KickApps – White Label Social Network

I think most on these lists will have heard of Ning. A smaller, younger offering has appeared called KickApps. KickApps powers over 3000 social networking sites compared to Nings 67,000+, yet KickApps appears to offer the stronger solution.

The overall KickApps experience is thorough. Nothing obvious is left out. White label sites have a full choice of 13 features; profiles, guest books, video and feeds are some of the options. The backend is simple to use and smart at the same time. The moderation of videos option doesn’t just present the uploaded video; numerous screenshots are automatically generated to immediately give a reviewer a good idea of what is contained in each video.

Widget  embedding support is extensive and delivered complete with DNS masked domain; users never link to KickApps itself, the specific domain is always presented in the embedding code. It’s a small thing but one that defines KickApps in comparison to Ning.

KickApps also offers an open API and developer kit. Blum told me that whilst most sites simply use the features offered, a number of high level users have implemented the API on their sites, delivering a custom solution.KickApps comes in two flavors and the difference between the two only comes down to advertising. Free users get full range of functionality with KickApps taking a part of each site for advertising. This doesn’t prevent free users from advertising themselves, simply a portion of each site must include a KickApps ads. The paid version is perhaps remarkably not sold on a licensed basis, KickApps charges a CPM rate per site served, meaning that less successful sites pay a lower rate. Blum believes that this model is fairer in that sites pay proportionality to their success, and therefore everyone wins; it therefore becomes in KickApps best interest to offer the best possible platform and experience to maximise revenue.Overall it’s a great offering. Strictly from a publishers view point the ability to keep your own domain on top of the white label service is compelling, and the feature set is remarkably easy to use and set up. The company has numerous existing deals and officially announced a tie up with Vibe Magazine yesterday.

  • steve

    Kick Apps has absolutely terrible customer service and unprofessional support.

    I am a professional website administrator and another expert reccomended I should give it a try. Obviously he had never even tried it himself, or i'm sure he would not have suggested it.

    After determining that KickApps was not for me (who wants pro-gay adverts in a war gaming site??) I wanted to close my account and i received one email tellimg me to hide the content with a CSS stylesheet (eh wtf? completely unprofessional solution…).I have sent at least five support tickets asking the Kick Apps Team to close my account and have not had any reply or response atall! I feel like i've been totally ignored and thus I do not have any positive comments about kickapps.

    Do not even bother, KickApps Support and customer service is terrible and it is impossible to close your account. Avoid!

  • http://www.pixelpod.co.uk/blog rickwilliams

    Hi Steve,

    Good to know. I wrote the post about KickApps a while ago when they promised a great deal and hadn't yet had the opportunity to shine. I'm sorry that you had such a bad experience.

    Best,

    Rick



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