Look - the next 10 years is all about card-circulators. It's actually a combination of two things: Cards, which present business metadata such as contact info and personalized notes, and a circulator, which efficiently organizes and presents the best contact for any particular job<i>. We're branding it Rolodex, but really, there is a whole industry ready to break the mold of traditional B2B.<p></i> the users will need to adjust to new ways of organizing and sorting, but some power users already have proven the new model.
The article is from 3 years ago.<p>It might be useful to know that since then, Honeybook raised a series C ($14M, compared to a $22M B round) in June 2016 [0].<p>I see this as not necessarily a good sign of the health of the company (no rounds for 2 years, and a smaller C round), but that's only a superficial opinion of course.<p>This is not to discredit NFX's article or thesis, but just an FYI on the specific company mentioned in the article.<p>[0]: <a href="https://www.crunchbase.com/organization/honeybook#section-funding-rounds" rel="nofollow">https://www.crunchbase.com/organization/honeybook#section-fu...</a>
Mods - please update title to show that this is from 2015.<p>Author says Honeybook Series B was "last month" - it was Mar 2015 <a href="https://www.crunchbase.com/organization/honeybook" rel="nofollow">https://www.crunchbase.com/organization/honeybook</a>
I think there's a lot of potential in targeting markets where service providers are not commodities, but the higher value and subjectivity of the services they provide creates a greater challenge. I think getting clients and service providers to trust these new market networks will be much more difficult than it is to trust the Ubers/Lyfts because of the higher value. (I think AirBnB is actually pretty close to a market-network.)
Instead of having a bunch of proprietary, centralized markets for each service, why not create an open source, p2p protocol for trade and let anyone offer anything they want?<p>Rhetorical question. It's called OpenBazaar and it's already in use around the world. I work on it and I hope the original article is correct that there's tremendous value in market networks.
I’m trying to differentiate “market network” from “marketplace” and I’m not clear that the distinction is adjacent but instead the latter is a type of the former.<p>The question then becomes: if presenting on this to an investor, how would another investor defend the difference as being more than just a repackaged term?
There’s a lot that’s missing on the thesis that needs to be explored.<p>1) How repeatable is a market-network that the workflow can be standardized?<p>2) For repeat providers, how can you provide more value to stay than to disintermediate? Note by the nature of the examples these are all high value situations.<p>3) An argument why these work flows and discovery tools are any better than Google + email + a document suite<p>I like where it’s headed but we need to drill down a few more levels to understand value and pain points.
LMAO this is such a stretch, there will be no one stop "market-network", markets will exist alongside markets like they always have, nothing new here and why in the world would anyone invest in such a thing.