www.menkle.com
Our focus is on creating local marketplaces in small towns and neighborhoods (as opposed to large population density areas where Craigslist dominates). We accomplish this by using zip codes (or neighborhood or town names) as a primary location reference.
We are looking for feedback on the following:
How do we provide an incentive for users to post on our site when we have very few buyers browsing the site?
What are the best categories of second-hand items that we should focus on (ex. Electronics, Furniture, Real Estate, Services, etc)?
What do you wish you could do on Craigslist but can't?
What can we offer that would make us a better alternative than Craigslist?
What would you change on our site to make it better?
Thanks for your thoughts and comments.
Perhaps a way to break into the market would be to find an esoteric genre of items to trade with a very devoted user group - these people generate buzz for free. Then, when you have a group of users, slowly expand into more mainstream categories that have some relation to the original base. For example, you could start with car stereos and speakers, then slowly expand into other car parts, then into everything. I realize this may require shipping and isn't CL-like, so it may not be what you are looking for.
I think the most important thing for me that Craigslist is missing is user profiles of some sort. When I am going to drive 30 miles to some guy's house to pick up a widget, I would feel much more comfortable if other users said he was on the level and dependable.
Feature-wise, I'm unclear on what your site offers that Craigslist doesn't, other than a more web 2.0 interface. If anything, I think a simpler, quicker interface would be better for something like this.