Looks Like Pinterest, Takes On Evernote: Clipboard Launches Its Web Clipping Service To All (Sarah Perez/TechCrunch)
At first glance, you might mistake Clipboard, the impressively-backed web clipping service, for yet another Pinterest clone. But any similarities are only skin deep. Clipboardâs real rivals are things like Evernoteâs web clipper, SpringPad, Delicious, Dropbox and Microsoftâs OneNote. Thatâs because, explains Clipboard CEO Gary Flake, Pinterest is about expressing an aspiration, but Clipboard is about getting things done.
For half a year, the company has been trucking along in a private, invite-only beta. But today, itâs open to all with a fresh redesign in tow and a new button for website owners.
Granted, there are several similarities between Pinterest and Clipboard. For starters, its collections are also called âboards.â And theyâre laid out graphically, with a heavy emphasis on the image associated with the clipped content. But Clipboard isnât just for clipping an inspiring or pretty picture â" it can clip all kinds of stuff, including slideshows (like those from SlideShare), audio, a functioning web app (like an online calculator), an online game, and more. And the clips are functional, too. The calculator works, the games play, you can click the links in the copied text.
Given the competition, why another clipping service, you may ask?
âWhen you think about how people organize things,â explains Flake, âthe thing that has 90% market share is pasting into an email client or Word document,â he says.
That is, peopleâs preferred method for finding and saving information from the web hasnât evolved much over the years, Flake believes. However, he adds that weâre now seeing the emergence of a new type of service for saving items. This is where things like Evernote or Pinterest come into play. Some of these (like Pinterest) are so simple that theyâre more about expression, while others (like Evernote) are âalmost accidentally social,â Flake explains. Clipboard is aiming for a sweet spot by being simple, social and functional all in one.
Like any good bookmarking/clipping tool, Clipboardâs clips can be private, allowing you to transition from your preferred system, if you chose to do so. In fact, personal use appears to be the favored way to interact with Clipboard, as currently 80% of the beta usersâ clips are private.
There are also indications of fairly good engagement for a pre-public product. 48% of users are clipping (as opposed to browsing the public clips from others), and the average user has 14 clips. More active users have around 30 clips each. 55% of the clips are also annotated by the user and 20% are hashtagged. (Clearly, some folks were never ready to give up social bookmarking, despite Deliciousâ implosion then somewhat fizzless relaunch.) Clipboard will eventually support importing tools to pull in bookmarks from other services, like Delicious, as well as your own browser, which could help some users transition completely from their current systems.
Also new today is a developer-facing tool which allows site owners to integrate Clipboard buttons onto their website, so visitors can easily clip and save content.
Clipboard, which recently acquired two competitors, Amplify and Clipmarks, is backed by something of a whoâs who of startup investors: Andreessen Horowitz, Index Ventures, CrunchFund (disclosure â" CrunchFund investor Mike Arrington founded TechCrunch), DFJ, SV Angel / Ron Conway, Betaworks, First Round Capital, CODE Advisors, Founderâs Co-Op, Acequia Capital, Vast Ventures, Ted Meisel (former CEO of Overture and now at Elevation Partners), Blake Krikorian (former CEO of Sling and now an Amazon board member), and Vivi Nevo.
Interested users can now sign up to try the revamped Clipboard here.
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