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AGORACOM (Resource) Client Success Stories – Yep, They’re Happy

Posted by AGORACOM at 9:04 AM on Monday, January 28th, 2008

The Vancouver Cambridge Conference is over and it was a great event. We had a chance to meet so many of our new members that have migrated to AGORACOM over the past 3 months, as well as, all the public companies that make it such a success. We were also proud to be a sponsor yet again.

During the conference, many investors and companies asked to see our track record of success, so we’re only too happy to oblige via the following presentation of AGORACOM (Resource) Client Success Stories. You will note we also included success stories from 2006.

We’ll continue to update it every 60 days, so look for more success story posts in the future.

Thanks and have a great day.

Regards,
George

Google Now Controls 65% Of Search – The Greatest Investor Relations Tool Ever

Posted by AGORACOM at 3:37 PM on Tuesday, January 15th, 2008

The New York Times is reporting that Google now accounts for 65.1% of all searches in the United States. In Canada, that number is closer to 70%. How dominant is Google? 3X bigger than Yahoo and 9X bigger than Microsoft. Google is the undisputed heavyweight champion.If you are like most small-cap CEO’s, you are probably wondering “why should I care?”

Answer
: Google is a $200 billion company because of their ability to do one thing – matching people who are looking for something with people who provide something. Until now, unless you are an AGORACOM client, you’ve always been the one looking for something. Vacation spots, airfare, research, stuff for your kids, the best all-season tires for your car … you use Google over and over to find things.

When are you going to use Google to be found?

Small-Cap investors use Google to find new ideas everyday. I know because AGORACOM and its clients are the ones being found everyday. Why aren’t you using Google to be found? When are you going to use Google to be found?

If you are not using allowing Google to help you find investors, then you are missing out on the greatest investor relations tool ever invented.

If you want to start being found, e-mail me at: [email protected]

Regards,
George

AGORACOM Interview Picked Up By Financial Post Trading Desk

Posted by AGORACOM at 7:13 AM on Tuesday, December 11th, 2007

Our latest “Expert’s Corner interview with Peter Grandich was picked up by the Financial Post. We taped the interview for our new content partners at Globe Investor and syndicated it via our industry leading podcast site SmallCapPodcast.com. Jonathan Ratner of FP picked it up and ran the story. The distribution power of the web in Web 2.0 is unbelievable. Tags, keywords, blogs, podcasts…if you don’t know what these mean then you better get on the ball or hire someone who is. Otherwise, you are going to get trounced by your competitors.

Regards,
George

Press Release – AGORACOM Launches Canada’s First Stock Market Social Network

Posted by AGORACOM at 8:05 AM on Friday, September 21st, 2007

TORONTO, ONTARIO–(Marketwire – Sept. 21, 2007) – AGORACOM (http://www.agoracom.com), Canada’s only provider of monitored online communities to public companies is proud to announce the successful integration and launch of Canada’s first stock market social network. Currently, over 65 public companies use AGORACOM to host their official online community for the purposes of amalgamating and communicating with investors in a monitored environment free of spam, profanity, stock bashing and pumping.

WEB 2.0 SOCIAL NETWORKING TOOLS FOR INVESTORS

The AGORACOM Social Network provides investors with unprecedented networking, collaborating and ranking tools for the purpose of helping members make the best investment decisions possible. Some examples of these social networking tools include the following:

RANKING TOOLS

1. MEMBER RANKING

AGORACOM has built a robust member rating and ranking system that allows members to anonymously rate each other on a scale of 1-5 and displays a real-time average ranking of each member. The member rating system is dynamic and allows ratings to be changed at anytime based on the performance of members at any given moment.

The AGORACOM member rating and ranking system provides investors with an ability to immediately measure the reputation of any given member at any given time, thus providing investors with an ability to appropriately value the quality of information posted by any member.

2. POST RANKING

AGORACOM provides members with the ability to rate the value of each post to our monitored discussion forums and displays a real-time ranking of the value of each post.

NETWORKING TOOLS

1. MEMBER PROFILES

AGORACOM provides members with an ability to create extensive profiles that include information related to their city, country, biography, profession and favourite sports, movies, websites, blogs and books for the purposes of significantly increasing interaction between investors with similar interests and backgrounds.

Most importantly, members can provide a list of their favourite stocks which, combined with the AGORACOM rating and ranking system, provides investors with a simple but effective way of tracking the investments of the community’s’ highest ranking members.

2. VIDEO MESSAGING

In response to the online shift towards video, AGORACOM provides members with an ability to broadcast a video message to members of the community directly from their respective profiles.

3. PODCASTING and WEBCASTING

AGORACOM provides participating public companies with the ability to webcast their interviews and audio messages that are immediately converted into podcasts on SmallCapPodcast.com and placed on the world’s largest podcast sites including iTunes and Yahoo Podcast.

AGORACOM President, George Tsiolis stated, “We are the pioneers of Canada’s first and only monitored discussion forums for TSX Venture and TSX listed companies. With more than 65 companies now using us to provide their official online investor communities, we reached a critical mass that warranted the pioneering of Canada’s first stock market social network.”

George went on to say “This is a very proud day for AGORACOM and every public company, shareholder and market official that embraced our Web 2.0 vision and helped make it a reality. Members of the Canadian investing community should look for even greater functionality to be announced in the very immediate future. Stock discussion forums are never going to be the same.”

About AGORACOM – No Profanity, No Spam, No Stock Bashing, No Stock Pumping

AGORACOM (http://www.Agoracom.com) is North America’s largest official online community for public companies. Unlike stock communities that provide investors with unmonitored stock discussion forums plagued by profanity, spam, stock bashing and pumping, AGORACOM was built to serve the interests of public companies and investors by creating monitored communities focusing on quality over quantity.

AGORACOM is the official provider of “Small-Cap Centres – Powered By AGORACOM” to Yahoo Finance Canada, AOL Finance Canada and every Blackberry device on the planet.

For more information, please contact

AGORACOM
George Tsiolis, LL.B
President
Email: [email protected]
Website: www.Agoracom.com

AGORACOM Survey Reveals Web Research and Discussion Forum Habits of Small-Cap Investors

Posted by AGORACOM at 5:03 PM on Sunday, September 9th, 2007

Earlier this year, AGORACOM surveyed approximately 800 small-cap investors at 3 separate conferences for the purposes of discovering how much of a role the web plays in their small-cap / micro-cap research and investing. We purposely avoided an online survey to avoid skewing of the results.

We were pretty convinced the number was significant based on anecdotal evidence but given the fact some small-cap CEO’s still believed the internet had no significance, we had to settle it once and for all.

Well, the results are in and they are irrefutable. In fact, they’re even bigger than we thought. Ir you’re an old school CEO, it’s time to re-visit your web strategy. If you’re a shareholder of a small-cap or micro-cap company, you need to find out their web strategy and, if one doesn’t exist, encourage them to create one.

Percentage Of Research Into Next Investment That Is Derived From The Internet

  • 76.6%

Comment: This is a wake-up call for small-cap and micro-cap CEO’s that believe a website is sufficient exposure on the web. Small-cap investors depend heavily on the web to find their next investment. As such, companies must incorporate proactive web marketing strategies in order to reach them. Search engine programs are the easiest and most effective method. In addition tools such as podcasting and blogging must be considered. You should even speak to your newswire provider about any web optimization they can offer for each of your press releases, or at least your most important press releases. In short, you need a web 2.0 strategy

If you don’t make it easy for new potential investors to find you , then they won’t. It is that simple. Companies that incorporate these tools into their IR programs will win. It is that simple.

Percentage Of Investors That Participate In Discussion Forums

  • All Investors – 59.7%

Comment: Despite the often ridiculous nature of stock discussion forums on most portals (we won’t mention any names) the fact of the matter is that investors do not want to sit at home and feel as if they are the only person invested in your stock. As such, they are going to use discussion forums to seek out fellow investors and exchange information.

Unfortunately, this also means that unscrupulous investors can have a significant impact on your stock price on both the downside (bashing) and the upside (hyping). It also provides your competitors with an opportunity to bait and switch your shareholders by bashing you while presenting their case.

This dynamic is not going to change. Stock discussion forums have been around since the advent of the mass web and they are going to be here long after. They’ll get better (watch for our big move into this space) but you’ll have to contend with it one way or another.

Suggestion – take control of your message by creating your own community that amalgamates your current and prospective investors into a controlled environment. Use the community to communicate with investors, while providing investors with an ability to discuss the pro’s and con’s of your company.

For Those Who Do Not Participate In Discussion Forums, The Percentage That Would Participate If Quality Control Measures Were Implemented

  • All Investors – 72.5%

Comment: This number only serves to further support our contention above. Small-cap companies that create a community and give their shareholders safe haven will benefit tremendously.

Moreover, this was a real eye-opener for us as it indicates three very telling things:

  1. The current state of discussion forums is not working. The abundance of profanity, spam, bashing, hyping and name-calling is driving away a large percentage of small-cap participants.
  2. Small-cap investors have a strong desire to collaborate online with fellow investors. Much of this can probably be attributed to the fact that small-cap investors do not have the comfort of analyst coverage, independent research and financial media coverage. As such, they are forced to rely on “the wisdom of crowds” by amalgamating and exchanging information in stock discussion forums.
  3. A Web 2.0 model that can minimize noise and maximize the exchange of information in a constructive and professional environment will receive mass acceptance from small-cap investors.

Total Percentage Of Investors That Would Participate In Discussion Forums If Quality Control Measures Were Implemented

  • 88.5%

Comment: This number combines the percentage of small-cap investors currently using discussion forums with the percentage of small-cap investors that want to use them if quality control measures were implemented. It is a huge number. If small-cap and micro-cap CEO’s that previously thought the web was unimportant do not see the error of their ways, then there isn’t anything more we can say.

On the other hand, if you are a shareholder of one of these companies, you have a lot to say. Mobilize your fellow investors and insist as a group that your company invest in a web 2.0 strategy to attract new shareholders and better maintain current ones.

CONCLUSION

These survey results should come as no surprise to readers that are the slightest bit web savvy. Online communities have gone parabolic in the past 18 months as like minded individuals seek each other out to share, collaborate and grow. MySpace for teenagers, Facebook for college students and grads, Linkedin for professionals. Each one of these started from zero and now have tens of millions of members.

Would you expect small-cap investors to be any different?

Regards,
George

The Empowerment Of Online Investors – It’s Here For Good

Posted by AGORACOM at 9:52 AM on Wednesday, September 5th, 2007

If you are a small-cap CEO that still believes “the internet isn’t important” (and there are still many out there who believe it) than you better fall into one of the following categories to back it up:

  1. I’m Stronger than Motorola
  2. I’m Stronger than Yahoo
  3. Um, I’ve changed my mind and now understand the power of online investors

Why? Take a close read of the following article from the Wall Street Journal – A New Thorn In Motorola’s Side

The article can best be summarized as follows:

———-

Eric Jackson owns just 130 shares of Motorola stock, but the activist investor and blogger has got big plans for the ailing mobile phone company.

Jackson launched an online campaign called “A ‘Plan B’ for Motorola,” urging the replacement of Ed Zander as CEO and chairman immediately — as well as four of 10 other board members, among other initiatives. He also posted videos on YouTube and put up a Web page where shareholders can “pledge” their shares to support his plan.

It would be easy to ignore Jackson, if he hadn’t helped balloon an investor revolt at Yahoo ahead of last month’s resignation of former CEO Terry Semel. Jackson owned just 96 Yahoo shares, but his barrage of blog posts and online videos quickly got him attention. He launched the campaign in January, agitating for the ouster Semel and some board members. About 100 Yahoo shareholders pledged roughly two million shares on youchoose.net to support him (representing about 0.2% of Yahoo outstanding shares).

Jackson is among a new breed of investors who are savvy about the grass-roots power of the Internet and use it to make activism no longer a game reserved only for wealthy financiers.

——————-

What made Jackson’s initiatives possible is the advent of Web 2.0, which provides investors with an ability to connect, collaborate and even revolt in ways that were never before possible.

What does this mean for small-cap and micro-cap CEO’s?

Online investors have almost as much power as you do when it comes to the future of your company. Unhappy investors are no longer relegated to the vacuum of “harsh” e-mail and letters to express their discontent. Today, investors can rally in short order via video, blogs and online forums to challenge you at your next AGM, oust you from your position or even elect their own slate of directors.

In fact, not only is this possible, I’ll go as far as predict it will actually happen in the next 12-24 months as investors make Web 2.0 a part of their daily investing lives. I’m the biggest proponent of great small-cap and micro-companies but we all know there are still many companies out there deserving of being the first target of an online shareholder revolt – and I’ll be the first to applaud it.

Good and responsible companies need not worry. Bad companies should be weary.

Regards,
George

IBM Survey Supports Importance Of Building A Small-Cap Community

Posted by AGORACOM at 9:40 AM on Tuesday, August 28th, 2007

A new IBM online survey of consumer habits as they relate to the web and TV contains findings that small-cap companies will find important in determining their future IR campaigns. The actual survey results are available here, while a press release summarizing the survey can be found here.

From my perspective, here are some of the more interesting points:

  • The global findings overwhelmingly suggest personal Internet time rivals TV time.
  • Consumers are seeking consolidated, trustworthy content, recognition and community
  • An average of 81 percent of consumers surveyed globally indicated they’ve watched or want to watch PC video.
  • Consumers are increasingly contributing to online video or social networking sites: 26 % of U.S. respondents reported contributing to a social networking site.
  • Of those who contributed content, an average of 58 percent worldwide did so for recognition and community, not monetary gain.

Community, community, community. Investors want it and you need to provide it. It is that simple.

Why?

Humans have always congregated around fields of interest. We work with people who share our passion (medicine, engineering, teaching, construction, mining, technology, etc.), we socialize with people that share our sense of fun (bars, nightclubs, restaurants, sports venues, lakes, etc.) and we take up causes with people that share our pain (cancer, MS, diabetes, etc.). Bottom line, we do almost everything in our lives with other people who share the same field of interest.

As such, it only makes sense that we want to surf the web along with those that share our interests. Young children love to play at Club Penguin (acquired by Disney for $350 million), teenagers congregate at MySpace (acquired for $560 million, College students and grads are on Facebook (valued between $5 – 10 billion).

Investors are no different. They want to share information with other investors like them. This is especially true for the small-cap space where information and analysis from major media and finance firms isn’t readily available. In fact, I would contend that small-cap investors are an even more rabid group than any of the communities listed above because investing is not a social exercise. It involves their personal finances and livelihood.

The case for building and maintaining a high-quality small-cap / micro-cap community is getting stronger by the day. It is never looking back. Don’t make the mistake of thinking this latest phase of the web (Web 2.0) is going to end like the dot-com implosion of 2001. Web 2.0 is not built on greed, stupid business models and insane valuations. This phase of the web is being built on applications that are actually being used by millions and millions of people. It is powerful and unstoppable.

Any “C” level small-cap executive that ignores these facts is going to find themselves far behind those small-cap companies that embrace them and capitalize on them.

Regards,
George

Why Small-Caps Should Issue Press Releases By 8:30 AM EST

Posted by AGORACOM at 11:09 AM on Monday, August 20th, 2007

Good afternoon to you all. Now that we’ve started broadcasting AGORACOM TV on a daily basis, one of the things I have noticed is that small-cap companies continue to release news just at or before the open. This might have been an acceptable practice back in the day when only brokers could access press releases on their screens but it made no sense once the web opened them up to the entire world.

It makes even less sense now. Why?

Folks, we are in a Web 2.0 world in which citizen journalism and analysis is becoming a bigger, more important research tool than Wall Street and finance portals. As a result, small-cap and micro-cap information is being pumped out by bloggers, podcasters, and vloggers everyday – all of which is being fed into every corner of the web via RSS feeds, including iTunes, Yahoo Podcasts, Google Blog Search, etc. on your behalf – and for free!

However, if you want your great news covered by these incredible reporting sources, you have to give them a chance to get to your news, digest it and report on it. Just like traditional news, Web 2.0 sources have deadlines as well. AGORACOM TV, for example, has a cut-off around 8:50 so that we can tape at 9:00 and be live by 9:30. I’m certain others are not much different. If your press release is coming out at 9:30, you’ve robbed yourself of potential mass coverage by one or more sources that might have otherwise picked up your news and sent it right around the world.

Bottom line – put your news out by no later than 8:30 AM EST….unless you don’t want the world to know about you.

Best,
George

Online Newspaper Audience Skyrocketing

Posted by AGORACOM at 8:18 PM on Tuesday, July 24th, 2007

Good evening to you all. If you are a small-cap executive, than you know I use this blog to provide support for my contention that old-school methods of reaching investors are dying a fast and painful death. Those companies that understand this and embrace Web 2.0 are going to win, while those that refuse to change will know what it felt like to be the last buggy whip maker in the dawn of the automobile era.

To this end, I provide you with the following powerful report regarding the skyrocketing growth of online newspaper readership. We live in exciting times.

Regards,
George

Whole Foods CEO Gets Busted For Anonymous Posts To Forums

Posted by AGORACOM at 2:30 PM on Monday, July 16th, 2007

Hey, gang. Been on vacation for a couple of weeks but getting back into the swing of things as I prepare for re-entry next week – and this story is a doozy if you haven’t already heard. Whole Foods CEO, John Mackey, has apparently been anonymously posting to stock discussion forums for eight years under the alias Rahodeb.

Given the fact AGORACOM runs official message boards for public companies (as opposed to unmonitored & anonymous forums), I believe I can lend some credible thoughts to the discussion when I say that investors should be very concerned about Mackey’s message board fiasco. Why?

1] Ethics. CEO’s already have the broadest possible platform to “talk up” their companies. Going anonymous on unmonitored discussion forums provides an ability/temptation to discuss or hint at material items that have yet to be disclosed in order to steer investors towards a more bullish stance.

2] Identity Crisis. Now that the cat is out of the bag, what prevents any savvy investor from now pretending to be a CFO/CIO or other key member of the company and posting false information to any number of discussion forums around the web?

3] Trust. Why would any CEO need to anonymously post information to stock discussion forums about his company? What is he able to accomplish indirectly that he can’t accomplish directly? Is the company’s message so weak on its merits that a CEO has to resort to such tactics?

If you aren’t concerned because you believe investors don’t take message boards seriously, here is a link to 3 recent responses of more than 750 investors that clearly demonstrates reliance upon them for information:

At the end of the day, we can all agree on one thing – CEO’s posting anonymously to stock discussion forums provides neither the company, nor investors with anything positive.

On the other hand, CEO’s using blogs or official discussion forums for the purposes of broader communications with investors should be applauded and encouraged.

Regards,
George