Dozens of words trapped in tiny prison cells, struggling to be free. And a design with so little character that it makes me worry that I've stumbled upon a domain squatter.
No community features, like discussion forums. No Best-of-Craigslist. Perhaps nobody cares enough about this bland site to craft such a thing?
Having said that, for all I know OLX would be crushing Craigslist if only the rip-off/ripped-off relationship were reversed.
I open up links I want to read in tabs, and then revisit them. I closed the tab for this twice, thinking that it was a squatted domain that I'd somehow browsed to. The third time, I stopped to see what it was.
OXL is big over seas in Europe. At Flugpo we are trying to build a craigslist competitor as well though we still have some work to do before we are ready for the big time.
Actually, I like it. I wanted to look at vehicles and it was far easier to browse than craigslist, cause there are pictures right next to the thing like ebay.
Though, yeah, its not as community oriented maybe?
Actually, I like it. I wanted to look at vehicles and it was far easier to browse than craigslist, cause there are pictures right next to the thing like ebay.
Here we see the problem with a front-page design that screams "clone": Visitors like me click away without learning about your site's unique new features!
If they stuck a sample vehicle ad somewhere on the front page the site might become much stickier. They'd at least look like they were trying.
Finding the room on the page without losing valuable links might be a problem, though. Maybe if they took out all those framed boxes they might find room for a thumbnail?
Maybe I don't understand how to do this, but there seems to be no way to search for something in all of, for example, Massachusetts instead of its separate geographic regions.
If that's the way it is, it's ridiculous and if it's not obvious how to do a broader search, that's also ridiculous.
Craigslist deliberately forces you to interact within your local sphere. It may suck if you're on the border of two of their regions, but it helps them keep a local focus. They could easily implement nationwide search.
I don't see what goal of theirs is facilitated by having a crippled search function. Someone in a border is going to look in the neighboring regions anyway - it just makes it painful for them and leaves the door open for a more sensible competitor.
I'm surprised no one's built an app that just spiders the craigslist database and allows you to query it in more interesting ways than the craigslist developers could think of.
There have been NUMEROUS apps that provide beefed-up searching (multi-city,etc.) for CraigsList. Most get in trouble with CL because they're violating CL's TOS.
Craig and Company want you on their site, not on an aggregation site that sucks their listings...so they shut aggregators and scrapers down pretty quickly. OLX is, if I recall correctly, one of the many companies that has already gotten in trouble for doing this.
I had always thought that Craigslist was poorly designed, but I've changed my mind. This site is, ostensibly, better designed. But I still had to look around for about 15 seconds before I found what I was looking for.
The way that the Craiglist headings are designed is really great, actually. With large headers you lose vertical separation, and this is especially valuable in visualizing the "search | categories | cities" split.
The Craiglist design may not be a happy accident of bad web design. I think it was done very carefully.
I have to laugh when I hear people say they could "build a better-looking Craigslist" in "a few months" or "a few weeks" or "a weekend" [or insert your own timeframe.] Craigslist isn't just some simple bulletin board software and forums that Craig put up on the Web one night -- it's the result of years of steady growth, good customer service, good word-of-mouth, and just good business. Sure, you could build a localized classified ads service that looks "more modern" -- meaning it uses gradients for no good reason other than everyone else is using them -- but that's no Craiglist.
Now, if you have a site that somehow gets past some major problem or irritation that Craiglist users face, then maybe you've got a chance. But if you're just putting a new coat of paint on an old, well-executed idea, I'm not seeing the opportunity there.
He's got an interesting approach to entrepreneurship -- rather than coming up with novel ideas, Fabrice takes ideas that work in one location and replicates them somewhere else. First he built (and sold) the eBay of Latin America + Europe, then he brought ringtones to America from Asia (!). After selling his ringtone company for $80M, he founded OLX, to bring craigslist to other countries.
the traffic problem is worse than you think, I believe they don't remove any old listings. So you may see 80,000 items, but only a dozen were posted in the last week
No community features, like discussion forums. No Best-of-Craigslist. Perhaps nobody cares enough about this bland site to craft such a thing?
Having said that, for all I know OLX would be crushing Craigslist if only the rip-off/ripped-off relationship were reversed.