Gateway to a vast array of online resources
Financial Times, London, December 02, 1998
The newcomer has already become the country's most visited
web site.
ntel, the world's largest semiconductor manufacturer, has been
notably absent from the list of US technology companies, including
other chipmakers such as Texas instruments and Motorola, that
have set up software development or design operations in India.
But, during a recent visit to India, Graig Barrett, Intel's new chief
executive agreed to make the group's first direct investment in
India - a small minority stake of about 10 per cent in a Mumbai
(Bombay) based Internet content start-up that plans to become
India's premier portal site.
Rediff was set up two and a half years ago by Ajit Balakrishnan.
'We want to be the ultimate portal site for Indians in India and
overseas, says Mr Balakrishnan, who has assembled a team,
including 15 journalists, to help turn his ambitions into reality.
The portal site, which has already become India's most visited web
site with more than 650,000 visitors a month, provides its own
news service, a free e-mail service and a home page creation
service which enables users to construct their own web homepages
without technical assistance.
Other services include an online job listing service, which now lists
more than 2,000 vacancies daily and which allows online
applications. It also provides a gateway to the vast information
resources now available on the web about India and is pioneering
consumer e-commerce with an expanding range of transactional
services.
These include an electronic music store featuring 40,000 titles, a
bookshop with 100,000 titles, a Divali (Hindu Festival of Light) gift
shop, film reviews and Bombay theatre booking service and online
travel agency enabling visitors to choose and book hotels in India
online.
"We want to build a revenue stream based on both advertising and
transaction revenues," says Mr Balakrishnan, So far, the site, built
using IBM's Net.Commerce software running on Intel-based Pentium
II servers, has 25 advertisers. He reckons 20 per cent of Indians
overseas already log into the site. 'Our goal is to have a 40 per
cent share,' he adds.