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Fuego Nation social networking company debuts, raises $1.5 million

Dean Takahashi, VentureBeat03.09.2008
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Has Web 2.0 led to social networking 2.0 already? So says Fuego Nation, a “social networking 2.0″ company that is announcing today it has raised $1.5 million in its first round of funding.

“Existing sites work well for young people wanting to casually connect online but don’t meet the needs of adults who would benefit from having their professional lives and personal passions in one place,” said Brogan Keane, CEO and founder of Fuego Nation, in a statement. “We’re leaving [behind] juvenile applications like poking and giving adults a much better way to manage their online reputations.”

brogan-keane-small.jpgHow’s that for a stab at Facebook? The San Francisco company says it will do a better job of connecting people and their passions, which in turn will help advertisers target consumers in a more relevant way. It also says it will have a rich, 3-D and game-like interface.

To elaborate, other networks focus on identifying the “interests” of members. But Fuego Nation will organize members by “passion spheres.” Members can increase their standing through active participation.

By focusing on passions, where members of a group can decide whether to admit someone based on how committed they are to an area of interest, they can weed out the people who join lots of groups but don’t participate in them. The company says users will be able to create stronger connections with each other and ads will be more effective.

The company was founded in March 2007 by Keane, who has worked at gaming and entertainment companies, including Electronic Arts, Domark/Eidos and Air Media. Matthew Cordasco, vice president of product development, joined Fuego Nation’s management team from technical consulting firm Noveris, where he served as president.

“We believe there is a big market opportunity for a next-generation social networking product designed specifically for the lifestyle needs of a Gen-X audience,” said investor Robert Goodman in a statement. “Fuego Nation will not only draw a high caliber of users, it will also appeal to lifestyle brands that are looking to create more meaningful and direct relationships with their consumers in a way that’s never been done before online.”

The site is due to launch later this year. The round was funded by private investors and syndicated by Robert Goodman who has joined Fuego Nation’s board.

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Reprinted with permission from VentureBeat. Story copyright 2008 VentureBeat Inc. All rights reserved.

Comments

I don't share the assersion that people "benefit from having their professional lives and personal passions in one place," to quote Brogan Keane. That is why I don't take my work down the pub, or invite my friends to come and work for me -- to me, these are best kept apart, as I don't want either world judging me on how I am in the other.

Unfortunately, this attampt to move the market forward shows little imagination. An evolution of the medium into version 2.0 will mean MUCH more than Facebook mated with LinkedIn and stripped of the sheep throwing; it will be about specialist sites meeting specific needs, rather than expecting one to do everything. Let's not forget SN is just a medium and we don't expect a single TV show or a single magazine to give us all we need about news, sport, business etc -- this medium is no different. Sites will emerge for business, for sport, and new entrants would be better off providing what a particular life-sphere needs and doing it well, rather than trying to make one size fit all.

Ian Hendry
WeCanDo.BIZ
www.wecando.biz


I feel that consolidation of social networks is inevitable. I’m currently on several social networks and it can be inconvenient to manage them all in parallel. I’ll be interested to see how Fuego addresses this problem. The next generation of social networks seems to be evolving to social gaming with intensive 3-D graphics. It will be interesting to see how this plays out in Fuego.


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