Online brokerage TradeKing, looking to boost its social networking efforts, announced this week that it will provide a month of free trading to users of its online community whose content is determined to be most useful to others.
The company also announced this week plans to upgrade the social community, which it launched in 2005 to provide leads for its customers.
For example, users can now attach a "miniblog" commentary to specific trade notations, or learn about successful traders through a new "All Star Blog" where industry experts comment on the trading strategies of community members. Finally, the company has added a "groups" feature to the online community, where users with common interests can congregate and share investing strategies.
The contest to find the best user-generated content starts this month with community members choosing the three top-rated posts about specific trades and the three top-rated blog posts. They will also select the overall top-rated community member -- the person who garners the most combined votes for top blog post and trade notes.
The winners will receive unlimited free options and equities trades in March, said Don Montanaro, the company's CEO.
"[We've] taken the solitary pursuit of independent investing and turned it into a social pursuit," he noted. "You no longer have to feel alone because you now have cohorts who you can collaborate with. It is just really becoming a really vibrant spot where Main Street research meets Wall Street research."
Montanaro said the community now has about 7,000 users, up from 2,500 last summer. Because the community operates on the same site as the trading tool itself, the company can keep its users on the site longer, he added.
In addition, unlike other online investor forums that allow anonymous users, members are TradeKing customers who must register with their real names. Thus, other users know that the people who are advising them are real traders, he added. "They don't have to bounce from using whatever trading platform they might like to use over to a community ... to try to infuse their decision-making process with information from other folks," Montanaro said.
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Friday, February 15, 2008
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