List Here is a brand new classified/community site. It allows members to submit both inventory and goods, and it takes pride on the fact that “unlike other classified sites, ListHere.com does not push posts down, or allow duplicate entries to continually water down relevance”.
A lot of emphasis is equally placed on making navigating the site and posting items a task as straightforward as possible. For instance, URLs that make for quick and easy reference are fully taken into account (www.ListHere.com/username), and the user can have immediate access to information like full reporting in clicks, impressions and contacts. The same applies to leads on his listings and social networking impact.
The whole of the United States is meant to be covered, and you can access every State in the Union by clicking on the relevant name from the main page. Pay the site a visit and see if the place you live has already chalked down some classifieds. And if it hasn’t, you might as well be the first one in.
August 27, 2009
source: killerstartups.com


3 Responses to “ListHere.com – A Brand New Classifieds Site”
I think that this site has one of those interfaces that lacks a ture feel to create content, and it looks extremely empty without a lot of it.
You have this tagged as killer startups, but I think it would need to have content in order for its filtration features to be noticed. They would be essential to other classifieds sites, but it is useless without anyone posting.
Like with Muutu, probably better to start in one or two places and build, see the mistakes/pros, then launch all over.
I have once heard the same same selling-point: “the whole of the United States is meant to be covered”.
wwww.americanlisted.com is the free online classifieds in US and claims it provides users with a local reach. It makes easy to find anything close enough to your home.
The question is: which classified site is the most local then?
I must say that it seems like a big challenge to be successful with that site. I think that the site Deborah referred to, Americanlisted.com seems way better.