France Web Market Overview

franceNext in our series on international Web markets is France. Other countries profiled so far have been Germany, Holland, Poland, Korea, United Kingdom, Russia, Spain, China, Turkey, Italy and Brazil. France has the 9th highest number of Internet users in the world, with 26.8 million. It has an Internet penetration of 44%, putting it below countries like the US, UK and Germany (all of which are over 60%). But France is similar to its neighbors Italy and Spain, which are both in the 40-50% range for Internet penetration. Perhaps more significant is the number of French language speakers on the Web, which is estimated to be 4.4% of all Internet users – or 45.8 Million. However that’s only an estimated 12% of all French speakers, so there is plenty of room for growth there.

My thanks to Thomas Ezan and Jean-Pierre Christie for the information in this post. Both kindly sent me details about the French Web market and its most popular apps.

Overview of French Market

When I think of France and the Web, I think of Netvibes (the Personalized Start Page used by 5 million people according to recent reports), Kelkoo (the price comparison engine sold to yahoo), and Jeff Clavier (not a web app, but a French angel investor!). But obviously there is much more to the French Web, so I asked Thomas to tell me more…

R/WW: Do most people use French web apps/sites instead of the US ones?

Thomas: Not really, except for news websites. For example newspaper websites like LeMonde, Liberation and LeFigaro. There are also many internet and IT-focused websites like 01net. All of those sites are in french. The typical french person is not used to reading or talking in english, unlike in Germany, Netherlands and the nordic countries. There is also french version of Techcrunch.

R/WW: Do the big companies have French language versions of their products? (Google, Yahoo, Microsoft etc)

Thomas: Google is the number 1 website in France and the other big companies like msn, yahoo are also very well used in France. For example their email services are well used. They all have a french version (which they must do to target the french market). MSN Messenger is the number 1 IM service (AIM is not very well used here). The french versions of amazon and eBay are also very famous here.

R/WW: What are the biggest Web companies in France?

Thomas: I’m not sure, but meetic is number 1 as far as turnover is concerned (it’s a dating site). And it’s started to spread around Europe. There is also priceminister and 2xmoinscher, were people can sells second-hand stuffs (it’s a kind of eBay without the auction concept).

The biggest e-shops are Cdiscount.com and Rueducommerce, were you can find anything (buying on the internet is now common in france, even for my mother!). Lastminute.com is the number 1 travel site. There is also kelkoo, a “price comparer” created by Pierre Chappaz and sold to Yahoo for millions.

Thomas’ Top Web Apps

Zlio: a kind of Loomia or MyPickList, which goes further in enabling you to create your own shop online (here is mine). Thus it’s a “smart clone”, by cloning and then innovating further… isn’t it innovation ? 😉 [Richard: yes, definitely!]

Wikio: made by the ex-ceo and founder of kelkoo. It’s a kind of digg-like in french, with many technical and financial features. Chappaz is a “VIP” in the “net-economie”, with a weekly tribune in liberation, a big french newspaper – so there’s been a lot of buzz on wikio.

LaFraise: created by a guy from Ubisoft, it’s a clone of threadless but it’s taking over and becoming international. Personaly I prefer lafraise to threadless, which doesn’t have the same “graphical spirit”.

Podemus: a podcasting reference founded by Bertrand Lenotre, it could be compared to odeo but it includes video.

Jean-Pierre’s List of French Web Apps

Digg Clones

http://www.wikio.fr/: the main french digg clone (see above)

http://www.scoopeo.com/: another french language digg clone [update: Scoopeo is from Belgium, not France]

http://fuzz.fr/: digg clone

Photos and Videos

http://www.fotolia.fr/: photo site

http://www.dailymotion.com/: watching/publishing/sharing videos

http://www.criteo.com/films.aspx: films and videos

http://www.eyeka.com/: photo and video sharing

http://www.kewego.fr/: video sharing

http://www.skema.fr/: video solutions

http://www.atafoto.com/: online shared photo book

Social Networks / Blogs / Bookmarking

http://www.6nergies.net/: professional social network

http://www.linkedfeed.com/: automated and customizable information social network

http://www.yoono.com/: rss reader/integrated social book marking

http://www.widiwici.com/index.php: Sport exploits, information sharing, challenges

http://www.blogspirit.com/fr/index.php: professional online blogs service

http://www.agoravox.fr/: citizen media

Misc

http://www.i-maginer.fr/: real-time 3D web services

http://www.netvibes.com/: personalized start page

http://www.kartoo.com/flash.php3: meta search engine

http://www.zlio.com/: « tupperware » like website (see above)

http://www.uneinvitation.com/: leisure organization platform

http://www.jamendo.com/fr/: music online

http://blog.moovement.com/: jobs

http://www.bluekiwi.fr/: intranet solution?

Top visited French specific websites

http://orange.fr/: top french telecom provider’s website

http://free.fr/: second-placed telecom provider’s website

http://www.voila.fr/: dating, chat website

http://www.mappy.com/: road and travel guide

http://www.fnac.com/: big French ebusiness website

http://www.boursorama.com/: first stock exchange website

http://www.skyrock.com/front/index.php: Skyrock radio’s website

Summary

As always, please leave a comment if we’ve missed something or you have more information about the French Web market. Thanks again to Thomas and Jean-Pierre for the details in this post!

Update: based on comments below, here are some additions. Apologies to those we missed out first time round…

Originally published on ReadWriteWeb (archived copy)

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