Good News: You Can Now Withdraw PayPal Funds to Philippine Bank Accounts
Tuesday
Jan 29, 2008
This is perhaps the best news I’ve seen lately. I got an email from PayPal saying Philippine users can now withdraw PayPal funds into our local bank accounts.
New! Withdraw Your Funds to Your Philippine Bank AccountNow you can add your Philippine bank account to your PayPal account, so you can withdraw your money directly to your bank. It saves you time and gives you faster access to your PayPal funds!
Plus, there is no charge to withdrawal amounts over PHP 7000*. So go ahead and add your bank account today!
Withdrawals of less than PhP 7,000 are only charged PhP 50. How great is that?
For more information, head on to the Philippine PayPal withdrawal page. A list of supported banks is here.
I think I’ll link up my PayPal account to those banks which have online access, so I can monitor how quickly funds are transfered.
My Thoughts on the ABS-CBN vs. GMA Ratings Game
Thursday
Jan 10, 2008
If you watch local (Philippine) television you would be bombarded with regular messages explaining some discrepancies in data gatherings for ratings in certain towns. Here’s my take on the ratings game, as posted on the Blog Herald.
[I]t dawned upon me that the reason behind all this fuss is money. For us consumers ratings could simply be indicators of how popular a television (or radio) channel or network is, for a given time of the day. However, for the network and for the media industry, ratings represent pricing power. For media that are not able to count exact “hits” or “page views” ratings are used as an indication of popularity and reach. This translates to how much the television network or station can charge advertisers, particularly as they price ad spots on cost per thousand pairs of eyeballs (or impressions, if that’s a better term).
Check out the BlogHerald editorial to see how I think this affects us, as bloggers.
September Sponsorship Now Open
Thursday
Aug 30, 2007
I don’t believe I’ve publicly announced this before (though I have put in discreet notices). If you’re interested in sponsoring this blog, then sponsorship starting September is open. You can purchase the entire 728×90px header space and/or the rightmost column 160×600px vertical space (to replace the adsense banners) for a nominal amount. I’m also introducing 125×125 buttons and text links on the rightmost sidebar. Discounts apply to volume—more than one ad or more than one month.

Google Pagerank is 5/10, with EatonWeb overall metric of 38.38%. Daily readership is at about 1,500 uniques with approximately 4,000 daily page views. The site has 220 RSS feed subscribers.
You can contact me in private for the rates, and to negotiate. If you’re interested in sites with wider coverage, I can also offer you ad spots on several Splashpress Media properties, including the Blog Herald, Tubetorial, Performancing, 901am and the like. More expensive, of course, but given the rate and quality of readership there, value is justified.
I’m not selling my soul. It’s just that while AdSense and the few TLA ads still continue to help pay the bills, I prefer having more control over advertising. And selling direct is always best—it’s cheaper for the advertiser, and I don’t have to split proceeds with the middleman.
Update: The masthead banner has been taken. I’ve got myself an excellent long-term deal for that one.
Mel & Joey Interview Video
Wednesday
Aug 22, 2007
This was aired last Sunday, August 19th, 2007 on GMA 7’s Mel & Joey talk show. The topic was innovative means of making a living.
The interview was actually about two hours long, as the producer and I chatted about a lot of things relevant to blogging and problogging. I guess due to time constraints (and to give way to other topics), they had to cut things short. The clip shown is just a few minutes long, and my part there was only about a minute or so. Fellow Filipino bloggers Abe Olandres and Gaile dela Cruz also appear on this segment.
Video is embedded here (viewable after the jump) ...
Send Prepaid Credits to the Philippines with Aryty
Monday
Jun 4, 2007
Last Saturday, my wife and I had lunch at Makati Shangri-La’s Circles restaurant on the invitation of Ms. Karla Maquiling of Pinoycentric.com. Apparently, the people behind Aryty.com (said to be pronounced like “alrighty”), CEO Nils Johnson and Creative Director Daniel Neumann, were in town and they wanted to introduce their company and services to Filipino bloggers.

The concept behind Aryty.com is strikingly simple, but with lots and lots of potential, in my opinion. Aryty basically lets users send prepaid credits to Philippine mobile phones—be it Globe, Smart or Sun Cellular. They don’t even charge any fees in excess of the actual credit amount. Users just have to go to Aryty.com, sign up, and send load to any prepaid number in the Philippines using their credit cards to pay.
And why does it have lots of potential? Get this. While internet penetration rate in the Philippines is at a dismal 10% or less (most of which access at public access points like internet cafés), mobile penetration rate is around 50% of the population, or around 50 million people. And what’s even better for Aryty’s business is that a good majority of Filipinos have friends or family members living abroad either as immigrants, expats or migrant workers.
So that means Aryty saw great demand, and they’re now filling in that gap. The competition is not actually other companies doing the same thing, but the behavior of the consumers themselves. Here in the Philippines, a good majority of mobile users are on prepaid, and credits can be bought just about anywhere—including stalls or shops in the malls, small corner stores, convenience stores, gasoline stations, and even your next door neighbor. You can even ask someone to pass or share load from his cellphone to yours, if you run low.
The prevailing preference is for micro purchases (say PhP 50 or about $1 a pop), but larger amounts are available (like PhP 300 or 500—about $6 to $10). These are still cheap by US standards, mind you.
But Aryty says it’s tapping the remittance-sending market, meaning those Filipinos who usually send bulk of their earnings back to their families here. So instead of them having to worry about their relatives back here who might need a few bucks to buy credits, they can just send them load at the comfort of their own Internet-connected computers. Remittances aren’t instantly sent and received, after all, but load can be sent in a matter of a few seconds.
What’s even more convenient is that once a user is registered, he/she can send load to mobile phones in the philippines not only from their computers, but even from their cellphones thru SMS.
And taking into account that not all Filipinos abroad are professionals with bank accounts and credit cards, Aryty will be opening stalls (or affiliating with shops?) where Pinoys can pay cash for credits to be sent here.
The group (composed mostly of bloggers) fielded a lot of questions and suggestions to the Nils and Daniel, and these were mostly about how secure the system is, and whether there’s room to improve or expand to other fields, like remittance, and even micropayments using prepaid load. Nils said they invested a lot of money and over a year’s effort of working on the back-end, so the system is solid and secure.
And as to their business model? We wondered if they will be sustainable, given that they won’t be charging fees on top of the actual prepaid load. The answer: they’ve purchased the credits in bulk, so they must have bought these at a huge discount. Note that local retailers also rely on the bulk discounts to earn. So for instance small retailers probably get about 10% discount on the prepaid load they sell, so they earn about PhP 10 for every PhP 100 they sell. The more credit or cards they buy for resale, the bigger the discount (I hear the larger retailers get about 30% discount or larger).
A summary
Let me summarize the good points and the bad points I see with Aryty so far.
The good points
- You can send load via the Internet.
- First time users get a free PhP 150 or about US$ 3 to send to Philippine mobile owners.
- Users need verification using a US- or Canada-issued mobile number, so the potential for abuse (i.e., multiple sending of PhP 150 load) is lesseneed.
- Local users can send text to foreign mobile numbers to request for load. Foreign users (US and Canada for now) will then receive the request on their mobile. If the number is registered already, they can just respond to send the load (and debit their debit/credit card). If not, they can login to Aryty.com to send the requested load.
- As mentioned, both sender and requester can use their mobile phones to ask for or send load, so there is no need to have access to a computer (as long as the sender is already registered).
Things to improve on
- For now, the service is only open to the US and Canada, hence a limited reach. Pinoys live and work all over the world, and this would be a good market to tap (which Nils says they are planning to do soon).
- The service is yet to open here in the Philippines. However, whether there is a demand here is still debated, since there is a low percentage of Filipinos with credit cards, and most who do are not very comfortable with using credit cards to transact online.
Suggestions
- Prepaid credit as currency? Can be a legal/technical hassle, but it’s probably doable. Vmobile tried this before. I wonder if they got any success.
- Of course, more countries.
- More payment options (like PayPal and even cash).
- Aryty as a remittance service?
- Have a button for bloggers/web publishers who might want to be “tipped” by prepaid load. Micropayments via PayPal aren’t here yet, but perhaps you can get rich by receiving thousands in prepaid load!
So if you Are in the Philippines and you have friends and relatives in the US or Canada, or vice versa, go try out Aryty.com !

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