Andrea Toochin
Business, work, and the path to and through the MBA.
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I didn’t try to buy LinkedIn shares and I don’t want Groupon stock if the company proceeds with an IPO. I’m not going to tell you about P/E and other valuation stats. I’m hoping to learn how to do that in time, as I’m attending Babson’s Evening MBA program. For now, I choose stocks based on their revenue stream(s) and potential to consistently lure American consumers.
My experience with Groupon was limited but for a business my guess is it’s sort of like getting featured on Oprah’s “list” but minus all the real sales. You get that flood of business except the income doesn’t cover all of your costs. You’re scrambling to accommodate all the buyers and then because of the number of Groupons sold, you end up having to extend the expiration date. More appointments filled at a loss…

Ultimately I think Groupon is a great idea but with competition growing, I think they need more “deals.” The AP video has Founder Andrew Mason saying that the solution to overselling and overwhelming businesses using Groupon, which can then lead to sub-par ratings on sites like Yelp, is their planned neighborhood rollout, which would limit the number of people seeing specific deals.
As for LinkedIn, social media is a necessary evil but its ROI is very hard to track. Where is Twitter storing the data? Their site often crashes and they are likely losing data to all the third-party companies that created free web-based Twitter management systems, such as CoTweet and TweetDeck. Following my recent Babson class, I now know these are data companies not just software companies. I guess I should ask, given my recent OB & IT class, how LinkedIn and Groupon are gathering user data and how they plan to profit from that data in the future?
I’ll close with this. When discussing gaming and social media, one of my professors, Bala Iyer, said this of Zynga (Farmville) : it’s an “analytics company manifesting as a gaming product.”