Hellotree: use those family tags to beat Geni
Written on May 7, 2008 – 12:47 pm
Ernst-Jan Pfauth, editor in chief
If you came here from Digg it would be great if you could actually Digg us too! Do you have a start-up that we should write about? Contact us! Thanks for visiting and hope you come back again!

Genealogy service Geni has some competition: Hellotree. This is a place where you and your family can build a family tree and keep each other up to date by sending private messages. Moreover, there’s also room for nostalgics, as you can post archive photos of those good ol’ summer days in the family garden.

The flash tree is pure eye candy and grows as you and your family members invite more relatives. Though I think it’s not enough, as Geni is HUGE. They have over 15 million profiles and are the definite market leader in this social media area. If Hellotree wants to build an audience like that, they should work on the integration of existing social networks. I mean, they already have the typical Web 2.0 appearance with all the gradients and big fonts. So why not offering all those Flickr addicts to take it beyond the ‘family’ tag?

Family tag on Flickr
If the API’s of services that have a family distinction in contacts support this, Hellotree might have found an angle to become a serious competitor of Geni. With a few clicks, people can already have their Flickr photos and MyBlogLog blogs included in their profile. Work on that, team from Hellotree, and a forest of family trees may lie ahead of you.
[via eHub]








The Next Web Blog is closely associated with The Next Web Conference which is held annually in Amsterdam, The Netherlands. At this event speakers from all over the world come together to talk about, and show of, the future of the Web. (
3 Responses to “Hellotree: use those family tags to beat Geni”
By Boris Veldhuijzen van Zanten on May 7, 2008 | Reply
I use Geni and its viral appeal is incredible. I added maybe 6 people (parents, girlfriend, children, sister) and within a few days my network grew to 83 people in my family alone! A few uncles spend hours a day adding people and expanding our family tree.
But here is the catch: once your family is in there you are basically done. I haven’t visited the service in months. My question is what will get people back to the service after a while…
By Meryn Stol on May 7, 2008 | Reply
There’s also Kindo: http://kindo.com/
I never tried it though.