DISQUS

VentureBeat: Jangl’s calls — free, international and anonymous

  • tim · 2 years ago
    Hi Matt --

    Thanks for the note here. Two quick things: regarding IM, we're working to have that feature turned on shortly. So right now, we can get a Jangl voicemail to anyone who has an email address; soon, we'll be able to do the same if you simply know their IM name. Eventually, it will work with lots of different web identifiers -- MySpace names, etc.

    Second, you're right in saying we're in customer acquisition mode right now. We could turn on any of these revenue features -- and in fact, we will in the near future -- but right now, we're focused simply of giving consumers a taste of what they can do, and in ensuring that the service is at its very best.

    In fact, too, Jangl's generating revenue with Match.com, as we power its MatchTalk feature, which lets its members talk on their real phones, without sharing their number. We're continuing to forge similar paying relationships with other communities and social networks, some of which will be branded and some of which will be white-labeled -- but that revenue stream will continue to grow, as well.

    Thanks again.

    tim
  • Daniel Feder · 2 years ago
    How does this compare with Jaxtr?
  • Michael Cerda · 2 years ago
    Jaxtr is a widget attempting to encapsulate Snapvine + Jajah + Jangl, although they are focused primarily on long distance arbitrage. Most of their 25,000 or so customers are long distance users from India and Israel (indicative of the long distance use case).

    Jangl is a destination site for you to call anyone (new), plus a widget for privacy, voice mail, text, and a lot more on the management & control side. The company has over a half million users and several major partnerships (and more coming).
  • Touraj Parang · 2 years ago
    Excellent question Daniel!

    As Michael points out, jaxtr is a more comprehensive solution for your communications needs than the point solutions provided by many other players in this market. We surpassed 100,000 users last week, and happy to report that all these users were organically generated (i.e., each user brought others in). Our users love our service, because our service is intuitive, easy and provides free global calling in addition to the essential call control and privacy features needed so that they don't have to worry about unwanted calls from telemarketers and spammers at random hours once they put jaxtr on their blog, profile, email, IM, etc.

    Another important differentiator between jaxtr and others is our philosophy about consumer choice. We are a service that our users CHOOSE and SHAPE, rather than forced on them through partnerships. Many users on Facebook, Orkut, MySpace, and other social networking sites have currently posted the jaxtr widget to their profile and are very happy with it. We believe in free global communications and consumer choice. When a service relies on partnerships for adoption, imho, it is an indication of a lack of grass roots consumer acceptance of that service in the highly viral web 2.0 world.
  • SG · 2 years ago
    IMHO both the models have a huge question mark related to revenues. These free calling features automagically turning into revenue generating models have not worked in the past. Getting users to play with free minutes is one thing, comverting these to paying customers is a completely different play.

    SG
  • srinivas · 2 years ago
    i want use free calls service
  • Michael Cerda · 2 years ago
    Well...Jangl was at revenue last January actually...thru partnerships. It's also a great way to build scale and quality into the operation. In parallel, Jangl is on its 6th consumer beta, iterating the innovation each time. We hope to find more success iterating and giving consumers what they want, rather than ripping off other companies.