Reflections & analysis about innovation, technology, startups, investing, healthcare, and more .... with a focus on Minnesota, Land of 10,000 Lakes. Blogging continuously since 2005.

Category: Messaging/Collaboration (Page 3 of 9)

LinkedIn’s Growth Beats Facebook’s

So you think Facebook’s growing rapidly, huh?  Well, check this out. Nielsen just released its latest ranking of the top social networks (for the month of October 2007), and it shows LinkedIn grew at a significantly faster clip than any of the top ten — even oh-so-hip darling Facebook. Of course, these numbers reflect usage at both home and work, and the latter is the traditional stronghold of professional network LinkedIn. Socntwksgrowth
But Facebook’s made no secret about expanding its user base into the adult working world, too — not just college kids passing around party pix.

What’s surprising is that, even with all the rapid — and rabid — Facebook adoption lately by us professionals (yes, I’m hooked, too), LinkedIn is growing even faster. Hipness is not everything, it seems — functionality matters, too. And LinkedIn has built up a pretty good stronghold in the professional networking/recruiting/job search space. (And you have to love founder Reid Hoffman also having a nice stake in Facebook as an early investor.)

Another reason LinkedIn may be scoring bigger growth: I’m not aware of companies banning it at work, but I certainly have heard that to be the case with Facebook inside some firms.
What’s your experience?  Should either of these sites be banned at work?  [The nerve of these employers, thinking people shouldn’t be searching for new jobs or sharing party invites when they’re supposed to be working…  :-)]

UPDATE (Thanksgiving Day, 11/22): Oh, this is too funny. GigaOM just posted Giving Thanks for…Facebook?

UPDATE (11/23): You have to love this juicy tidbit via TechCrunch UK…. Rumour: NewsCorp to Buy LinkedIn.  I think it could very well be true — I agree with one of the commenters that LinkedIn + the WSJ could be a great combo.

 

‘Social DNA’: Do You Know Where Your Digital Genes Are?

You knew it had to be coming: a way to map your online social self. My god, how did we get along without this till now? Thank you, eSnips (I think). Esnipslogo
I mean, Facebook asks some questions when you create your profile there [many of them lame, certainly for adults]. And it seems to me MySpace does, too — but then I never go there anymore.  [I remember they force you to tell your age on your profile, so I went with the max they would allow: 91.] Do I need another social network now?  Well, let me think about that… 🙂  But I went through the sign-up procedure, anyway. After all, if I’m doing a post, I’d better. And it was interesting. More on that in a bit.  First, some background…

eSnips is a content-sharing site that officially launched at DEMOfall in September 2006 (my coverage). CEO Yael Elish, a veteran Internet entrepreneur, told me then that her site lets "everyday people share content in one place, without having to manage so many accounts."  She said then that it was about sharing, publishing, and even selling your creative work — and was all free. At that time, eSnips offered 1GB of free space, but that’s now been upped to 5GB. Traffic to the site appears to be growing nicely when viewed at Alexa.

So, what’s this new wrinkle of "Social DNA" all about?  From today’s press release:

A key premise of Web 2.0 services is the ability to discover like-minded people through common friends or tags. eSnips Social DNA takes this ability to the next level by matching people with others who resemble them most based on hundreds or thousands of common defined aspects of their lives. It’s done through a series of fun, creative and often intriguing 1-2 minute online quizzes across multiple topics (referred to as Social Genes).

The multiple-choice quizzes are just one type of “Social Gene” that makes up a user’s Social DNA.  The other type is a List, where users can express their musical, literary, cinematic and even dietary preferences.  A List can express personal favorites in a more diverse way than a Quiz, which is why a mixture of both is essential to get comprehensive Social DNA results.

Immediately upon answering the first question, users get exposed to others who responded like them.  As they continue the quiz, the matches change until eventually a user only sees the highest scoring matches. They also can see how their answers compared to rest of the population, shown through a uniqueness score and set of graphs. Upon completing a quiz, users can quickly and easily create a fun widget to post on their website or blog.

Here’s a screenshot of the page I got after I went through my first quiz, in the category of Business & Technology.
I chose the Web 2.0 quiz (natch). As you can see, only 30% answered like me, so I’m "in the minority" — how special! This is just one quiz of many I could have done.  I didn’t count how many quizzes there were, but I’m assuming there would have to be hundreds, eventually, anyway. [Note the service is, of course, labeled beta — what isn’t?] Esnipsresultspg_2

My take after going through one quiz is that the questions were a bit trivial — even silly. I think eSnips is trying too hard to be funny, in an attempt to make the process fun (which of course it has to be).  I just question the scientific nature of all this, I guess, if there is any.  Should there be?  More than a few of the questions didn’t offer an answer that I liked.  Nonetheless, I think this Social DNA concept is fascinating, and I have no doubt that eSnips users — mostly all younger than me — will eat it up.  Why?  Because it plays right into the powerful need to get your online profile "just right."  I heard a stat last week that active social networkers are spending up to an hour a week on average fiddling with their profile.  This will enable them to go nuts like on no other site I know!  If you’re into finding/discovering people online (can you say dating?), this will be a very engaging and "sticky" feature for eSnips. I think it’s bound to boost traffic to the site, bigtime.  It will be interesting to watch that play out over the next weeks and months.

Defrag 8: Final Tidbits and Recap

Well, a few days have gone by since Defrag ended, and I always like to let things settle a bit before I have my final say on a conference. This is that post, which also captures some highlights from the rest of the second day’s program.

The "Next-Level Discovery" panel featured an eclectic group, including an IT professor from Berkeley (Marti Hearst), a general manager of Dow Jones Factiva (Lou Paglia), the inventor of Jabber and now working at Wikia on a project to create an open search engine (Jeremie Miller), and the CEO and cofounder of code-search site Krugle (Steve Larsen). Discoverypanel
Brad Horowitz of Yahoo was the moderator. Here’s a sampling of what we heard:

Hearst said discovery is about finding things you weren’t expecting to find. But, today, in the enterprise, "people are about search." She said today it’s about navigating, whereas in the future it will be just "saying what you want." Hearst said we’re starting to see the convergence of two trends: massive collections of implicit user behavior, and better handling of longer queries.

Lou Paglia is the GM of the corporate research division at Dow Jones Factiva, which "normalizes thousands of news information sources from around the world for corporate research people." He said that in the enterprise today, Facebook is a way of discovering, as is checking stocks, for example. Jeremie Miller, open source guru that he is, said that, for next-level discovery to happen, we need better connection of independent parties. "The fabric must grow there."  Steve Larsen spoke of efforts to make search smarter, and that there are now more than 100 vertical search sites (his company being one example). "These could do to the major search sites what cable TV did to the networks."  These vertical search sites are about specific interests of consumers, he said. Because they constrain what one is looking for, you can assume implicit things about them. And you can present results that provide context, the real meaning of discovery."  Horowitz said Flickr (a Yahoo property) mines the "interestingness" of people and "reflects that back to the community" — and that this is "better than just explicit things like ratings." There’s value in these implicit behaviors, and it lowers the barriers of participation.

In the discussion period afterwards, Factiva’s Paglia spoke of the "hidden web" and how it’s a big area of need in the corporate world. He said his firm is seeing a change in the paradigm. "How do you get beyond the article? What’s the actual knowledge in the news? What about the data element to help managers make decisions? We want to help people get to where they want to go."  Krugle’s Larsen said his company’s code search engine can even link all the way back to the market requirements that caused a given piece of code to be developed. Wikia’s Miller said "the dark web will cease to be known … information wants to be found." Doc Searls asked from the front row, "What about searching old web pages?"  Miller said "these are a real treasure, but it’s very hard." Factiva’s Paglia, however, said "we’re getting there." Another audience question was about social search. The panelists noted that one company working in that area, Me.dium, was here, and that Microsoft has such a project. Horowitz said Del.icio.us (also a Yahoo property) is "headed more this way."  Esther Dyson asked whether more structure was needed for search. Horowitz said it depends on who’s providing that structure. Larsen said visualization is one way to give search more structure. Paglia asked, "Why should we have to search at all? You should just be able to log onto your CRM and be told what things you need to action on today." Horowitz closed the panel by commenting that "it’s amazing how ossified search results are!" People are locked into a certain look or way that search results are presented to them, but implied this needs to change, to get better.

The Elephant in the Room
A special add to the program, who flew in just for the second day of Defrag, was technologist Kevin Marks of Google. Kevinmarksonstage
Formerly with Technorati and Apple, Marks said his area of responsibility at his new employer covers basically everything except search and ads. The word was that he came to event in response to one of the impromptu Open Space discussions the previous day, called " Closed Private," which took issue with Google’s new "Open Social" spec — as it might relate to the enterprise, at least.  And the word was Kevin showed up to explain his side… 🙂  A great recap of his talk was done by my friend Sean Ammirati — it’s here on  Read/Write Web.  Also, for those of you into the details, here’s Kevin Mark’s slide presentation. A key thing many people may not be noticing is that two of the already announced partners for Open Social are Oracle and Salesforce.com. So remember this, friends, as Kevin said: "Business is social, too."  I say that’s a key takeaway from this event. And I think it’s great that Google chose to show up here. It really speaks to the significance of this first-year gathering called Defrag.

And From Sponsor Yahoo….
Jeremy Zawodny of the Yahoo Developer Network gave an interesting presentation, saying his areas of interest were Open Source, Social Everywhere ("the ‘Net always has been"), Web Services, and Web Platforms. Zawodnyfuture
His "Future" slide shows where he’s focused, so I include it here.  For more, see Jeremy’s blog.

The Guys With the Money
How could there be a conference without a VC panel?  It just can’t happen. But we were very lucky to have partners from arguably three of the most successful firms investing in Web 2.0 technology today: SoftTech VC (Jeff Clavier), Union Square Ventures (Al Wenger), and the Foundry Group (Brad Feld). Here are some highlights:

Feld said there’s a notion now that it only takes $2-3 million in invested capital today to become a profitable business in this space, well below what’s traditionally been the case. Clavier noted that "the $100k you spend today to develop your prototype is like $1 million ten years ago." Wenger reminded us, though, that "if you fall behind after you hit a vein, that’s problematic." 

Vcpanel

Feld said his first investment as a VC was only $50k (Net Genesis), and the he only invested $100k in Harmonics (which developed Guitar Hero). "A typical seed investment now is $250-500k, where it used to be $5 million," he said. "It’s faster now to get to a proof point." Later, we learned that Clavier really doesn’t invest in "enterprise software" [though one would assume he’s interested in social networking as it applies to business, or why was he at an event that was more enterprise focused?], whereas Feld chimed in that "he loves enterprise software!"  He thinks it’s amazing that so many VCs "don’t like it anymore."  Consumer-oriented Web 2.0 deals have certainly taken much of the attention away, but a major trend is emerging whereby those technologies are now leading advancements in enterprise productivity.  And Feld inserted here his take on that, which I think is a major takeaway from Defrag: "I like what I’m seeing in enterprise IT spending increase projections for 2008 — double digits, maybe 20%," he said. Most VCs want to fit into one or the other category (consumer or enterprise), "but I’ve never been able to separate them." Wenger noted the huge difference in the two is that, in an enterprise business, "you must focus on building a sales team." No small undertaking, to be sure, nor cheap.  Feld noted that, of course, very few companies become successful on both sides.  His advice to startups: "Don’t overcommit too early which side you’re going to focus on."

As the afternoon’s sessions continued , we heard a very good presentation by Nova Spivack, founder of Radar Networks, called "Towards a Usable Semantic Web". He referred to the "third decade of the Web" as being about "transforming it from a file server to a database."  For a selection of his slides, see my Defrag pix on Flickr. Nova’s firm has introduced a new service called Twine, which he says represents the next level in knowledge management —  "knowledge networking." Nova defines that term as "social networking + semantic web + collaboration + search."

My Recap of Defrag Version 1.0
This first-year event was great, in nearly every way.  In fact, I can’t think of a single thing I’d change when I fill out the comment form — except maybe to publish a list of attendees. [Unfortunately, the sponsor wiki sites were not fully populated with everyone in attendance — which amazed me. Perhaps they were expecting everyone to sign up on their own?  They didn’t.] It was really the people attending this event that made it such a rich expertience.  That was the key, and I say hooray to the producers for getting so many key players out for this one.  At one point, producer Eric Norlin said it was like "getting the band back together" from Esther Dyson’s great PC Forum events, now retired. I mean, when you have people like David Weinberger, Doc Searls, Chris Locke, Esther, Jerry Michalski, and so many other early Internet pioneers in the same room, it can’t help being a thought-provoking experience!  I was taken by what Steve Larsen said about the event. He told me: "I was at the first PopTech conference, and I also attended the early PC Forums. This event has the same feel."  Steve also pointed me to a blog post about those early days of this core group of Internet and online community pioneers, which gives you a feel for what things were like back then. It’s good to look back, but I also think Defrag made some history of its own on these two days in Denver in late 2007.

As I spoke to Eric Norlin on the second day, I think he and
a colleague really hit on the essence of Defrag #1: "It’s all about
questions, not answers."  That really wraps it up as best as anyone can. And I know that I’ll be back again next year for more.

Defrag 7: Enterprise 2.0 and ‘Building Ties’

Tuesday, the final day of Defrag, opened with Andy McAfee of Harvard Business School speaking on the topic of "Enterprise 2.0." I love learning from these Harvard guys. They have such a…delivery, or something. A way of making the topic seem, well, just so compelling and fascinating. They must give these guys stage training. They just keep me forward on the edge of my seat — I love that. Andy referred at one point to his colleague Clayton Christensen, another great thinker and presenter I’ve heard a couple of times. But I must say, after hearing Andy for the first time, he’s in the same category. (An insight of Christensen’s that Andy dropped here, one he also uses as a guidepost, is this: "Managers are voracious consumers of theory.")

"I think we’re at a time parallel to ten years ago," said Andy, "the first stage of the Internet." What he’s been hearing a lot from Corporate America lately is CEOs asking their CIOs, "What is this Web 2.0 thing, and what’s our strategy?"  The implication is this trend we’re calling "Enterprise 2.0" is for real, and I guess that’s why it’s a major underlying focus of Defrag.

McAfee put up a slide that he labeled "the knowledge worker’s view of the enterprise."  Andymcafee_2
He said this diagram provides a foundation for understanding how the new Web 2.0 technologies help "build ties" in the organization. For the center of the target, "strong ties," the prototypical tool is the wiki. He noted that email is "broken in many ways," and that wiki technology can be a better, simpler solution for collaboration. "I keep coming back to what Ward Cunningham says: ‘What’s the simplest thing we could possibly do?’ "

Andy said that a more important area of focus, however, is the next concentric circle: "weak ties."  He quoted a sociologist that says we spend a lot of time working on our strong ties. "That’s okay," said McAfee, "but they’re not likely to be sources of non-redundant info." We need networks to build our weak ties. "That’s exactly what we should be doing inside organizations," he said. "And this speaks to the strength of Facebook inside companies." [I wanted to ask at this point why, then, are some companies banning its use at work? We can only assume they’ll eventually see the light, or create their own internal Facebook-like networks.] "The prototypical tool here is the social newtorking system," said McAfee. "It builds bridges to other networks…and what emerges is access to non-redundant information."

Bloggers Are ‘Brokers’
So, what of the next circle, the "potential ties"?  This is the area of the unknown pool of people we all know are out there that we want, or hope to, connect with to expand our worlds. "But how do we find them?" In this classification of ties, Andy said the key is the broker. "Brokers have real value in bridging people." And the prototypical tool here? That, he said, is blogs. You would think he’d be referring to internal company blogs (and Andy does support that practice), but he went beyond what happens inside the firewall. "The blogosphere is an incredible way to expand my knowledge and my network," he said. "And it’s not terribly time intensive. "The typical knowledge worker is not going to spend hours reading blogs, but they can certainly learn how to monitor the most important ones to them."  He showed what he called a great example of an internal, idea-sharing blog — that of a construction-related firm called IntraWest. He also spoke of an internal "working prediction market" at Google. FInally, he showed what he said was an excellent example of an intranet, that of Avenue A | Razorfish — and, since we rarely get a glimpse of company intranets as outsiders, I’m including his slide here, at least so you can see the types of information included, if not the detail. Aveaintranet_2
Blog posts receive a prominent position at the right. McAfee said the base technology for this site is MediaWiki. "Companies are deploying technology at all level of the bullseye."

We Need Strangers
But what about that other, final circle — the one McAfee labeled as "None"? Why was it included? He said this is the group that could be assumed to be "people that have nothing to say to each other." But, he said, let’s stop here. "Think about capital markets. This is a way for complete strangers to value a company." And that brought him back to the subject of prediction markets. "There are lots of these on the Internet," said McAfee. "For elections, sports events, many things." He also cited, and showed, the example of the Hollywood Stock Exchange, which is an entertainment prediction market where you can buy, sell, or hold your favorite movies and stars, in a completely virtual marketplace. This was the point where McAfee laid out his greatest challenge. "Why aren’t such markets employed more inside corporations? Especially since firms spend so much time and effort on forecasting. They work!"

Prediction Markets Ascending?
He said he really believes that "we’re missing a play here — it’s worth experimenting." In the discussion following, Andy noted it’s not necessary to have real money at stake in such virtual markets. "Hollywood Stock Exchange is complete funny money." But there are advantages from these markets — "It’s irrelevant if real money is at stake." Google, he said, offers incentives for its employees to participate in its prediction market — specifically t-shirts, which are a very sought after prize inside the firm. "Google employees are not wanting for much," he said, "but I’ve been told there’s a real t-shirt economy going on inside Google." He also noted, in response to a question from an Intuit employee who said her company’s internal blog has cut company email in half(!), that "there’s an authoring urge by certain people, and every company has them." They drive the success of these internal blogs and other tools.

McAfee concluded his talk by saying that this concept of "ties" provides a foundation for understanding how the new Web 2.0 technologies can help create networks between people that would otherwise not form. "Managers want this playbook." He said that some people think the Internet tends to make things "too much alike, too homogenized." But he’s seeing just the opposite. "The net effect of these new Enterprise 2.0 technologies is that they will help companies and workgroups differentiate from each other."

Defrag 6: Flickr Pix

Before I blog about the second day’s sessions, which were great, I thought I’d upload and link to my Flickr set for Defrag. We’re in the last session right now, about information overload, and here I am multi-tasking and overloading myself…. 🙂  But it just comes naturally to us information freaks, I guess!  Pretty much everyone else here is doing the same: checking email, reading stuff on their laptops, blogging, writing business plans, who knows!  This has been a fun event. More soon….

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