edgeio.gifEdgeio, a Menlo Park start-up trying to redefine the way people list classifieds, has raised $5 million in a first round of venture capital, and may raise more. Here is the release.

The round was led by Intel Capital and included an investment from Transcosmos.

The idea behind Edgeio is audacious because it seeks to do an end-run around the incumbents like Craigslist and others, by letting people bypass them entirely.

But in a notable development, some of big players — eBay, Cafepress, and Amazon — are agreeing to play along and are sending their listings to Edgeio to make sure they are included there. Edgeo says it is compatible with these services because it only lists a small excerpt of their classifieds, and users clicking on them will be sent back to the originating site.

Now the question becomes whether Edgeio has folded its end-run strategy too early — agreeing to play with the big boys, and thereby allowing them to co-opt Edgeio by keeping their users to themselves. But Edgeio is betting that becoming a “meta” classifieds site will make it a superior search engine in the long term.

Here’s how Edgeio works: It lets people, from the home owner listing their home, to a car owner selling their car, to post their listings on whatever Web site they want — their own blog, for example — and Edgeio then goes out to find it and lists it at its own site automatically.

It can do this only if people tag their classified listings with the word “listing.” Edgeio will then add it to its database. If you’ve added other tags for the item (e.g., “San Francisco” and “Porsche”) these give Edgeio a way of classifying the ad in the appropriate category on Edgeio’s site. Directions are on the Edgeio site.

We first wrote about Edgeio here.

We just talked with Keith Teare, chief executive, after testing the site. We found the interface experience somewhat clunky, in part because the home-page is still focused on attracting people to list their classifieds there. The site will soon cater more closely to people searching for goods, Teare said, something he agrees has been neglected.

One notable development is that Edgeio has moved up in the organic search results at Google. So if you type in “2007 autos,” Edgeio has the third entry in the results. If you click on the link, Edgeio will take you to the page with its 2007 autos listings.

If you specify a city or zip code, Edgeio will show you the 2007 autos for that region. If there are none, it will show you those closest to your region.

This has opened opportunities for advertising revenue for Edgeio, since some local advertisers will advertise on these pages. So far, it has Google ads. (Below is a partial screenshot of Edgeio’s page for autos in Fremont, Ca).

Now that Edgeio is working with eBay, Amazon and CafePress, it will get paid a referral fee if the traffic it redirects back to those sites’ classifieds ends up in a sale, Teare said.

Teare is also developing a way to help blogs or other focused sites to create their own marketplaces, he said. A blog focused on BMWs, for example, could draw on Edgieo to list BMWs and other BMW components, and earn a cut in revenue on any sale.

Edgeio has launched a Chinese site, and filed a patent for its technology, Teare said.

More than 3000 publishers have uploaded their listings to Edgeio, he said. Since launching six months ago, he says Edgeio has more than 100 million listings from more than 14,000 cities in 130 countries.

The Chinese version of the site is named site named mulu100.com (which in Chinese means catalog of catalogs).

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  1. Keith Teare’s Weblog » edgeio secures $5m series A financing said:

    [...] Rob Hof has covered the news here. Techmeme here And Venturebeat here [...]

  2. Edgio Gets $5 Million in VC Money « Screenwerk said:

    [...] VentureBeat’s Matt Marshall covers the site and the funding. Here’s the press release (pdf). Edgio is a global classifieds site in the “Web 2.0″ mold. Here’s my first pre-launch posting on the company when I was still with The Kelsey Group. [...]

  3. Edgeio Raises $5 Million For Craigslist Competitor - Mashable! said:

    [...] Like Flock, the company began at the top of the hype curve, and seemed to tumble from that lofty position over the first few months. But now it seems they’re making some real headway, with eBay, Cafepress, and Amazon agreeing to have their listings included: this always seemed like a more solid business plan that aggregating blog entries, and perhaps the “listing” tag served more as a way to get bloggers talking than as a core strategy. Another major problem in the early days was that Edgeio had thought deeply about the experience for the bloggers publishing to the site, and about all the content they could aggregate from other sites, but not so much about making a great experience: in other words, it’s useless having more listings than everyone else if no one actually goes there to search for stuff. According to VentureBeat, they’re now working on that element. [...]

  4. VentureBeat Wire » Edgeio gets $5 million to expand Web 2.0 classifieds site said:

    [...] See our story here. VentureBeat Community [...]

  5. Techcrunch » Blog Archive » Edgeio Closes $5 Million Series A Financing said:

    [...] I won’t say much more here due to the conflict of interest (I remain on the board of directors of edgeio and am a stockholder). For other coverage, see BusinessWeek, VentureBeat, and Greg Sterling. I’ll add more links here as additional coverage comes in. No Tags [...]

  6. edgeio corporation » Thanks for the coverage said:

    [...] Matt Marshall of Venturebeat Rob Hof of Businessweek Pete Cashmore of Mashable Greg Sterling Techmeme Mike at TechCrunch [...]

  7. TechCrunch Japanese アーカイブ » Edgeio、シリーズAで$5M(500万ドル)を調達 said:

    [...] 利益のコンフリクトが絡むことなので詳細はご報告できないが(私自身はこれまで通りedgeio取締役兼株主)、この件についてはBusinessWeek、VentureBeat、Greg Sterlingなどの関連記事を参照されたい。新たな報道が入り次第、以下にリンクを追加していくつもりだ。2月のedgeioローンチに関するエントリはこちら。 [...]

  8. Edgeio Raises $5 Million | The Last Podcast said:

    [...] Reports can be found here, here and here. Only a short note on TechCrunch, of course - Mike Arrington runs edgeio after all. [...]

  9. Edgeio — not an eBay killer after all » Mathew Ingram: mathewingram.com/work said:

    [...] with del.icio.us   |   Email this entry   |   TrackBack URI   |   Digg it   |   Track with co.mments   |     |   Cosmos Click here forcopyright permissions! Copyright 2006 Mathew Ingram [...]

  10. Edgeio Closes $5 Million Series A Financing » JenIT said:

    [...] I won’t say much more here due to the conflict of interest (I remain on the board of directors of edgeio and am a stockholder). For other coverage, see BusinessWeek, VentureBeat, and Greg Sterling. I’ll add more links here as additional coverage comes in. [...]

  11. VentureBeat » Edgeio buys its way to online real estate search said:

    [...] We last wrote about Edgeio here. Tagged ARES, edgeio, deal VentureBeat Community [...]

  12. VentureBeat » Edgeio, after trying bold new ad model, to auction assets. said:

    [...] its network would showcase those ad that were relevant to their own site. (See our early coverage here and here). Edgeio also listed the ads on its own site, so that people could search for them. [...]

7 Comments

  1. John Rewlet said:

    this is a joke what edgeio is doing. I understand why Sequoa and others smart VCs never invested there money in.

    Ok OK its fine to aggregate ads on one page but you dont owe the users. Instead you place some adds and earn money. Where is a innovative service here…

    Web 2.0 stop using that word, it doesnt exist. Youtube was not web 2.0 it fulfilled the need making sure that average users spend 10 mins gootubing!

  2. John Furrier said:

    I’m on the road today but wanted to congratulate Keith Teare and Mike Arrington. In early 2005 Keith founded the company with Mike in the garage at his house in Palo Alto.

    Congrats guys.

  3. tomo said:

    why is everyone so down on Edgeio? I have used the site and while it is super slow, I found it useful. It should only get more useful as it’s audience and membership grows. Matt, you refer to the idea as audacious and i’m not quite sure why… CL is obviously succesful and new companies will try to do whatever it takes to compete against them and other leaders in any market. Some companies do it via price and others get creative or try to…

    John R, while you may feel ’smart money’ didn’t invest, let me assure you that not every investment by Sequoia is a 100 bagger and Intel, ebay, amazon and cafepress appear to see some value in investing and partnering which certainly gives some cred to their model/strategy.

    FWIW, CL has a finite # of markets it serves while Edgeio doesn’t have to create unique sites at all, it appears to be done on the based on the users selected inputs.

    Having said that, hopefully they’ll use some of the money they raised to beef up the infrastrucutre because it is really slow…..

  4. F Ho said:

    “Mulu” means “table of contents” in normal usage.

  5. May 11th, 2007
    8:25 pm

    CozyBug.com said:

    Check this out!!!
    Local Online Flea Market and Garage Sale!
    “Catch the Bug”
    CozyBug.com brings buyers and sellers together in a local online market for the purpose of conducting locally owned and advertised, safe, shipping-free transactions. Cozybug.com was specifically created to address the challenges produced in the online sale and purchase of items that are large, heavy, expensive and difficult to ship over long distances such as furniture, appliances, used vehicles such as cars, boats and bicycles; it is also ideal and solves the problem for shoppers that prefer to examine an item in person locally in addition to viewing it online.

    Sellers with many items to sell can create their own personal storefront, and have the option to advertise their storefronts throughout the site, an ideal feature for antique stores, second-hand furniture stores, local car dealerships or flea market vendors looking to increase local foot traffic.

  6. May 27th, 2007
    11:05 am

    David Cantu said:

    eBay not enough? Here comes CozyBug
    Wednesday, May 23 2007 | Puget Sound tech news | Permalink
    Hard to believe that there’s room in the online flea market business for another vendor other than the megalithic eBay, but Issaquah-based iCantu Technologies launched CozyBug earlier this month. It’s differentiation is that it localizes online shopping to eliminate shipping charges – kind of a mashup of the “for sale” category on Craigslist within a more trusted setting. It’ll be interesting to see how the company plans to get buyers and sellers to utilize this site – it’ll be critical to its success.

    -posted by Rachel

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