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Smashbuys: Popurls for Stuff

Written by Frederic Lardinois / June 27, 2008 4:49 PM / 6 Comments

smashbuys-logo.png

Some ideas are either so good (or so easy to copy), that it's only a matter of time before they have been cloned so many time that they become cliché. Popurls was exactly such an idea - a simple web site that aggregates headlines from various Web 2.0 blogs and social media sites.

The latest Popurls clone is Smashbuys: a site that displays the top sellers in various categories at some of the major online retailers, including Amazon, Newegg, and iTunes.

If Smashbuys were only a Popurls clone, though, it would hardly be worth writing about here. However, Smashbuys does put an interesting twist on Popurls - it adds a second layer of information on top of the simple display of top 10 lists. Smashbuys keeps track of what items are most popular among its users and displays that information right next to the individual product. Thanks to this, we now know that Coldplay's 'Viva La Vida' is the top album on iTunes, but Smashbuy's users were far more interested in Disney's 'Camp Rock.'

smashbuys.png

Smashbuys' business model seems quite simple: affiliate marketing. While Smashbuys doesn't seem to disclose this anywhere on the site, every link to the sellers' sites has an affiliate code in it.

Overall, Smashbuys puts an interesting spin on the Popurls model. The top 10 lists will probably work best for for books, music, and movie tickets, but I'm not sure how many people make their electronics buying decisions this way.

Comments

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  1. We started something similar at DealArmy.com except we don't get kick backs (via affiliate codes)...we just want to help regular people find great deals.

    Posted by: DealArmy | June 27, 2008 6:06 PM



  2. The biggest reason that services like this will win, is that they're aggregative in nature. That is they make life easier for their users by aggregating data from disparate sources. It's something I tend to wax poetic about but it's really the way of the future. At the end of the day truly novel ideas are getting fewer and farther between - aggregating data from elsewhere however is easy to conceive (if sometime tricky to execute)

    Posted by: Ben Kepes | June 27, 2008 6:16 PM



  3. The biggest reason that services like this will win, is that they're aggregative in nature. That is they make life easier for their users by aggregating data from disparate sources. It's something I tend to wax poetic about but it's really the way of the future. At the end of the day truly novel ideas are getting fewer and farther between - aggregating data from elsewhere however is easy to conceive (if sometime tricky to execute)

    Posted by: Ben Kepes Posted on FriendFeed   | June 27, 2008 6:18 PM



  4. i commend those guys who makes those sites, they are really very innovative in nature.

    Posted by: arthritistreatment> | June 27, 2008 11:29 PM



  5. When i first landed on their site it look cramped, too much info and it's kinda confusing, i'm not sure if that the site i will be interested to stay and read.


    Nat
    www.workersinc.com

    Posted by: Nathaniel | June 29, 2008 6:05 PM



  6. This is not newsworthy.

    Posted by: Joseph | June 30, 2008 8:51 PM




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