Free Mobile Information Service to Developing Countries
We are kicking off the “viral launch” of GoSeeDo. Simply put, this offer is for people of developing and less developed countries to have a common platform to share events. Facebook, Twitter and other sites are nice platforms for distribution, but when you need accurate, fresh, and instantly available information on the Internet, this is what you have. Our information is ALWAYS COMPLETE because people who want you to know, post accurate content, because it is in their best interest to do so.
Our value is in our mobile service, which is .99 per month. Since we are a global service, we want to gain traction outside the United States since this is a global service and frankly where most of our friends are. We are offering FREE access to the site for the first 500 customers from ALL developing countries or emerging nations.
The site is now live and the mobile site launches October 2009. Those first 500 people to sign up will enjoy a full 6 months of access to the most relevant mobile information service in the world. In our testing of our sites readiness for mobile devices, we are scoring 4.0 or greater using Mobiforge. The idea of GoSeeDo is simple: we provide the communication vehicle to share events, add, edit while on the go using your phone’s mobile browser. There are many sites that allow you to add events, but this is THE FIRST that allows you to add from your mobile device.
You can add an UNLIMITED number of events, and TXT to your friends. We encourage blog and website owners to add the GoSeeDo Logo to their site. When you join, it is best to chose a username that is easy to remember, and all you do is tell your friends and customers the following: Visit goseedo.net (now) or goseedo.mobi (Oct 2009) and enter keyword (YOUR USERNAME). All your current events will be displayed in the selected city or location to give you hyper-specific information.
Also, GoSeeDo visitors can share targeted Disaster Relief information to accurately and quickly offer help and locate services for people in need. We treat Disasters as events, because they are, and thus people need to know.
