Silicon Beat has a post today on Vizu raising $1-million to develop an online polling service from a group of investors that includes WR Hambrecht + Co, Amicus Capital, Ron Conway, Esther Dyson, Don Hutchison, and Mike Maples, Jr. I've played with several other poll services - Quimble, dPolls - and found them to be interesting tools and fairly easy to use. Vizu was, by far, the most time-consuming poll to create and I was disappointed to discover the only way to distribute it was via e-mail, as opposed to being able to put it on your blog or Web site. The question is whether Vizu, Quimble, dPolls, etc. can become businesses. From what I can tell, dPolls and Quimble are generating revenue from AdSense, which means they have to attract lots of traffic from polls on blogs and Web sites back to their corporate site. It's still pretty early days but I don't see a vibrant business model here unless what we're looking at is low-cost operations that don't require much revenue to survive. My sense is online polling is just another cool Web 2.0 service with limited business prospects. Give me some time, and I'll come up with a catchy acronym or pithy phrase to describe these "cool but..." group.