HomeLoginAbout UsFeedbackSupport  
IT Jobs - JobCircle.com, Inc.JobCircle Tagline
Today's Statistics
0 local jobs
0 company profiles
0 registered candidates
 
       Submit Resume      ·       Browse Classifieds      ·       Career Development      ·       Employer Directory      ·       Discussion Circles
  Home / Career Development / Workplace / Celebrity Profiles: George Bell, CEO of Excite
Career Center
The Career Coach
Tech News Today
Educational Facilities
Training Centers
Societies and User Groups
Certification Information
Job Fairs and Trade Shows
Technology Stocks
Hi-Tech Snapshots
JobCircle Tech-Files
Classified Search

  Search Jobs
Search for:
within     of

(use zip or city, state)
Need help?   
Discussion Circle
Talk with the IT community in our Discussion Circles.
Classified Search
Career Development
BLAST YOUR RESUME TO THOUSANDS OF IT RECRUITERS!
With JobCircle's RezRocket, you can send your
resume instantly to recruiters right down the road from
where you live! JobCircle RezRocket - get a live blast quote now!
 
Workplace

Celebrity Profiles: George Bell, CEO of Excite

George Bell was a senior vice president at newspaper and magazine behemoth Times-Mirror, living in Long Island and commuting into Manhattan, when he got the cyberspace call from a little company called Architext in 1995. At the time, Bell was hardly idle - he was running the company's sporting magazines, including SKI, Field & Stream, Snowboard Life, Salt Water Sportsman and Yachting, as well as overseeing the introduction of the Outdoor Life Network, a specialty cable channel. Bell leapt at the chance. As he told Vault Reports, "I figured the last time there was an opportunity to run a new form of media was the advent of cable 20 years ago, and I'd missed that." Today, Bell is the CEO of what is now called Excite, one of the premier search engine companies in the world. Excite's flagship brands - Excite.com and WebCrawler.com - are visited by more than twenty million people per month. We figured - who better to ask about schmoozing on-line?

Vault Reports: How many e-mails do you get per day?

Bell: On the average, I get 125 e-mails per day. I get them from people we're doing business with, people who work for the company. I would say I only get one or two cold e-mails a day.

VR: Do you get e-mail from friends and family?

Bell: Most of the people I used to call my friends don't call me that anymore. They don't bother to call me. I rarely get in touch with people. But e-mail has helped - it has made communication much more efficient. I can take home and deal with 20 to 30 e-mails at the end of the day. About once a week I'll get an e-mail from a friend of mine who I haven't spoken to in a while. I try to respond to all the e-mail I get.

VR: Why do you keep your e-mail address publicly available, when you might not publish your phone number?

Bell: Because we work in the information business, our philosophy is behind keeping our e-mails available. We feel we should always be open to our customers and the public. That's our business. We don't encourage random e-mails or fan mail, but it doesn't upset us.

~ VR: When did you first go on-line before becoming CEO of Excite?

Bell: Six months. I was using Eudora mail. I didn't spend a lot of time on the Web.

VR: What use do you think people have for e-mail today?

Bell: I find that people in our culture are nowadays more willing to have certain conversations over e-mail. Certain conversations, I think, should be done in person, like meetings between managers, or personal criticism. E-mail shouldn't be a substitute for conversation, and it often is. It has reduced the value of diplomacy in our culture. As far as entertainment value, it's a different story. It's fun, and you can, of course, get a sense of someone through their e-mails, just like you would through a series of short letters.

VR: How are conversations over e-mail different?

Bell: E-mail is more casual, because it seems to be more in the spirit of the Web. Oftentimes, you find with cold proposals over e-mail, there are no introductions.. It just launches into the pitch. That's fine with me. I don't remember the last time I got an e-mail that started "Dear Mr. Bell." I like my e-mail short and blunt. And the ease is perfect. All I need to do is click reply and say "No thanks." I'm not caught on the phone.

VR: Are you friends with competitors?

Bell: There's still a lot of healthy competition between us and our competitors - Infoseek, Lycos, Yahoo. We're all 10 to 15 miles away from each other on the highway. Some people take competitiveness to different levels, and we figured that meeting each other face to face would probably alleviate some of the bad parts of that competition. So we met for a game of laser tag. It worked, and we all had a good time, winning wasn't the point.

Saturday, November 07, 2009
8:37 PM

Rosemont
Upcoming Events
Tell us your zip code and we'll show you events in your area! Please visit our Event Calendar to view upcoming events and to set your zip code.

Tech News Today
ReadSoft AB Signs Partnership Agreement with Computer Support Services Inc
M2 Communications
University Offers Free Microsoft Software
Associated Press
Sun shines on handsets
VNUNet.com
More Tech News...
ITtoolbox News

Vault:  The Truth is in the Vault

© 1998-2004, JobCircle.com, Inc.
© Content reprinted with permision by Vault.com.
All Rights Reserved.

JobCircle.com, Inc. assumes no liability for incorrect or outdated information contained in this site, and does not guarantee that the information contained in this site is accurate.  This information is publicly provided with the sole purpose of assisting job seekers find employment, and for assisting companies in finding employees.  This web site and the information contained herein may not be used for any type of solicitation of goods and/or services to any party whose information may be disclosed through this site without prior consent of JobCircle.com, Inc.  Information contained in this web site may not be copied or reproduced, commercial or otherwise, without express written approval of JobCircle.Com, Inc. or the respective owner(s) of the information herein.