From Dime-Co.Com
There's money to be made by investing in online real estate
By BRAD SPIRRISON
Feb 19, 2007 - 5:39:01 AM
The mayor of
Chicago is a
31-year-old microbiologist who lives in
Canada and probably could not tell
a political machine from a soda machine. He does collect taxes, however, and
would flip the
Second
City for the right price.
So who does this guy think he is, Richard M. Daley? "I guess he's someone
in
Chicago?"
said Andy Jonson, who holds the deed to the City That Works within new online
social networking site
Weblo.com
. "I'm just learning about
this stuff."
Launched last October by an Internet gaming entrepreneur and funded to the
tune of $2.6 million, Montreal-based Weblo is part MySpace, part Second Life
and perhaps part tulip craze. The company makes money by selling virtual plots
of land -- including municipalities, landmarks and ordinary addresses -- to
willing buyers who purchase the intellectual property for reasons both
speculative and nostalgic. Andy Jonson paid nearly $150 for
Chicago,
but has since earned a few pennies a day while collecting taxes from the
property owners who acquired virtual rights to the
Sears
Tower,
Wrigley Field and other local institutions. He also gets a cut of any ad
revenue circulated through his cities, which include
San
Francisco,
London and
Paris.
"I'm sort of playing it like any other investment," he said.
"I've managed to resell some properties, and so far this is doing better
than my mutual funds."
According to sales data supplied by the company, Weblo property owners are
making tangible profits from their virtual assets. The state of
California sold for
$53,000 after it was initially purchased from Weblo for approximately $37,000
only months earlier.
Illinois
is listed for more than $17,000. As of Jan. 31, more than 5,200 cities have
been purchased worldwide.
Weblo founder and CEO Rocky Mizra said that nearly a decade ago he conceived
the idea of assigning real ownership to virtual properties that are based on
actual addresses. Until recently, however, Mizra focused on Web site
consulting, buying and selling domain names, and running a gambling business at
iBetX.com. As sites like MySpace and Facebook started turning heads, Mizra
contemplated how social networks with exorbitant traffic could more efficiently
make money from and for their members.
"I'm used to having a revenue model right from the onset," said
Mizra, 34. "Until now, the only thing you can accumulate on social
networking is fame. Where Weblo comes in is the commerce part of it."
Weblo's investors include former MySpace Chairman Richard Rosenblatt and
Fred Harmon, a managing partner with
Silicon Valley
venture firm Oak Investment Partners.
Mizra said the company employs approximately 120 developers in
India and
Pakistan to codify his bizarro
reality as well as other ventures. In addition to loading up on real estate,
Weblo members can purchase rights to celebrities ranging from Brian Urlacher to
Jennifer Lopez. They can also create their own profiles.
While sites such as Weblo and Second Life, which now has more than 3.6
million members, are not my cup of tea, the economies that develop within them
warrant attention. Over one 24-hour period last week, more than $1 million was
generated through Second Life. On Weblo, in addition to resale opportunities,
members are financially motivated through advertising commissions to their
expand networks and presence on the site.
"If you have 10,000 friends [on your profiles], then money is being
made, and you take a cut of it," Mizra said.
For more details visit:
http://www.weblo.com/property/
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