Office Spaces for Digital Nomads

Dell’s excellent Digital Nomads blog has inspired a few of my friends. Clearly, working on the road is no longer the niche interest it once was.

Earlier this year, I wrote about my on the road workspace. A few weeks later, I discovered The Business Class, a network of flexible workspaces from Brazil to Berlin.

I signed up at the Berlin branch while out for the summer, and thought it’d be interesting to speak to the man responsible, Manu Kumar.



QN: Can you introduce TheBusinessClass.Net in one sentence?

MK: BCN connects real people in real places — allowing freelancers from all over the world to live the freedom of working with their PCs, barefoot in the 21st century.

QN: How is BCN different from other shared offices?

MK: I don’t try to set up just offices – I call BCN locations “ports” each location also has a “agent”…

On request the Port-Agent can provide info about business contacts, tips and tricks for the respective place, the surroundings, and its culture. BCN port managers also act as native speaking business guides.

BCN supplies a platform for freelancers which has only been available to employees of large international companies till now. You have an address from where you can discover the new city and also find new clients – and most importantly: you have local people working beside you. People you can ask and connect with … a kind of “professionalized” friendship network.

QN: What gave you the idea for the BCN?

MK: Over the years I’ve worked all over Europe, Japan and China. It was always easy finding a place – from sofa surfing to five star hotels, but finding an temporary office and connecting with like minded folk was nearly impossible.

Now I am building up that kind of “office” – with the essential infrastructure, connections and people at these locations . BCN is my answer for the growing number of freelancer traveling the world while working…

QN: Where are your locations across the world?

MK: We have two types of locations: “Drop In Offices” – Urban locations, to work from or establish new business contacts, while our “Drop Out Offices” are exotic locations where freelancers can withdraw, relax or work intensely. Presently you can find BCN in these places:

Our first “Drop In Office” is my former studio located in Berlin-Kreuzberg/Germany; currently one of the culturally most active quarters in Berlin.

Our Desert Office is in the Mojave-Desert (just one hour drive from LA/USA). “Quintal do Mar” – our Island Office – is located on a tropical Island in Brazil, right at the beach, but just ten miles away from a mayor city. “Ramsoft” is the software company in Bangalore/India that hosts our Outsource Office.

“The Grand Street Loft” – is our Loft Office located in New York/USA, and The Alps Office lies directly in the historic city centre of Graz/Austria.

QN: Which is your favourite location and why?

MK: Our next location! Seriously, each person and location that joined the BCN-network was a great experience for me to meet and get connected with to work together. All these partners became friends of mine! I am very exited about to whom and where it will takes us next time.

QN: You run the BCN as what you call a ‘fairchise’. Can you explain a little about that?

MK: Anybody having a suitable office location can apply to become a BCN-port.

We advertise your port on our website – in several languages. We manage the timetable, the booking, the banking … We set the whole system up for free – we are taking all risks, because if it doesn’t work you’ve got some advertisement for free.

QN: What next for TheBusinessClass.Net?

MK: At the moment I am talking to nice people in Cape Town/South Africa, Thailand and Brazil – but nothing fixed yet. (but if you have somebody, somewhere … please tell me, but the weird-the better!)

We are looking to have at least one BCN port every continent as soon as possible.

Soon our website will have a workspace that will be very helpful for freelancers. If you want to be updated, just log in as a member – and join BCN for free. All of its members can use the website to present themselves, or to look for and find business contacts.

Learn more at TheBusinessClass.net.

eBay Discovers Keyword Stuffing

eBay look

eBay have discovered good ol’ fashioned keyword stuffing. Surely some mistake?

For my non-SEO geek readers, keyword stuffing is a spammy old-school SEO trick.

It fell out of favour with most SEOs soon after the Declaration of American Independence.

Google’s webmaster guidelines say…

“Keyword stuffing” refers to the practice of loading a webpage with keywords in an attempt to manipulate a site’s ranking in Google’s search results. Filling pages with keywords results in a negative user experience, and can harm your site’s ranking… typically, these will be lists or paragraphs of keywords, often randomly repeated.

I usually avoid SEOmoz-style outing. But this is too funny not to flag up.
Here’s a screenshot:

Now in case you struggle to read 300+ words of paragraph-less 8 point text, this reads…

eBay’s Music category is the best place to buy or sell music from top artists across all music genres: rock, pop, R&B, rap, hip-hop, reggae, blues, classical music, country music, easy listening, adult contemporary, new age, heavy metal, Christian rock, folk music or children’s music. Whatever your tastes, eBay has it available new or used in every format: CD, cassette, Box-set, LP, record, vinyl record, single EP or super audio CD. eBay even offers music as digital downloads, meaning you can buy music in digital / MP3 format. Looking for today’s most popular music? eBay has great prices for Dave Matthews Band, Bruce Springsteen’s Devils & Dust, Coldplay, Systems of a Down, American Idol, Green Day, Audioslave, Toby Keith, Il Divo, Jack Johnson, Beck, Rob Thomas, Kem, Nine Inch Nails, Ryan Adams, Kelly Clarkson, Gwen Stefani, 50 Cent, The Game, Mariah Carey and others. Looking for the all time top selling albums? eBay has them new and used at the great prices: The Eagles Greatest Hits 1971-1975 (The Eagles), Thriller (Michael Jackson), The Wall (Pink Floyd), Led Zeppelin IV (Led Zeppelin), Billy Joel Greatest Hits Volumes I & II (Billy Joel), Rumours (Fleetwood Mac), Back in Black (AC/DC), The Beatles (The Beatles), Come on Over (Shania Twain), Boston (Boston), The Bodyguard (Whitney Houston), Cracked Rear View Mirror (Hootie & the Blowfish), Elton John Greatest Hits (Elton John), Hotel California (The Eagles), The Beatles 1967-1970 (The Beatles), No Fences (Garth Brooks), Jagged Little Pill (Alanis Morissette), Born in the USA (Bruce Springsteen), Physical Graffiti (Led Zeppelin), Dark Side of the Moon (Pink Floyd), Saturday Night Fever Soundtrack (Bee Gees), The Beatles 1962-1966 (The Beatles), Appetite for Destruction (Guns ‘N Roses), Garth Brooks Double Live (Garth Brooks), Supernatural (Santana), Backstreet Boys (Backstreet Boys), Ropin’ The Wind (Garth Brooks), Bat Out of Hell (Meat Loaf), and Purple Rain (Prince and the Revolution).

This should really help those all-important rankings on Altavista

Take a look for yourself, just above the footer on eBay’s catagory pages.

What’s the Conversion Rate for Spam Email?

“After 26 days, and almost 350 million e-mail messages, only 28 sales resulted,” wrote the researchers. The response rate for this campaign was less than 0.00001%. (Via BBC News)

That’s one sale for every 12.5m e-mails sent. A 2003 article in The Register put spam’s breakeven point at one in a milion emails, suggesting that either:

1. Spam operating costs have dropped by an order of magnitude in five years.

OR….

2. Berkeley/UCSD researchers are RUBBISH at pushing penis pills.

Either way, I recommend Conversion Rate Experts’ new report on how to improve conversion rate.

PubCon Drinking Game

Seriously, $240 for an afternoon’s internet access?

Dear reader, I write from San Francisco airport, where SFO business centre bills at $40/hour. I’m in the wrong racket.

But I’ve got a blog post to write pronto in response to CK’s ultimate PubCon 2007 roundup, and before I head to Yosemite for the weekend.

It’s no secret that most webmaster conferences are *cough* a little boozy. Plus they must hold PubCon in Vegas for a reason, right?

So forget my usual distaste for SEO biz tittle tattle. Here, in all its glory, is the one, the only PubCon drinking game.

Take one sip each time…

See you in Vegas!

SMX London: Buying Sites for SEO

SMX LondonI’m speaking at Search Marketing Expo (SMX) London tomorrow, Wednesday 5 November, on the topic of “Buying Sites for SEO”.

Dude, Where’s My Revenue Model?