I am both happy and sad, for the existence of this weblog has been validated once again by the lacklustre performance of our entrepreneurs.
On first glance, IconnectE (create your possibilities) appears to be Singapore’s very own LinkedIn. Yet, the more I toyed with it, the sadder I felt. Here’s why:
- Site usability sucks. Registration takes way too long. Unlike LinkedIn (which allows phases of information input by the user), IconnectE forces you to go through the entire 3-page process of filling in your details and establishing your profile. It’s also a pain to have to press ctrl while scrolling down the long list of countries whose markets I have an interest in. Oops, an errant mouse click and I lose my previous selection. Layout and design still feels kinda dingy. Last but not quite the least, the site feels extremely sluggish *wants to strangle the site*.
- Revenue model is suspect. With most netizens having gained immunity to online advertising, ads will bring in next-to-nothing in terms of bling. When I saw the cost of premium membership, I almost fell off my chair – S$180/year in exchange for extra events listings and gawd knows what other useless stuff (I can’t find the gawd-damn pricing page post-registration!). Who are they trying to kid man?
- It’s a portal, stupid. How very…Singaporean, to do anything and everything in the form of portals. Don’t we have enough of those already, in the form of government portals? Must even our entrepreneurs join the government in the Incredible Portal Race, and create 6.5 million portals, one for every future citizen of Singapore? Har-de-har-har. Maybe then, we’ll have more portals than New Zealand has cows – 1 more item to go into the Guiness Book of Records eh?
- It could have been so much more. The brainchild behind IconnectE does not appear to be in tune with the possibilities that can be offered by Web 2.0 (and beyond). Let me take this one step further and postulate that founder Jesse Ting is probably past 35, even 40 years of age. Some say we were created in the image of God. Others say within each of us are imprints of our parents. I say, IconnectE = good idea, sub-par execution. And don’t anyone give me the ‘it’s a beta’ excuse~
- IconnectE is a Frankenstein - the baby of Jesse Ting (brains), Muu Consulting (advisory) and yolk design (grunt work). HMMMMMM…some digging into what Muu Consulting does, and I have the following hypothesis:
Jesse: I want to do a website to connect people and businesses, but I don’t know how or what!
Muu Consulting: Build a portal!
yolk design: *slogs and slogs*
IconnectE might still resonate with the local community who have yet to use LinkedIn…but I seriously doubt it’ll go very far regionally, much less globally.
The verdict?
HOT or NOT
Official rating: 1.0/10 (for effort)

6 responses so far ↓
I Dun Get IconnectE… at Entrepreneur 27 Singapore - Web 2.0 Unconferences, Websites & Cool Tech from a Sunny Island at the Equator // March 29, 2007 at 12:50 am
[...] i gave up on the service after 15 minutes of fiddling around on the clumsy Internet Explorer 7. But this blog has performed a stress test and you can check out their frank [...]
Justin Lee // March 29, 2007 at 1:04 am
good stuff on the Hot or Not scale!
cray // March 29, 2007 at 2:23 am
whee… local community who have yet to use LinkedIn!
roflmao.
just the kind of innovators you need on your site
chandrashekar.beingalpha.com // March 29, 2007 at 3:11 am
IconnectE, AreyoukiddingmE?
maybe its because I’m in an excitable sorta mood today… I burst out laughing when I read the E27 article on LinkedIn’s newest competitor – IconnectE…
“… an interactive portal that enables small businesses, entreprene…
Mariot // March 31, 2007 at 5:45 am
They make a stupid mistake by calling it IconnectE where the I and E stand for Internet Explorer. Microsoft must have give them carrot to entice them to put such a name.
Why don’t they name it like WconnectB instead ,so that WB stand for Web Browser and make it works with all browsers.
The site seem to have little focus of what it is trying to do.
Mariot // March 31, 2007 at 5:48 am
Anyway, it is a good start for Singapore Web 2.0 sites, although a bit comical. I thought the site is joking when it ask for $180.