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Using technology as a business tool...

Using a BBS for business... An article from the Questy archives

1997 comments: I wrote this back in 1990 for a regional business journal. It's fun to go back and read this from time to time, it makes me realize just how far this "hobby" of mine has progressed. Then again neither myself or the internet has yet to decide what it wants to be when it grows up......

1990 article:

There are over 118 million phone lines, and 92 percent of all Americans have at least one. Probably less than one million Americans are using the world of computer telecommunications to its fullest potential. According to Peter Norton, a renown computer journalist, "While other application categories such as word processors and databases are pushing the limits of their capabilities, telecommunications is still in its infancy. For those who missed many of the early events in the computer revolution, here is an opportunity to get in on the ground floor of a rapidly growing but still misunderstood new technology."


There will come a day when we can blame the phone system for losing our mail rather than our friends at the post office. Electronic mail is slowly working its way into every day usage. The electronic "mailbox" is inside your computer. Quicker and more efficient than conventional mail, it even does the fax one better. If you read your mail and decide not to save it, there is no paper to throw away. E-mail, as it is sometimes abbreviated, is an offshoot of Telex. Telex is a worldwide system for sending messages between typewriters that has been going strong for close to a century. E-mail can be used to create a bulletin board system of information gathering and storage.

Computerized Bulletin Board Systems (BBS) grew into existence during the 1970's. Just like the old fashioned paper and cork board versions, the BBS is a place that acts as a central point to store and exchange information. Recent estimates of modem sales and memberships in online services suggest that less than one percent of all Americans have ever used a computer bulletin board system. To say the potential application of the technology is in its infancy is a definite understatement.

Let's start on more familiar ground to explain bulletin board systems (BBS). It's safe to say that most Americans at one time or another have been in a donut shop. Imagine yourself stopping in for a fattening late night snack and a cup of coffee. On your way to the counter you see a bulletin board; it is the old fashioned type, cork board with a wood frame and metal push pins stuck in all over. This old fashioned bulletin board is the community information center.

Let's say you are shopping for a car. You walk up to the bulletin board and on a clean sheet of paper you write, "What do you think of Mazda's? Signed Tommy P." Then drink your coffee, eat your donut, and you leave. The next evening you return to the donut shop, not only for your craving of a sweet snack, but to see what has been added to your bulletin board posting. On the bottom right corner you have a scribbled message, "Hey Tommy P., I've owned a Mazda for years. I think they are great. Signed Suzie M." Tacked to a corner of your bulletin is a note, "Hey Tom, if you're looking for a foreign car, why not try a Toyota. Signed Freddie B." You have no idea who are the respondents to your bulletin. Since it's been 24 hours since you last posted your bulletin, your responses have been posted at any time.

Your respondents may be part of your neighborhood, or just a one time visitor to the donut shop. The same thing is true with a computer BBS, only on a larger scale. Respondents to a computer BBS may be local, regional, national, or even international, depending on the BBS used. Just like in the donut shop, on a computerized BBS you may have no clue to the identity of your respondents. The usage and application of a BBS for a business can be diverse. In our car shopping bulletin, in a few days you may get several opinions on Mazda's, as well as off shoot bulletins on other makes and models. If you were the local Mazda dealer, reading this bulletin board could give you positive and negative feedback on your product. If you personally set up this bulletin board, you could also gain an insight into what your own customers think of the competition and how they compare your brand to the other brands they may own.


Starting a BBS on a local level could be an expensive proposition. It is more advisable to start a BBS if your product has regional, if not national appeal. The person using the computerized BBS would tend to be above average in education and income due to the development of the technology and its current usage. You can provide a forum for your product's users. You can have customers trade advice and tips with each other, as well as monitoring these opinions for your marketing usage.


So what does all this great information cost? If you offer nationwide service, or even regional service, you will probably need several phone lines dedicated to your BBS. While your customer support BBS could be a powerful public relations tool, it could easily cost you $500 to $1000 a month just in phone time. Just about any desktop personal computer equipped with a modem could serve as your BBS. Although most of the software and documentation you find will be for MS-DOS based systems. The modem converts the digital conversation of the computer to audio tones which are understood by our current analog telephone systems. The cost of the needed hardware could be a few thousand dollars. The key to hardware choice is time versus money. The faster your computer and modem, the less time spend on phone lines. A customer support BBS is usually free to users but don't feel embarrassed to charge for access, especially if you make specialized information available to users of your BBS.

As with any other type of software, BBS software may be wide ranged in price, from a low cost single user version of less than $100, to a commercial grade with a price tag of over $1000. A popular BBS program with several versions is available from Mustang Software, Inc., of Bakersfield, CA. Mustang's "Wildcat! BBS" is a widely used program by amateurs as well as professionals. Rather than going through time and expense of setting up your own bulletin board system, it may be more cost effective to become a part of an existing BBS. The popular information networks such as Delphi, GEnie, and CompuServe offer their subscribers access to many specialized BBS clubs. There are hundreds of amateur and semi-pro BBS across the country with special interest groups available for just about any topic. Adding a modem to your existing PC will cost you $200 or less. Modems are rated by baud rate, which is the rate of symbols transmitted per second. The typical PC Telecommunications program for the individual user will cost less than $100. While initial start up cost for the BBS user can be small, the monthly service charges, which may or may not include phone time, can easily add up to $50 or more per month. The computer bulletin board systems are just one of the many new information horizons opened by PC telecommunications. You may make new friends or business contacts by joining a BBS. You may find information found no where else. You broaden your companies market and information gathering abilities by starting your own BBS. Like all other forms of technology, it has a price. Since your costs may be based on real time usage, you could run up quite a phone bill as well as usage surcharges if you are not careful. As in any new endeavor, be slow and steady. Slowly gauge your efficiency, as well as your ability, in affording the vast array of knowledge at your fingertips.

1997 Comments: I think it's interesting to note that of the three online services I mentioned in this article (in 1990): CompuServe,GEnie, Delphi, today (1997) only CompuServe has made the transition to online service / internet service provider. America Online was also in existence back then and has also survived the transition to the internet. (Even more recently CompuServe was absorbed by America Online.) While many BBS still exist, much of the information on local club type BBS's has now migrated to the Internet with thousands of "Newsgroups" (Usenet). The analogy of the Usenet to a donut shop cork board still holds true.

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