Meebo Brings the “Check-In” to Websites

You can “check in” to locations in the real world with your phone — now Meebo wants to bring the same idea to the web. The company, which offers a sharing toolbar that lets users connect to social networks while they surf, is launching a new version that allows them to check in to any site that offers the Meebo bar, and to follow other users and see what websites they visit. Available as a browser extension as of Tuesday, the company said the new features will be rolled out to all sites using the toolbar by mid-December.

Meebo’s existing toolbar sits at the bottom of a website, much like other toolbars that can be downloaded and installed by users, but the Meebo bar is added by individual website publishers — including TMZ, Justin.tv and Entertainment Weekly — through a few lines of Javascript. Users can log into or create a Meebo account that connects to their Facebook, Twitter and instant messenger accounts, and then share a link to the site via the toolbar, or even drag and drop individual elements of the page (images, videos, etc.) in order to share them with friends.

Meebo founder and CEO Seth Steinberg says that in talking with users, the company heard that many wanted to know what sites their friends were visiting, but didn’t necessarily get that kind of information from Facebook. “On Facebook, they can see what sites their friends were looking at last night, but not the sites they’re on right now,” he said. So the startup decided to build in a “follow” function, as well as the ability to “check in” and tell others where you are as you surf.

While on a site with the toolbar, users can click and check in at the site, and can also see any of their friends who have also checked in there, and — if they choose to enable it — can share that information with Facebook or Twitter. Steinberg says that after a certain number of visits, users can become VIPs on specific sites, which allows websites to offer them discounts based, in the same way that some retailers using Foursquare or Facebook Places offer return visitors deals on merchandise. Meebo will also be offering sites that don’t use the toolbar a “check in” button.

Meebo has plenty of users who already make use of its cross-platform IM service and web-based messaging. But will users take to another service that wants them to check in somewhere and follow other users, even if they can share that status easily with Facebook and other networks they already use? Steinberg says that the optimistic view of a recent Pew survey — which showed that few people use location-sharing services — is that there is still plenty of room to convince them to do so.

“Check-ins haven’t been done in any kind of meaningful way on the web,” the Meebo founder said. “We think we can truly drive new social discovery through these features.” Steinberg says that Meebo reaches about 190 million unique visitors a month via the more than 8,000 websites that run its toolbar, and almost half of those users are in the U.S., which means the company reaches about a third of U.S. Internet users. How many of them want to check in to the sites they are visiting — and share that information with the world — remains to be seen.

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