ThisMoment captures personal scenes with a social sheen
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| Boston
Vince Broady wanted to remember a special night out with his two pre-teen sons 鈥 the night that they first went to a movie together as just 鈥渢he guys.鈥 It was a special showing of the classic action movie 鈥淢ad Max,鈥 one of Mr. Broady鈥檚 favorite flicks.
Afterward, Mr. Broady went to the social media website thisMoment.com to record the night. He quickly created a 鈥渕oment,鈥 a slick slideshow using photos of the restaurant they鈥檇 eaten at and the movie theater that they鈥檇 attend that he鈥檇 found online. Then he added a clip of his favorite scene from the movie (which he grabbed from YouTube). He topped off his presentation with a snapshot he鈥檇 take of his boys posing in front of the car driven by 鈥淢ad Max鈥 in the movie.
Broady, who鈥檚 the founder and CEO of the free site thisMoment, which officially launched today, says he thinks people are ready to use social media to record real meaningful 鈥渕oments,鈥 not just share 鈥渢his is what I鈥檓 doing right now鈥 trivia.
鈥淭hisMoment is designed to let people save and share the moments of their lives by giving them a really simple but extremely powerful tool that enables them to bring together all different kinds of media around these moments,鈥 says Broady, an entrepreneur who previously developed and ran entertainment websites for CNET and Yahoo.
When viewing a thisMoment slideshow, readers scroll down through the text, however brief or long, and scroll across the screen for related images and videos. Makers of thisMoment 鈥渕oments鈥 can connect directly with their other social media sites like Facebook, Flickr, or YouTube to easily pull all their online material together.鈥
Each 鈥渕oment鈥 can be shared in whatever way the user wants: kept private, shared with the other people that were involved in the 鈥渕oment,鈥 with Facebook friends, with other customized groups of family or friends, or left public to be seen by anyone. Broady has been surprised to see that during six months of beta testing most people who created 鈥渕oments鈥 wanted to share them openly.
To prime the pump for text, thisMoment asks users to complete the line 鈥淭his moment made me feel....鈥 For example, one group Broady found had pulled together their reactions to the inauguration of President Obama, sharing their emotions at the time and photos from the inaugural site in Washington, as well as the reactions and photos of people in Atlanta and northern California.
Any 鈥渕oment鈥 that a user has access to view on someone else鈥檚 thisMoment site can also be copied (known as 鈥渟eizing the moment鈥) onto their own thisMoment page. During beta testing,聽 鈥渕oments鈥 were copied to another site an average of three times. 鈥淢oments鈥 can also be embedded in a user鈥檚 blog, where they can be viewed in their entirety without having to leave the blog page. New 鈥渕oments鈥 can also be posted automatically to social sites like Facebook, Twitter, and FriendFeed.
Other free social media sites have become immensely popular, with millions of users. But it鈥檚 still unclear how they will eventually make a profit. ThisMoment will stay free to its users, Broady says, but he sees others sources of income.
One involves licensing the technology behind thisMoment to others. ThisMoment has announce a deal with People magazine, which will use it to help celebrate People鈥檚 35th anniversary. The New York Times will use thisMoment to package its 鈥36 Hours in...鈥 travel features online, making use of the format鈥檚 text, photo, and video integration. Road & Track is taking a similar approach to presenting multimedia features on exotic cars.
Eventually, Broady speculates, companies might charge a micro-fee, perhaps a dollar, for users to add an especially attractive prepackaged 鈥渕oment鈥 or 鈥淢omento鈥 to their thisMoment page. Imagine, he says, if the Los Angeles Lakers put together a package on winning the NBA title, selling it as a 鈥渟ouvenir鈥 that fans could put on their thisMoment site.
Advertising eventually will provide income too, Broady says, but only if it can be very targeted and relevant. 鈥淚f I鈥檓 looking at this beautiful day on the beach, I don鈥檛 want to look at a mortgage ad.... I want an ad that will help me get there.鈥
Searches on Google and Microsoft鈥檚 new Bing search engines already are uncovering thisMoment 鈥渕oment鈥 pages, sometimes putting them near the top (and ahead of Facebook) in some searches, Broady says.
鈥淲e try to make it really, really simple鈥 to create 鈥渕oments,鈥 he says. But the result is an elegant platform 鈥渇or saving and sharing what鈥檚 going on in your life.鈥