How Dubai media machine AWI is turning traffic into transactions with new car portal ArabsTurbo
In classifieds, Egypt has become a highly competitive market, with companies like the revamped Waseet, Dubizzle, and Avito’s Bekam duking it out for classifieds leadership hegemony. But Waseet has a few key advantages that could help it keep market share, even as the others spend heavily on advertising.
For one, Waseet is not simply an Egyptian
company; it's been a print magazine for nearly a decade in 35
cities across the Arab world. Its new, revamped regional classified
site, which first launched in 2009, is now "a combination of
Craigslist, Yellow Pages, and Yelp,” says Andy
Abbar, the general manager for the online division at
AWI, Waseet's parent
company. Rather than merely listing
items, its also offers a directory of relevant services; apartment
seekers can, for instance, also find recommendations for local
painters, moving services, or insurance providers.
Waseet is built by AWI,
one of the largest media companies in the region, which has built
several very popular online content
portals, including Layalina,
Marie Claire Arabia, Fortune Arabia, Gala, Top Gear Arabia, and Al
Balad Newspaper, from its base in Dubai.
This gives Waseet a critical bit of leverage; as AWI continues to
launch niche content portals, it's funneling readers to Waseet to
purchase the items they are reading about. One major example
is ArabsTurbo, an auto content portal that just launched,
which offers recent motorist news, funny videos, and the latest
vehicles available for purchase, many of which redirect users to
Waseet's relevant local listings.
It’s a savvy model: lure users to enjoy niche content, and then encourage them to continue browsing and eventually shop via other AWI holdings, keeping readers spending within the AWI online empire.
Thus far, the tactic is working. Waseet's
website redesign has boosted traffic, bringing its monthly totals
to 650,000 unique visitors, 1 million total visits, and 6.5 million
page views. Average time on site is 5:30 minutes. Its
also helped paid listings (for top posts or "urgent sells")
grow to around 10 a day, of the 3,000 (mostly free) posts
daily.
Effective Measure now ranks Waseet above Dubizzle
in the classifieds category with over 83,000 unique users a
week in Egypt, compared to Dubizzle's 75,000.
AWI also intends to grow the model by identifying the right niches. “I really don’t believe in taking a magazine and digitizing it and calling it digital content. My job is to build online experiences related to specific categories,” says Abbar.
Content is king
With ArabsTurbo, AWI plans to similarly grow its traffic by learning from Layalina. The fashion content portal, which launched in November 2012, now sees over 2 million unique users each month, and a hefty 2 million fans on Facebook, which Abbar says makes it the most popular fashion content portal in the region, particularly in North Africa and the Levant, now, as we predicted earlier this year, surpassing competitors like Nawa3em.
“We learned quite a bit from Layalina and
our roadmap for 2013 was to launch the motor sport site,” says
Abbar. There’s plenty of interest in real estate, jobs, and other
items on Waseet, but Abbar says autos are overwhelmingly the most
popular item to list and buy.
Unsuprisingly, ArabsTurbo is most popular among young males in the
Gulf. As an auto and motor sport content platform, it competes with
Motoraty and Biser3a. In a large collage of images,
albums, and videos, ArabsTurbo also includes translated spec-driven articles,
entertaining videos and reports, auto shows, and its own original
weekly test-drive videos for some of the hottest cars out today.
The team is also offering premium content to be featured on MSN
Arabia, hoping to increase similar partnerships.
Building an online empire
Again, transactions are one of AWI's primary goals with ArabsTurbo. “We’re building an integration between ArabsTurbo and Waseet autos, so you can see if a car you’re reading about is on Waseet in your city and you’re directed to buy it,” says Abbar.
Yet for now, the AWI team of around 20 is focusing on traffic first. “Across the portfolio of products we really don’t focus on monetization as a priority; the focus is on building the right team, the right product, the right traffic, and when we have all three, it helps to equal monetization,” says Abbar.
Layalina is also directing traffic to ArabsTurbo, via the occasional article on a high-end car; it will be interesting to see whether ArabsTurbo can have the huge surge of popularity its sister site has seen over the last 10 months.
Waseet, on the other hand, will be making purchases even easier, releasing a mobile app in the coming weeks (especially prudent as more and more users buy via smartphone), and launching an English version of the site by year’s end.
“I really believe the region is on to something big, despite the challenges and turbulence we are undergoing. It’s an exciting time and I just wish there were more than 24 hours in a day because there’s so much to be done,” says Abbar. “But the sky’s the limit.”