Home Sitemap All news Inside SL Opinions Finance News feeds Contact
RSS Feed For All Articles
 
Advertisement


Advertisement
Home arrow Opinions
Opinions
A Second Chance

User Rating: / 1

Arbitrage Wise's Blog
Written by Arbitrage Wise   
Monday, 09 July 2007
Sponsored by:

ImageMy girlfriend is a Myspace addict.  Not a day goes by that she does not get on.  All of my friends are Myspace fanatics.  Yet, not a single one of them are on Second Life.  A few have tried and they all got bored because, quote "There's nothing to do on there."  My rebuttal to them, “If you didn't have any friends on Myspace, what would you do on there?  Because whatever you do on myspace, you can do the same in Second Life, and more.”

What people do not see in Second Life, or any virtual worlds for that matter, is that it most represents the beginning of a new form of social network.  Why have a page on Myspace or when you can own a house on Second Life?  Why post pictures of yourself or your friends on Facebook when you can frame them up in your living room.  Why post messages on boards when you your friends can congregate at one location and talk amongst each other?  One of the reasons not many people get on SL is because they do not have the hardware to support the program.  Once the hardware starts catching up with the software, I have no doubt that my network will grow to include more of my Real Life friends.

But it doesn't end there.  Second Life takes people beyond their circle of friends and beseeches them to extend their network to strangers.  It eliminates some of the negative attributes that undoubtedly constitute people's social behaviors and perception, be it consciously or not.  At one point or another in our lives, we all have made premature judgments on people we don't know based on insignificant factors such as race, gender, wealth, or disabilities only to find out that we were dead wrong about them.  But not in Second Life.  There is no such thing as racism in SL.  You can't really be prejudice against a fire-breathing dragon.  When a customer talks with or contacts us about a problem, we don't make any premature judgments based on how much they have with us or how they look.  Everyone at our bank gets the same treatment, whether they have 100L or 1,000,000L.  

We all start with a clean slate.  Everyone can befriend strangers without sub-consciously worrying about their shortcomings.  How we are perceived by others is based on who we are, not what we are.  That saying might be a cliché, but nowhere does that hold true to its form more than in Second Life.  If you lack friends in Second Life, it is not because you lack the material wealth or desired physical attributes, but it's probably because you lack the inner characteristics required to be a friend.  In that essence, Second Life really does offer what everyone wants:  a Second Chance.

 

-Arbitrage Wise

 
Comment on Exchange Blog

User Rating: / 2

Arbitrage Wise's Blog
Written by Arbitrage Wise   
Friday, 29 June 2007
Sponsored by:

Image

Robert Bloomfield aka Beyers Sellers (A Professor at Cornell) recently wrote a blog "What in the world is a Fictional Securities Exchange? " and asked me to comment on it.  Here is my comment:

While I think that the SL Exchanges should be a means to help raise capital, I do not see that as the primary goals of the current exchanges. As Robert pointed out, the fact that the listed companies own close to 90% of the businesses offers little value to the investors. What I see these exchanges doing is a providing a means to create artificial value for the owners.

For example, Company A wants to go 'public' and issues 1mil shares in IPO at 1 Linden per share, while having 10mil shares outstanding. Odds are, the IPO will be successful because of most investors' lack of due diligence in examining the IPO. They simply want to put down a small risk to see if it will pay off, and possibly just have some fun trying their hands in the stock market. If the IPO is successful, this company can now claim they have a market value of 10mil Lindens. But what is there to support this value?

Now, assuming that the business does have a sound model and someone is interested in buying them out. Does Company A really expect that the person to pay the current market price where the value was artificially created overnight? Let's not forget to add in the fact that there is very little liquidity in these markets, so the owner of Company A can simply go out to the market and buy more shares himself to further inflate the value. So where does it stop?

While the idea of an exchange can be noble, one must first examine how the exchange operates and ask, what is the intent of the exchange? Who are they looking after, the companies or the investors? Are their policies set to help incubate developing businesses that have favorable value propositions, or are they merely colluding with businesses to make money for the owners?

I would like to end this comment with one suggestion to the exchanges: Your customers are the investors, not the companies.

 
Think Like an Entreprenuer

User Rating: / 1

Arbitrage Wise's Blog
Written by Arbitrage Wise   
Tuesday, 26 June 2007
Sponsored by:

ImageAre you business minded?  I've recently read an article an enlightening article about entreprenuers on Strategy+Business.  

Some of the things it highlights are:

1) A lively stock market, in itself, is perhaps the first ingredient an emrging nation needs to create a proporeous, self-sufficient economy, because entreprenuers need investors to back their risky ventures
2) Entreprenuers "succeed as agile seekers looking for many different ways to identify and capture opportunity."
3) Entrepreneurs are "Capturers of Opportunities"
4) Individuals with more varied backgrounds were more likely to become entreprenuers
5) The economy as a whole becomes more dynamic when entreprenuers "act on the 'Eureka!' moments that signal a new idea.
6) A good life is one with a "career of challenges and personal development."

Even though these concepts apply to everyday real life people, it's impact should be more pertinent in Second Life.  With Second Life still in what I believe is it's infant stages, there are so many more opportunities for entreprenuers to develop all kinds of businesses within the virtual world.  But before anyone can be an entreprenuer, he first has to think like one.  

 

-Arbitrage Wise 

 
A Great Equalizer

User Rating: / 1

Arbitrage Wise's Blog
Written by Arbitrage Wise   
Saturday, 23 June 2007
Sponsored by:

Image In Second Life, as in Real Life, there are always 2 kinds of people: the workers, and the owners.  However, what makes SL so different from RL is the ease of transition from being just a worker to the owner.  Your ability to start a business in SL is not handicapped by the same problems that you may face in the real world.

How successful you are is not largely dependent on how deep your wallet is or who you know, but rather by what you know and what you can do.  Basically, it’s up to you how successful you are.  Businesses in Second Life are not so much limited by capital.  There are no expensive manufacturing processes to develop nor do you need an intricate supplier and distribution channel.  Price competition as we know it is no longer a determining factor in who is or is not successful.

What make you successful in SL are your ingenuity and your ability to create a product that has values to others.  Values are no longer determined by the cost of the item, but more by it's looks and functionality.  Let’s take for example the clothing industry.  A person looking to start a clothing line or store no longer faces material quality problems, internal logistics problems, or distribution channels problem that he/she may face in RL.  There are no high startup costs.  You simply sit down on your computer, design the clothes, and sell it, be that you do have to put in some marketing efforts.  But what ultimately determines your success is based on your creations and your ideas, not so much by outside forces.  In that sense, Second Life (or virtual reality for that matter), is truly a great equalizer. 

-Arbitrage Wise

 
Why Buy SLReports?

User Rating: / 1

Arbitrage Wise's Blog
Written by Arbitrage Wise   
Thursday, 21 June 2007
Sponsored by:

ImageIt seems like I have been having a writer's block lately.  I just can't seem to string together a collective thought to put something down on 'paper'.  Hopefully, this first Opinion of many will help jump start my brain.  For those that have been reading my blog, I will now move it to the Opinion section of SLR.

Some of you may wonder why I would buy SLReports.  A short and direct answer would be diversification to protect our customers.  My goal is no longer to simply run a bank or a financial business.  I want to have my hands in as many business sectors as possible.  SL is still a micro-economy where the current barrier to entry in a business is very low, so now is the time to take advantage of it before it becomes higher.  In my previous blog, I've mentioned that I am interested in getting into the advertising side of SL.  Why?  Because there are no dominant players yet, and we all know that the capitalistic world we live in now revolves around commercialization.  We all know that advertising is still in its infant stages in SL.  Look around, there are no primary medium for corporate advertising yet.  No one has presented Main-Stream media an option that is appealing to them.  We all know how everyone feels about these 'ad parcels' that I hear about... not a very appeasing way to satisfy the appetites of mainstream media.

But look again, and focus hard on our ATM's.  You will see that we are trying to develop what I would consider the first Grid-Wide advertising network.  Our ATM's have a farther reach and grab more user attention than most sparsely placed ad boards out there.  So now that we have our foot in the advertising business, the next logical step would be to develop some form of synergy with the web.  That's where SLR comes in.  By having SLR, we can create a package that will be more appealing to potential customers than either of the ad mediums alone.  

Now let's take this thought and see how we can apply it to create a profit.  This is just an example, but let's take this upcoming election.  We have seen that John Edwards and some other politicians have hosted events in SL.  Let's say a politician wants to have an event and needs a way to promote it to attract visitors to their event?  I would say with confidence that given the 14,000+ group members, the exposure they get on SLReports.net, and the immediate ads they can have on our ATM that we can deliver the traffic that they need at their event, don't you?  Now the question is, what will it cost them?

 

Until next time, may your Second Life be as prosperous as your First Life.

 

-Arbitrage Wise 

 
<< Start < Prev 11 12 13 14 Next > End >>

Results 79 - 83 of 83







Lost Password?
No account yet? Register
Advertisement