th anniversary of the SEC, with so much new technology available to improve the quality of information for investors as well as the way investors acquire it, we’re initiating a broad, introspective look at our business model,” said Chairman Cox. … “We’ll be examining how to improve the way disclosure works, including tapping the full potential of today’s technology…That could mean fewer confusing forms, and more useful information at investors’ fingertips in a form they can really use.”

According to IR Web Report, the eventual new system will probably be based on “eXtensible Business Reporting Language (XBRL), which breaks down traditional document-based disclosures into individually tagged data elements that can be read and recompiled by software according to an investor’s preferred way of viewing the information.”

If you don’t get that, don’t worry. We’re going to provide XBRL info in a separate post. In the meantime, here is a powerful but layman’s description from Edgar-Online:

XBRL automates financial analysis, which is an historic accomplishment. Computers can intelligently “read” an XBRL report to select specific data, pull it into documents and spreadsheets, analyze it, exchange it with other computers, and present it in a variety of formats. This can all take place in real time, allowing users to instantly compare hundreds of companies, industry sectors, topics, and issues, with automatic updates.

Exciting stuff for good emerging companies – and scary for small-cap / micro-cap companies that are nothing more than empty pump-n-dump schemes that hide behind convoluted filings.

We’ll be sure to keep you up to date on this initiative.

Regards,
George

AGORACOM Runs 1st Client Ad On Bloomberg TV

Posted by AGORACOM at 12:07 PM on Wednesday, July 2nd, 2008

Good afternoon to you all. Back on February 1st, we announced that our US Investor Relations programs would now include the ability to reach investors via Bloomberg Television and CNBC TV. These incredible tools were made available thanks to our powerful partners at Google, who are now handling offline ad space for the likes of (TV) Bloomberg, CNBC (Newspapers) New York Times (Radio) Clear Channel.

To this end, I’m proud to announce that our first Bloomberg Television began running in mid-June on behalf of our client Futuremedia. About 125,000 people have watched the ad so far and volume on FMDAY is much higher than normal.

Anecdotally, a partner from Washington called to advise they were watch Bloomberg the other day and nearly jumped out of their chair when I popped up on the screen. We’ve uploaded the commercial to YouTube for all to see. The quality isn’t as crisp as the actual playing version but you’ll get the idea.

Suffice it to say that we are really excited about this initiative and expect to be launching a few more campaigns in the coming weeks, including our very own AGORACOM ad. As always, we put our money where our mouth is by using the exact same tools we ask our clients to use.

Regards,
George

AGORACOM SURVEY: Relevancy Of Small-Cap Investor Conferences

Posted by AGORACOM at 11:01 AM on Monday, June 23rd, 2008

Good morning to you all. Last week, I posted my thoughts on the relevancy of small-cap investor conferences and asked for your thoughts on the matter via our simple, 4-question survey.

I’m happy to report that nearly 200 people took the time to participate in the survey (thank-you) and the detailed responses and results can now be viewed here:

For those of you that simply want the highlights, the results were as follows:

  • 60% do not find conferences valuable and get everything they need from the web.
  • Of those 60%, 24% responded they would not take time away from work or family as a reason.
  • Of the 40% that do attend, 70% listed “meeting with company principals” as the #1 reason.
  • Only 11.5% of you believe that small-cap conferences will vanish but 52% believe there will be fewer (but better) conferences.

Interesting stuff. In summary, it looks like the web takes care of all investor information needs but still can not replace personal interaction. I wonder if increased use of video (conference calls, presentations, etc.) would further erode the raison d’etre of small-cap conferences.

I’m also not surprised to see that 52% of investors believe there will be fewer but better conferences in the future.  Like the increased number of bad small-cap listings, we have also seen the rise of too many bad “conferences” that are nothing more than a money grab.

I’m certain (and glad) the slower economy is going to force them out of the business, while quality conferences like those put on by Cambridge Conferences and DealFlow Media will survive and thrive by providing a valuable collaborative experience for investors, pubco’s and industry participants.

Thanks again to everyone that participated in the survey. Much appreciated and I hope you found the results to be equally valuable.

Regards,
George

Yahoo Publishes Case Study On AGORACOM

Posted by AGORACOM at 9:29 AM on Saturday, April 26th, 2008

Yahoo-agoracom2

Hey, gang. Sorry I’ve been “off-blog” for a few days but I was under self-exile as we planned the next 6 months of AGORACOM. I’m back and you can expect to see a flurry of great stuff here on the AGORACOM Blog.

To this end, I’m really proud to announce that Yahoo has released a case study on AGORACOM that is being used in several of their collateral materials. If you want some great insight into how we use search engine marketing to drive new investors to both our clients and our website, have a read.

This is especially true of those of you that discovered AGORACOM via search engines.

The best part is that search engine marketing really works. AGORACOM clients using search engines are literally driving hundreds of new investors to their HUBS every month. From our own point of view, our traffic numbers just continue to grow and grow and grow.

If you are not using search engine marketing for your business, you are missing out on a world of opportunity.

Regards,
George

AGORACOM Hits 60 Million Page Views In 6 Months

Posted by AGORACOM at 12:14 AM on Saturday, April 26th, 2008

It gives me great pleasure to announce that AGORACOM recorded 10,514,612 page views for the period February 25 – March 26. This is our biggest month since we announced the launch of our wiki-powered “Investor Controlled Discussion Forums” on October 11, 2007.

When we made first made the announcement, we set out to destroy the stock discussion forum status quo that we have all come to hate over the past 10 years thanks to unrelenting spam, profanity, stock bashing, stock hyping and assorted noise. Many thought it could not be done because we could neither change habits nor unseat the incumbents. We not only knew we could, we knew that we would. Now, more than lip service, the following numbers speak for themselves:

THE TALE OF THE TAPE

(Figures for February 25 – March 26, 2008. All figures reported by Google Analytics)

  • Page Views 10,514,612
  • Visits 711,385
  • Unique Visitors 133,641
  • Pages Per Visit 14.78
  • Avg Time On Site 10:48
  • Number Of Countries/Territories 161
  • Top 10 (Canada, USA, Germany, Netherlands, Belgium, UK, Sweden, Mexico, Austria, Switzerland)

The numbers look even better when you consider:

  • The middle of March is pretty much a write-off for financial discussion as parents go on vacation or spend more time with their kids.
  • The numbers stem from pure discussion. No spam, flaming and bickering traffic.

HAPPY TO SEE A HAPPY COMMUNITY

We are very happy to see the data back up our theory that investors deeply desire the ability to amalgamate and discuss individual stock investments in a civilized community.

However, we are even happier to read the reaction of our members. Here are just some of the raving testimonials we’ve been able to pull from the site so far.

While we’re talking about our members, I want to take this moment to thank each and every one of them for believing in our model, spreading the word and breathing life into it. Without them, this would be one hell of an application with no users. A special thanks goes out to all HUB Leaders that abandoned their former communities at Stockhouse, Raging Bull, Yahoo Finance and others in hopes of a better experience. I’m glad our promises to you have been fulfilled.

STATUS QUO ISN’T SHAKING – YET

Now, I know we haven’t shaken any boots at the big 3 (AOL, Yahoo, Microsoft) just yet but the numbers and testimonials clearly show we have tabled a solution that is far more appealing to investors that are no longer willing to accept the unacceptable.

Until now, the trash has ruled the day, forcing the masses to abandon discussion forums and conduct due diligence either on their own, or in small groups. It is inefficient but it is the best option we’ve had for nearly a decade.

Eventually, the market corrects inefficiencies and AGORACOM has set its sights on correcting this one.

By refusing to sacrifice quality for quantity, AGORACOM is attracting and will continue to attract smart and conscientious investors that understand the wisdom of crowds. Eventually, quality begets quality and a massive community that both generates its own content and moderates itself will replace the status quo.

BLOGS CAN NOT REPLACE DISCUSSION FORUMS

With the advent of financial blogs – and some pretty great ones that include Paul Kedrosky, Roger Ehrenberg, Barry Ritholtz and Mark McQueen to name but a few – some might argue discussion forums are no longer necessary, even outdated. Don’t make that mistake. Blogs are great for insight into the most important economic issues from a wide array of great minds. However, they rarely stay focused on a particular topic for more than a week, if not a day.

Stock discussion forums, on the other hand, provide investors with an ability to exchange ideas and analyze one particular stock 24/7/365. You might read about macro events (i.e. sub-prime) on a blog but figuring out the ongoing impact on your specific stock investments requires an extended micro discussion that blogs can not provide.

CONCLUSION

This is Wiki meets IGC (investor generated content) at its finest. There are bigger communities to be sure – but can you find another vertical in which the need for a drastically more efficient model is more needed? Trillions of dollars are at stake. People’s futures are at stake. We can DIGG for this and Wikipedia that – but what are their implications for inefficient or imperfect information?

Stock discussion forums are vital to the lives of so many people. I believe we are about to witness a paradigm shift that makes them valuable once again. Stay tuned for more.

Regards,
George

Small-Cap CEO Lesson – Your “Personal Business Newspaper” On Google

Posted by AGORACOM at 6:05 PM on Tuesday, April 8th, 2008

Every time I’ve shown the following to a small-cap CEO, they’ve literally jumped out of their seat and yelled “I want one of those!” (If you’ve mastered RSS Feeds and Readers, don’t bother going any further. If you didn’t understand this last sentence, continue.)

It is that powerful.

What Is It?

Technical Description: Don’t worry about it. I’ll teach you about RSS Feeds, Readers, etc. some other time. All you have to know is this is the web of the future – but you get to learn about it today.

Non-Technical Description: It is the small-cap CEO tool that you have always dreamed about. It turns Google into your very own information gathering spy machine by sucking up every relevant piece of intelligence on the planet (to you) and brings it all into one place – your Google page. No more failed attempts at surfing through more bookmarks than you can ever use. Now, it all comes to you.

But I didn’t know I even had a Google page? You do – you just don’t know how to use it yet.

Can You Describe It? Yeah – but a picture is worth a thousand words.

First, let’s picture what Google looks like when you use it. A big blank white page with a simple search bar in the middle of it. Something like this?

——————————————————————-

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Now, let’s see what my Google pages looks like. These are just 2 samples. Please click on each image so that you can see a full-screen, clear version:

IMAGE #1 – My Business Category

IMAGE #2 – My Gold & Metals Category

As you can quite clearly see, I have multiple, valuable sources of information streaming into my personal newspaper at Google, 24/7/365. I’ve divided my sources into specific categories. I can’t tell you how valuable this has been in terms of:

A] Providing market intelligence – Information overload is useless. Information that helps me beat the competition is priceless. My personal newspaper on Google is equal to approximately 5 full-time (24 hour full-time) researchers at my disposal.

B] Time Management – We all have 436 bookmarks we’ve amassed over time but who has the time to visit just 3 of them per day? Life is busy, so you shouldn’t have to hop from site to site. Now, you don’t have to.

MY MARKET INTELLIGENCE ADVANTAGES

First of all, to call it an “advantage” is probably the understatement of the year. Advantage implies I have an edge, or better odds. This is outright domination.

Google allows me to create my own “personal newspaper” that only publishes information that I ask it to publish. What kinds of information?

1] Any new search engine or blog results relating to “George Tsiolis” or “AGORACOM” or “ABC competitor”. If anything new pops up in this world about me or my competitors, I know about it. For example, a competitor was recently named in an article concerning the latest SEC e-mail spam crackdown. Priceless!

2] News related to my business. I need to know about any new developments in “investor relations”, “investor relations + TSX Venture” , “investor relations OTCBB”, etc. If an investor relations contract is signed or terminated in North America, I know about it. How valuable is that?

3] News related to Web 2.0. If there is a new technology or application that can help my clients or AGORACOM, I know about it.

4] News related to my clients’ industries. I need to know about news or developments that affect my clients in specific industries (i.e. metals and mining; oil & gas). However, with so much noise out there, I only want to know headlines coming out of 10-20 great sources of info. I don’t have time to surf all of those sites – but I can aggregate each of their headlines onto 1 page and quickly scan them for those few juicy articles that help us stay ahead of everyone else.

* Each AGORACOM account executive run their own industry searches for their specific clients

5] Real-Time Market/Economic analysis – I can get today’s headlines from hundreds of sites…but where do you find the best analysis about those headlines? I follow about 20 of the sharpest minds on the web, whose analysis is fed into me all day, everyday.

How do you get one of these? Just ask. This is too good not to share.

Regards,
George

AGORACOM Surveys Over 650 Retail Investors At PDAC 2008

Posted by AGORACOM at 11:14 PM on Sunday, March 30th, 2008

Good evening to you all. As most of you know, AGORACOM was once again a proud sponsor of the PDAC International Convention. This is the world’s biggest mining and exploration conference, with over 18,000 delegates from all over the world.

In addition to the PDAC’s greatest hospitality suite event ever (see: Invitation + Video + Photos) , we also found time to conduct great business. One thing we did was once again survey attendees over the entire 4 days in order to better understand their online research habits and favourite metals/minerals. (View 2007 Survey Results Here).

With more than 650 investors surveyed, we were once again able to extract some very valuable information. The results will have different implications for each of you depending on your core commodity and whether or not you have an online IR strategy.

As expected, I’ve added my own commentary following each of the questions but welcome your feedback via posting your comments at the end of the post.

Without further adieu, here are the results:

QUESTION #1 – Which Metal/Mineral Are You Most Bullish On?

  • Gold (54%)
  • Silver (12.5%)
  • Nickel (8.8%)
  • Uranium (7.7%)
  • Diamonds (6.6%)
  • Copper (5.8%)
  • Molybdenum (4.6%)

QUESTION #2 – Do You Prefer Small or Large-Cap Resource Companies?

  • Small-Cap (79%)
  • Large-Cap (21%)

Big change here. Last year, it was ~ 88 / 12. Either investors are looking up the ladder, or more large-cap people are coming by the AGORACOM booth to find small-cap investments.

QUESTION #3 – What Percentage Of Your Research Into New Stocks Is Done Online?

  • 100% of Research – (17.6%)
  • 90% of Research – (23.4%)
  • 75% of Research – (21.7%)
  • 50% of Research – (19.6%)
  • < 50% of Research – (17%)

After a little further tabulation, we can conclude that the web accounts for 69% of all research into all new investments. Still think online investor relations and marketing isn’t important? If you want to take a look at more supporting data that I’ve reported on, please review the following headlines.

QUESTION #4 – Would You Like To Participate In Private Placements Of TSX-V Resource Companies?

  • Yes – 56.5%
  • No – 43.5%

Retail investors obviously have an appetite for participating in private placements. AGORACOM is now taking this a step further by building a database via our very own private placement opportunities initiative. If you would like access to our database for a future financing, please let us know.

QUESTION #5 – Do You Use Discussion Forums For Information and/or Research?

  • Yes – 54.4%
  • No – 45.6%

Two comments here:

First, small-cap CEO’s and IRO’s need to pay close attention to this number. Though most of you ignore them by saying “I don’t read forums”, the fact of the matter is that 55% of your current and prospective investors use them for information and research. Thus, either you take control of your message, or somebody else will.

Second – and more importantly – 80% of investors that don’t currently use discussion forums would use them if quality control measures were implemented. As such, the true percentage of investors that participate or want to use discussion forums is actually closer to 90%.

Conclusion – If 90% of your current or prospective investors want a community that they can use for information, collaboration and research – give it to them! Just look at how it has helped Noront Resources communicate with their investor base.

Question #6 – If You Have Used Stockhouse, Do You Click On Their Ads?

  • Never – 53.8%
  • Rarely – 26.1%
  • Sometimes – 16.7%
  • Often – 3.4%

Assume we are extremely conflicted here, so I won’t provide any commentary on these figures. If you are a Stockhouse advertiser, you probably want to pay close attention to them.

CONCLUSION

The importance of the web in achieving your IR goals simply can’t be overstated. If you think a website alone is sufficient, you are wrong and need to read this report in order to avoid wasting more valuable time.

Investors are using the web to research and discuss their current or prospective investments. They are dissecting your fundamentals, collaborating about your future, watching videos, sharing photos and making decisions about whether to buy, sell or hold your stock.

You have an incredible, cost-efficient opportunity to be a part of that process and significantly impact the future of your company for years to come. Feed your audience with the best information possible, ask them questions, listen to their feedback and create a connection with an ever increasing number of investors that will pay you perpetual dividends.

If you are not a significant part of that ecosystem, you are doing your company a great disservice and will inevitably be left behind the unstoppable growth and habits of online investors.

Regards,
George

AGORACOM Client – Avalon Ventures – Rings Opening Bell On TSX

Posted by AGORACOM at 12:44 PM on Thursday, March 27th, 2008

I’m very proud to announce that one of our longest and best supporting clients, Avalon Ventures, rang the bell and opened the TSX markets today. Avalon traded on the TSX Venture (VSE in the old days) for 13 years but officially graduated to the TSX on February 28.

They are up on the front page of the TSX.com but probably only for the day, so I took the liberty of posting the picture here for everybody. We also have video of the event that will be coming in over the next couple of days. I’ll post it at that time.

Congratulations to Don Bubar, Avalon’s President & CEO, as well as, his entire team. Don is the star of the show for piloting the company through rough market conditions a few years back – and now ending up on the big board.

During his speech, Don was also gracious enough to thank his management team and supporters of the Company during the resource bear market years. A class act.

Congratulations to everybody that attended at the invitation of Don for their support over the years. We look forward to more great things out of Avalon in the years to come.

For those of you that are new to the Avalon Ventures story, do yourself a favour and take a closer look by visiting their HUB or website.

Avalon Ventures Ltd. is a Canadian junior mineral exploration and development company with a primary focus on the rare metals and minerals that are in increasing demand for environmentally-beneficial high technology applications. These include lithium, tantalum, cesium, beryllium, indium, gallium, rare earth elements (“REE”) such as neodymium and terbium and rare minerals such as calcium feldspar.

UPDATE: We now have 2 videos from the ceremony. One video contains the opening remarks from both Don Bubar and TSX representatives. The second video is a quick interview with me and Don in front of the TSX stock board with the Avalon logo behind us. Both of the videos can be found here.

Regards,
George