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I've started this article about ten times.
I know what I want to say, but want to insure that my
intent is clear to readers. I'm writing this article
not with the intent to hurt Tucows, but with the intent
to help small developers.
Unfair Competition & Abuse of
Power
by NotePage,
Inc.
Last summer, rumors were abound that an
employee of Tucows was using Tucows statistical information
in order to determine which products produced the highest
return on investment, with the intent to clone them
and create competitive products. While not illegal,
it is definitely questionable from an ethical standpoint.
No real proof existed, so what can be said. It was nothing
more than a rumor.
An article cannot be written based on
rumors. What facts do we know? According to the State
of Michigan corporate records Alto Software, Inc. is
owned by a Tucows employee. Alto Software's two products
Alto Block All and Alto Memory Booster were posted on
Tucows. Both products have high download counts and
held top download positions from November 2003 to February
2004. In order for Alto Software to maintain top positions
throughout the holiday season they would had to have
spent thousands of dollars in advertising dollars.
Abuse of Power
Abuse of power sounds pretty absolute, unfortunately
that line isn't as clear as one would think. It appears
that the ad spots held by Alto Software were provided
free of charge. Free advertising, while possibly an
employment perk, and not of itself bad, resulted in
the cost per click to increase significantly for other
developers in those categories. In order for Alto Software
to maintain their top position, the cost per click was
raised from $ .04 per click to more than $ .40 per click
from November to January. Alto Software increased the
cost per click, in order to maintain the top position,
but were never required to pay for the clicks. This
forced other developers wishing to remain in a top listing
to pay significantly more for each click. The handful
of developers bidding on keywords and categories were
forced to spend significantly more money each month,
in order to maintain their position and compete against
Alto Software's products.
A software promotion company (softwarepromoting.com)
that appears to be a subdivision of Alto Software, guaranteed
listings on Tucows.com. Softwarepromoting.com's website
even went so far to say, that software promoted using
their services was exempt from the Tucows removal process.
Competing submission services were unable to provide
these guarantees. The legitimacy of Alto's promotion
service also requires close scrutiny.
Alto Software clearly had an unfair advantage
over their competitors. It would appear that a Tucows
employee personally profited from their position at
Tucows. There is a fine line between breaking ethical
rules and using your unique position to make a profit.
It appears that line was clearly crossed.
Lessons Learned
Developers need to track their advertising dollars and
measure their return on investments. They should be
aware of any rapid increases in spending. Developers,
need to know who their competitors are.
The developers affected by this are in
a very narrow market but it really could have happened
to anyone.
Challenge
Apparently the upper-management of Tucows was unaware
of what was occurring, while ignorance is not an excuse,
it appears that Tucows has taken the first steps to
resolve the problem. The employee is no longer employed
by Tucows. As one of the developers I spoke to said
"Tucows is bending over backwards to make things
right." I personally hope that this is the case.
I encourage Tucows to make an effort to reach out to
all the developers that were effected, whether they
are aware of the problem or not. The loss suffered by
these developers is difficult to measure, not only did
they pay excessive amounts for advertising, but they
also lost a portion of sales to a competitor with an
unfair advantage, during the holiday season.
Here is my challenge to Tucows, reachout
to the smaller developers as well as those with deep
pockets and make things right! The second part of the
challenge is to put strict policies in place to prevent
this from occurring the future.
The challenge to developers is to stay
alert, and be aware that this can happen. There are
a number of download sites owned by developers, the
disclosure is usually obvious, developers need to pay
attention. Spending advertising dollars on a competitor's
site is probably not a good business decision. Clearly
Tucows is held to a higher standard because of its stature
in the industry. The fact that Tucows is a publicly
traded company only emphasizes their accountability.
It was not to Tucows benefit, for this to occur and
it is likely that they will be taking radical steps
to ensure that it does not happen again. If handled
correctly, Tucows may become one of the safer places
to advertise in the future.
About the Author:
Sharon Housley manages marketing for NotePage, Inc.
http://www.notepage.net
a company specializing in alphanumeric paging, SMS and
wireless messaging software solutions. Other sites by
Sharon can be found at http://www.softwaremarketingresource.com
, and http://www.small-business-software.net
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