10 Years of WashingtonPost.com, Some Insytes, Some Issues
I remember sitting at my Guru Communications desk in Miami Beach seeing the Washington Post come online back in 1996. We were in the height of our frenzied growth and struggling against the five headed monster that was our management team. We had just finished launching Isle Bombardier a couple of months beforehand and we were all talking about how big Media doesn’t get it. But the Post did, and that was surprising and refreshing to see.
Reading the article Web Site Starts From a Memo, Gains Millions of Readers about the brief history of the Post, I found a few gems that I wanted to share with you.
In particular, this quote from Warren Buffet is extremely relevant to the modern thinking of many of the Web 2.0 startups I know who don’t really have a business model or plan to revenue other than AdSense. I never really understood that form of business model in the early days (which is why I was not able to make Virtual Community Network a big success – I thought we were supposed to try to make money not light it on fire and burn it). While I disagree with the free spending strategy in principle because of the huge risks, I do see how those risks can be mitigated to ensure some modicum of success.
And Kaiser recalls a conversation with Post board member Warren Buffett in which Buffett told Kaiser to stop worrying about the financial side: “There is no case in history of somebody assembling a huge audience and then failing to make money from it,” Kaiser recalls Buffett saying. Washington Post.com – Web Site Starts From a Memo, Gains Millions of Readers
This was the beginning of the “eyeballs” movement – build an audience, make the site sticky and make it viral to grow the audience. I still find it very interesting that today people expect to get to the same “sticky eyeballs” outcome by being “open” and letting their customers easily migrate to competitors. At least today there are standards of quality and methods of understanding audience expectations that make it more possible to create a product/service that really satisfies the needs of the audience.
What really make sense to me in this debate is that it clearly drives competition and motivates organizations with thriving collaborative cultures to make the best possible product in order to prevent people from leaving. It is sort of like an unsatisfied customer relief valve – when the pressure from customers leaving for a competing service get too high, is the company more likely to shut the valve or respond with greater innovation to reverse the flow?
This is seemingly being played out in the Flickr v. Zooomr discussion – especially now since the Flickr Famous Thomas Hawk is going to work for Zooomr. While he says he will still continue to post to Flickr, that does not make sense – he has switched his life to a new photo sharing platform by joining the company, he should make the full commitment to it. While it may be a stab at a brilliant marketing move (keep talking on Flickr about how much better Zooomr is), I feel that such a move is not in the spirit of authenticity that is so prominent in this era of the Web 2.0 Social Contract.
Which brings me back to the brief history of WashingtonPost.com and some of the more recent strategic shifts. To embrace more of the many to many aspects of the covversational Web instead of the one to many model that has been so prevalent for so many years.
In a recent all-company meeting, Caroline Little, WPNI’s chief executive officer and publisher, spoke of recent online innovations. “We set out, very purposefully, about two years ago, to leverage the medium of the Internet, to create more possibilities of conversation and to drive people to come and stay on the site: With blogs, comments on blogs, Technorati [links], comments on articles, a broader and deeper opinion section,” she said. Washington Post.com – Web Site Starts From a Memo, Gains Millions of Readers
I refer to this shift as moving from being the “Town Crier” to becoming the “Town Hall” – moving from the idea of media as voice to the idea of media as place – a venue where the conversation happens. From trying to control the conversation to facilitating it amongst peers. The Post does understand this better than most big media companies, but not completely. They still think the game is about driving people to the site and keeping them there, which is an ad revenue model rather than being a social one. This was further evidenced by their position looking out at the world from inside the organization.
Washingtonpost.com, they realized, wasn’t a completely separate product; it could also help market the larger Washington Post brand. Audience spikes around big news events sent a strong message: Readers yearned for the authority of The Washington Post’s reporting. Washington Post.com – Web Site Starts From a Memo, Gains Millions of Readers
Internet usage always spikes around big news stories – email volume, IM volume, hits to the big authoritative news sites and now so does the amount of stuff people contribute to the conversation through their Blogs, Podcasts and Vlogs. Yes, people need to have a trusted, authoritative voice to turn to, but this is no longer the Post by default. In all fairness, the strategies that the Post has taken are in the right direction. They are willing to experiment a little, they are embracing conversational methods and they have a really bright team of folks working for them.
But the jury on relevance and authoritative voice is still out and probably won’t render its final judgment for another 10 years. Personally, while a track record and brand loyalty is important, I now judge news sources on the merits of each piece they publish. I am just as likely to stumble on a Washington Post story as I am one from the New York Times. What matters most to me now are the filters like TechMeme, TailRank and Digg. Then it comes down to the people I trust and then the organizations. Until I can build a more personal relationship with Post reporters (neither myself or them have the time to do so), I will only have a limited amount of trust that I can give the organization.
This fundamentally misses the most important point, that Greg Narain paraphrases nicely
Is anyone really dealing with the relationship that’s held and the realities of maintaining that connection and loyalty over an extended period of time? Socialtwister 2.0
That is the problem with social media – and that is the opportunity.
technorati tags:beyondblogging, washingtonpost, zooomr, flickr, web2.0, socialmedia, conversation, newmedia
Insytes on Creating YouTube Popularity
This is a great, common sense plain english analysis of what people are watching most on YouTube. It doesn’t hurt that he has an engaging style, looks like Kevin Smith and comes from down under. He also knows how to use minimalist editing for maximum effect. Check it out for yourself.
Update: For some reason this WordPress configuration does not like embedding objects, so click on over to the video instead.
Rails Day 2006 – A Nuby's Experience
So I have been spending Rails Day trying to learn Ruby programming so I can interface with my programmers and perhaps develop a bit of the code myself. Forgetting the fact that my skills in this arena don’t even include CSS let alone a good working understanding of MVC, things are pretty bumpy. Still, I am going through all the relevant screencasts, guides and tutorials. Perhaps by 9pm tonight I will be able to actually build the program I sketched out last night. If not, at least I have a good base of knowledge for going forward.
I had promised myself I would stay away from learning programming languages, but I am also frustrated by not being able to get simple things done for myself, so I figured I might as well at least invest a few days in seeing how easy it really is. Here is what I have found so far:
- If you often exchange words for one another and don’t have a clear logical approach to follow off of a key, it becomes very difficult to make everything in the code work together without breaking… al lot!
- Configuring the development environment is a real bitch. None of the Mac OS X tutorials had all of the information I needed to know. I had to poke around in different guides, help files and elsewhere just to get the pieces in place so that I could understand what where to even start. Then the tutorial used different line commands than my environment.
- These guys who know what they are doing go way too fast for any Nuby to follow. Ridiculously fast – perhaps because the presentation they were giving was too time constrained. But seriously, would it have been that hard to record another version at a slightly slower speed? Or is this just another tactic to keep more people from learning how to program?
Well, I was able to get the test Blog app up and running, but eventually broke it somehow, even though I followed the steps exactly and double checked the code for syntax or other errors. So I ended up throwing it out. I guess I can try to recreate the whole thing one more time to make sure I follow everything exactly (i renamed a couple of fields for my own usage). For now though, I am going to take a break…
technorati tags:railsday, rubynuby, rubyonrails
Blogged with Flock
Leadership does not mean “Power Hungry”
Posted by cheuer in Leadership on June 16th, 2006
Chris Messina had an interesting post called “The future of open leadership” which I felt compelled to respond to. I generally get where Chris is coming from and agree with a lot of the core stuff (after all, one of my practice areas with Conversal was ‘transforming the heart of business’) but much of the way it is presented and the pervasive anti-establishment perspective does not sit well with me. It seems that many people of late are advocates for throwing the baby out with the bath water – instead of seeing things as they really are, everything is colored by their personal experience and perspective> People are more apt to associate something they dont like (such as the abuse of power) with something funamental (such as leadership) and thinking we need to re-invent the fundamentals. We don’t – we need to help people reach back to their roots and re-introduce the fundamentals as what they really are. Here is my broad sweeping response to his post which I also included in his comments:
NCDD Pre Conference Planning Report
My life as a dScribe has really begun. These are the notes I made at the NCDD Pre-Conference planning meeting for folks from the Bay Area. I will be hosting a BrainJams event with them as one of the pre-conference workshops which should be quite enlightening all the way around. I learned a great deal about so many different Dialogue and Deliberation efforts going on around the Bay Area and around the country. Better still, I met some really incredible folks (unfortunately their name’s may be butchered in the map as noted by the (sp) ‘tag’ next to their names).
I have not yet had a chance to clean this up (busy day) or make it pretty, but wanted to get this out sooner rather than later. If anyone has some time to do so, please go ahead and download it, make it pretty and email it back to me so I can replace the file for others…
You can download the raw MindManager File or get the PDF file to review. If you want to look at it more closely, you can download a free MindMap Viewer as well.
1500+ Photos Behind
OK, so many of those need to be deleted still, so perhaps it is about 400-500, but since I have been trying to clean up and process my photos instead of just posting them all as is, it sure is difficult to keep up. Maybe someone can offer services to do photography post production online – perhaps some mechanical turk like service. Regardless of what the tools say they can do, in many instances the auto correct just does not do the best job of improving a photograph.
Does anyone have some hints on how to get all this extra digital production done while still working and having a life? Does anyone know of a service? Does anyone want to start one?
PS – more to come on dScribes later this week (I hope)
Good News: MindManager Pro for Mac OSX!!!!
Just wanted to share this piece of good news with everyone – MindJet is finally releasing the MindManager Pro v6 for the Mac OSX. I originally bought a copy for the PC last year after seeing Hobie demo it at Gnomedex and I have been beta testing the Mac version for the past several weeks. (gosh it was hard to keep quiet about it, but I did) Tonight they are having a release event at the Apple Store in downtown San Francisco that I am going to… where I will also be picking up my laptop which just came in this afternoon!
So stoked on so many fronts. This also means that my iBook G4 now has a new logic board, a new hard drive, a new CD Burner and a new keyboard. If you know of anyone interested in buying it, please contact me since I am trying to buy a new MacBook.
The best news though is that I get to use Mind Manager openly on my Mac. I have been doing quite a bit more work with it over the last few weeks and it is definitely the way I work best. In fact, I did my entire NetSquared presentation in it first, then exported to PPT and worked on the design and some last minute editing. It will help me deal with all the projects we have going on much better now. MindManager for Mac brings me one step closer to getting rid of my PC – I have been waiting so long for this, but the wait was worth it completely. Now my productivity will soar along with the great ideas that keep popping up…
New Blog In Progress
Given that I will be mostly offline for a couple of days while traveling to New York for my friend’s wedding, I don’t know why I really started this process now. Well, I guess I do really – I promoted a couple of URL’s for projects that don’t have Web sites yet and wanted to give it some grounding to start if anyone looks for them in the meantime.
So that said, you might be interested in the presentation I gave on tagging yesterday at the NetSquared Conference. (Download the PPT or visit the panel session description) I am really bummed I could not make it there today for the ‘working sessions’, particularly since one of the ideas I proposed to them around the rent an expert theme is being used and I wanted to experience it first hand to see how it turns out. Anyway, I was not invited to offer my expertise as it is, and frankly I am not sure what expertise I would offer if I was.
Ultimately I am going to follow Tom Foremski’s advice and at least give each of my ideas that have domain names behind them a post here and a category so I can add more to those ideas over time. That will take a while to get done really, but hopefully I will be able to finish migrating the Chris Heuer site over to here within a week or so and get this Blog configured and cleaned up properly and resolving to my name so I can just direct people to ChrisHeuer.com for accessing the work I am doing.
So in the meantime, please pardon my dust as I get my new online home in order…
Whew…. data ok, latop not
Posted by cheuer in Uncategorized on May 22nd, 2006
So we were able to recover the data off my hard drive and back it up to my iPod this morning at the Apple store in Kendall. Poor gramps was bored stiff as we waited over an hour, but it was worth it because I got to show him a bunch of photos on Flickr. Now I need to get a new laptop because it seems the logic board is bad. Perhaps I can get them to give me a credit on a new MacBook Pro instead.
Dangit – Laptop dead again!
Posted by cheuer in Uncategorized on May 21st, 2006
I can hardly believe it. 2 east coast trips in less than 6 weeks and once again, as was the case with Boston, my laptop has died while on the road.
This time, it is extremely hard to deal with. Last time there was not really much of a loss, other than a few emails and a bunch of photos, which I was able to recover later. This time however, I lost a presentation I was working on for NetSquared conference that is due Tuesday, a ton of important emails, about 100 photos from the Beyond Blogging event, 100+ photos of my big brother and his family, a requirements document I was working on for one of my startups, 2 blog posts I wrote on the plane, the podcasts I recorded at the event and a couple of other important documents I worked on while flying east on the way out here.
Really big bummer and it really hurts this time because so much was lost and will need to be recreated. Worse still, now I am really behind an already overloaded schedule and I have to borrow access on my friend’s PC. Now I will need to take it in to the Apple store tomorrow and get them to look at it and/or perhaps pay one of the data recovery companies a few hundred dollars to retrieve the data.
It would not be so bad if this had not just happened about 5 weeks ago. I thought I was supposed to have a new hard drive after the last one failed under warranty, but perhaps they replaced it with a refurbished one? Regardless, there is not much I can do other than deal with it, defer all the deadlines and pray that the Genius Bar can get the drive up long enough to burn the stuff over to DVD.
The weird bit is how it happened. I was working on the blog posts on the plane, when I went to save them as Word docs and the spinning color wheel came up, only to freeze in place. When trying to restart, it just went from the bright white screen to a grey one. After landing, it restarted in the car miraculously, but then froze. It started a couple more times after that, but would not shut down when I closed the laptop. So on the way home tonight I picked up some CDR’s with the intention of recovering whatever I could get off of it – after many failed attempts, I have finally given up and just hope it might come alive tomorrow.
I am more of a spiritual, not religious sort of guy, but please do pray for something good to happen from this for me. Apple did such a great job in fixing the laptop last time, going really above and beyond. It would suck to know that they gave me a crappy refurb hard drive that died just a few short weeks later causing me all this anguish and loss…