Friday, March 17, 2006

Ma.gnolia has a Budding Bus.ine.ss Mo.del


Ma.gnolia, a new social bookmarking site that I have blogged about before, is now live and open to new registrations. What I like about ma.gnoilia is how it goes beyond other sites in this category by coalescing distinct communities and interest groups like Flickr does. But there's much more.

The most interesting thing about Ma.gnolia is that - ta da - they already have a business model. They are actively courting marketers. Already you can see this business starting to bloom. Take a look at this page. Ma.gnolia has partnered with PETA, the EFF and even the Food Network to launch special collections of bookmarks. Now that's a smart idea.

As an interactive marketer, ma.gnolia really excites me. In this new world I see big opportunities for corporations to become not just content creators, but aggregators of stuff that's crafted by consumers. It's great that marketers can use ma.gnolia to create special collections, either as themselves or by sponsoring a personality to do so. Now let's hope the community fills in.

By the way, this isn't just a model for social bookmark sites. It's for memetrackers too. Hey Gabe, this is an idea for you. Memeorandum should partner with marketers to build co-branded memetrackers.

Ma.Gnolia

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Thursday, March 16, 2006

TV 2.0

What happens when social computing meets TV? Thomas Hawk demonstrates CozmoTV, which he describes as TV 2.0. CozmoTV already lets you tag television shows. However, the big next step is coming - on an opt in basis you will be able to publish your TiVo viewing habits on Cozmo. You can find friends who record the same shows you do. Now that's powerful. Oh and by the way, CozmoTV is free with plans to go ad-supported with a rev share for the community. Who says advertisers can't win in a TiVo world?

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Tuesday, March 14, 2006

Del.icio.us Vamps URL Check

Delicious has quietly rolled out a redesign to their URL pages that offers some pretty rich information such as the URL's bookmarking history, user notes, common tags and more. Give it a go from any Web page via this bookmarklet.

I find the URL check to be a great way to better understand bloggers. Here's where this comes in handy. The tag cloud and descriptions tell me how the world views the blogger. For example, note the tag clouds for Andrew Sullivan's blog vs. the one for Daily Kos. Right away you know who's viewed as a liberal and who's a conservative. This might be easy in the case of these two blogs, but when it's more esoteric sites where the picture is murkier you get the idea for how this comes into play.

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Thursday, March 09, 2006

Two Degrees of Similicio.us

I am asked all the time "how do you find blogs about such and such." Similicio.us plugs that hole. Once you find a blog you like, you can enter the URL on similiciou.us and it will show you related links by looking at relevant sites that share the same tags in people's del.icio.us bookmarks. It works on any site, not just blogs. Give it a go.

Sunday, March 05, 2006

Take del.icio.us to Go

Mobilicio.us enables you to access your del.icio.us bookmarks from your mobile device. It works by mashing up del.icio.us with Google Mobile. From your mobile browser just browse to http://mobilicio.us. Sign in using your del.icio.us username and password and you're good to go. Try it out here.
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Thursday, March 02, 2006

The Center of Gravity is Shifting

If there was a common question that ran through all of today's social media tour interviews it was this - what's next, Steve? One of the themes I kept hitting over and over is that the blogosphere is not where all the action is going to be in the months ahead. Yes, you read that right. Don't adjust your set.

For sure the b'sphere will continue to remain the largest galaxy in the social media universe in the short term. It's a major center of gravity that pulls people toward it. However, over the last few months a number other social media galaxies have rapidly risen to prominence. Take YouTube, digg and MySpace. These are just three examples, but they are drawing huge audiences. Richard Edelman is gushing over a fourth - StupidVideos.com.

As these constellations grow, some will become larger and more influential than the blogosphere. We're already seeing early signs of this and the power brokers will shift. For example, mobile jones notes that Technorati's coverage of MySpace is sorely lacking. Technorati also does little to help us mine and track YouTube, digg, StupidVideos.com and countless other smaller galaxies of consumer generated media. They focus on blogs.

With this important shift, there is a burgeoning need for tools that help us cement all of the content that we want to track from our favorite galaxies into a unified interface. Technorati and memetrackers like memeorandum play in this space, but they better evolve if they want to keep up. Search, RSS, and social tagging will be at the heart of this next great stage of Web 2.0 growth because they are enabling technologies. That's why if you're placing bets in this space, don't bet solely on blogs. Keep your eye on the expanding universe.

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What the Web Office Means for Productivity

Jeffrey Treem points to a great whitepaper on what Web 2.0 will mean for knowledge workers and productivity.

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Monday, February 27, 2006

Tag Tutorial Time

Over at ProBlogger, Aaron Brazell has written an outstanding tutorial on how to integrate tags into your blog and why this is important. I tag nearly every post and I have been seeing my traffic from Technorati's tag pages climb ever since.

Don't hesitate. Start today. Drag this Technorati tag bookmarklet to your bookmarks to get started. I picked this up over here. I bet we'll see "the tag" submitted as an Internet standard in the next few months, much like the trackback.

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Friday, February 24, 2006

Ten Flickr Hacks

Kevin Dugan: "Here are ten tips to get you started."

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Thursday, February 23, 2006

Ri.dic.u.lous

Alright, I know you really really need to know this so I just have to oblige. Presenting - tada - social bookmark manager #4,523: Scuttle.

OK, now how many of these sites do we need? This is getting ri.dic.u.lous. Does anyone remember Blink? They're still out there, but I bet you thought they were out of business. I sure did. iHarvest was another pioneer in the same burgeoning bookmark market back in 1999 and they're long gone.

So what's to guarantee that this era's bookmark sites will not end up in the same train wreck that took down the Web 1.0 pioneers? Sure these new sites are social and that makes a big difference, but a huge shakeout in the Web 2.0 bookmark "market" is coming - and fast. Yahoo won when they bought del.icio.us. Game over. Move along. Nothing to see here. The bookmarks have left the building.

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Wednesday, February 22, 2006

mobileGlu

Has anybody tried mobileGlu? I don't have an invite, but it looks interesting. The site promises to pull data from your life online and optimize it for a mobile device automatically. mobileGlu currently supports del.icio.us, Flickr, moblogUK, upcoming.org, and RSS feeds. This is from the same team behind BuddyPing.

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Washington Post, CJR Tie Up with del.icio.us

Yahoo's Matt McAlister discovers that both the Washingtonpost.com and CJRDaily have added “Bookmark with del.icio.us” buttons to their article templates today. Further, he offers a pointer to an array of tools that any publisher can use to add the same functionality to their sites.

PR types and marketers should take note of this too. Ads, press releases, online marketing collateral, word of mouth and viral campaigns, you name it will have these buttons. They will become as ubiquitous as those “email this to a friend” buttons you see everywhere.

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Friday, February 17, 2006

Video Ad Rev Sharing with Revver

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A buddy of mine has been telling me to check out Revver and boy was he right, it IS cool.

Revver is a video sharing site, similar to YouTube. The big difference is that you can make money from your work. Revver attaches short advertisements to the end of every video that is uploaded to the site. Consumer generated videos are tagged too and each tag has an RSS feed.

For the advertiser, this seems like a great place to dabble in word of mouth. They are saying you can advertise for as little as $20. There's an FAQ here.

UPDATE: I found out after I posted this that Revver is client of my soon-to-be employer, Edelman.


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Sunday, February 12, 2006

Complete List of Web 2.0 Sites

Listable, a tagged community of lists, has a giant registry of Web 2.0 products and services and an RSS feed to go with it.

(Via digg.)

Tuesday, February 07, 2006

Go Digg Da Video Bomb

Video Bomb is a new social site that's like digg for video. It works in much the same mannner. Users submit cool videos to the “Incoming!” page and the community “bombs” the best ones. If a video gets a lot of “bombs” quickly, it rises to the front page. All videos can be tagged and the site has RSS feeds. It will be interesting to see if these niche memetrackers takes off or whether digg and others will eventually just integrate multimedia features. (via del.icio.us/tag/micropersuasion)

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Thursday, February 02, 2006

Play Games with Flickr, Squidoo, del.icio.us or Technorati Tags

TagMan is a game that combines the classic hangman game with tags. (via del.icio.us for:steverubel)

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Wednesday, February 01, 2006

Pitching Bloggers by Form

TechCrunch, a very popular blog that tracks Web start-ups, has added a web form that PR pros and start-up companies seeking coverage can use to request a product review. The form even supports embargoes. This is a neat idea. Now I wish that someone would create some code that any blogger can customize to add such a form into their template.

For now I am sticking with my preferred method of getting pitched via del.icio.us. Since I wrote about this method back in March, del.icio.us has added a special “for” feature that keeps your pitches to me private. Just post anything you think I would be interested in linking to under the “for:steverubel” tag. I check this feed more often than I read email pitches. The reason is that when I am emailing I am all about communicating. When I am feed reading, I am in blogging mode.

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Sunday, January 29, 2006

The FeedButler Digged It



Someone better update that News 2.0 matrix because here comes FeedButler. The site is an RSS reader with social bookmarking and “non-hierarchical editorial control.” All stories are automatically added if the feeds are submitted by the users. When enough users has marked a new item as “cool' it is promoted to the front page. Hmmm, sounds familliar.

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Wednesday, January 18, 2006

A One Stop Shop for Tags

Three easy steps for generating blog tag codes...

Step 1: Visit the Improving Customer Experience site

Step 2: Simply input the keywords you wish to be tagged. Separate keywords or phrases with commas. There is no need to add the + symbol to your phrases.

Step 3: Choose from Technorati, Flickr, Del.icio.us and/or Furl Tags

(via John Cass)

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Friday, January 13, 2006

Yahoo Has a Big Future in Tagvertising

Two new sites have opened up in an effort to court advertisers to sponsor tags (the latter is down as of this writing). Both, I am sorry to say, are indicative of the bit of froth that is filling the Web 2.0 space. They won't fly because they don't have the fervent user community that marketers covet. Yahoo, however, does and I think we're going to see them make tagvertising an entirely new revenue line.

Those of you who have been around here for awhile know that I am bullish over the potential of advertising on tags - or what I call Tagvertising. I believe this year it's going to become a killer marketing vehicle. As Yahoo and others take tag sites more mainstream, advertisers will flock to sponsor certain tags because it is a highly targeted buy. It's very similar in certain ways to Google Adwords.

The media players that stand to gain are Yahoo and Technorati. In the near future I bet we will see Yahoo start to slowly and carefully integrate their contextual search marketing ads right into their newly purchased fraternal tag twins - i.e. Flickr and del.icio.us. Don't be surprised to see them stick contextual ads in these sites' RSS feeds as well. And if the rumors are true that Technorati is selling out to Yahoo, then I think we're looking at something extraordinary indeed with perhaps a revenue share for bloggers. Keep an eye on what Yahoo does with its latest buys and on Tagvertising overall.

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Friday, December 30, 2005

2006 Trends to Watch Part VI: Features Creep

In the desktop software industry (and elsewhere) there's a common ailment known as “feature creep.” Wikipedia defines this as “a phrase used to describe software which over-emphasizes new features to the detriment of other design goals, such as simplicity, compactness, stability, or bug reduction.”

Today's web-based apps differ greatly from their evolutionary PC-bound cousins, notably in their social features. However, late this year to me it became apparent that the Web 2.0 world too is suffering from feature creep. The Web-app industry in 2005 resembled the space race in 1955. The focus has been on launching “cool stuff” quickly, rather than building a five-nine compliant businesses. The one shining star is 37 Signals, perhaps thanks to their Zen-like, Phil Jacksonesque philosophy of keeping things simple.

As Reuters noted today, our dependence on the Web 2.0 world is growing. Blogs and tagging sites exploded in popularity. However, as they also underscore, over the last several weeks there have been more than a number of major outages that left users stranded and frustrated.

In 2006 features will creep. In other words, the breakout Web 2.0 companies of 2005 will slow down in innovating ever so slightly as they make sure they have the infrastructure in place to grow. This build-out is not only critical for handling increased demands for their services, but more importantly to compete with Google, Yahoo and Microsofts who all live in “a five nines” world.

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Thursday, December 22, 2005

Search the “Tagosphere” with Wink

Wink is a brand new search engine that opened to the public today. It lets you search across link sharing sites like del.icio.us, Digg, Slashdot and others. Wink splits results into two halves. The top set of results come from these communities, while the bottom is straight out of Google. You can bookmark results and sync them with del.icio.us.

So far, I like what I see, although I am not sure how Wink is ranking the results from the tag sites. I also wish I could search just one or two of these sites through some advanced search interface. Still, we need a site like Wink and I look forward to seeing where they take it. Michael Arrington has more.

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Wednesday, December 21, 2005

The Personal Bee

Stop the innovation train, I want to get off! OK, I am kidding. Here's another RSS/search innovator that I found in my refer logs. It's called The Personal Bee.

The Personal Bee is a “discovery engine” that helps you discover information from a collection of RSS feeds. They say that while client-side RSS readers and web-based RSS aggregators merely catalog your RSS feeds, they're inadequate when you get north of 10 feeds. “The Bee” aggregates feeds by “buzz words” into topic areas, without requiring you to pre-specify search terms. For example, here's one focused on the Web 2.0 Workgroup. Note the use of tags.

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Thursday, December 15, 2005

Google Reader Turns Flickr Feeds Interactive

NOTE: This post has been updated, thanks to a comment by Jason Shellen.

The Google Reader has added a bit of technology to photo RSS feeds so that you can now view additional photos that are from the same feed. Here's a screenshot from Thomas Hawk's feed ...

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Friday, December 09, 2005

Yahoo Buys del.icio.us

There's been rumors that big news was brewing with del.icio.us. Well now Josh Schachter announced on his blog that Yahoo has purchased del.cio.us. I conducted a brief iChat IM interview with Josh, which I have published below. The key news is that del.icio.us and Yahoo My Web 2.0 for now will remain separate products with cross-polination in the future. For more, see the YSearchblog, which for some reason doesn't have trackbacks anymore. Congrats to Josh and del.icio.us!

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Thursday, December 08, 2005

Jots - Another Social Bookmarking Site

There are lots of goodies in my refer log today. Just as I was uploading my last post on Bear Storm, I saw a link from Jots - yet another social bookmarking site. Like del.icio.us, you can use it to upload and tag links either for yourself or to share. Programmers might be interested to know that they have an API too.

Ok, so now as we have our dozenth social bookmarking site - or something like that. There's Spurl, Furl, Simpy, BlinkList, Connotea, My Web 2.0, de.lirio.us, del.icio.us (the pioneer), MonkeyBreath (fooled ya) and now Jots. Is anyone making money yet? Why is it that none of these sites carry Google Adsense? They're walking away from free money!

Fred, don't all these sites concern you? What is the competitive moat around del.icio.us? I love what Josh Schachter has built. I live on his site and I believe in its network effect. However, it seems like someone can come along and replace it if they institute some killer feature.

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Thursday, December 01, 2005

Five Ways to Get on the del.icio.us Home Page

Merlin has outlined a how-to that will surely get him on the del.icio.us home page. It covers five ways to get on the del.icio.us home page! I can tell you from experience his ideas do work.

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Monday, November 28, 2005

A Tag Sale Tale

Just when you think you've seen it all, here comes a tag sale tale. From the always credible PR Web, comes this gem of a press release. A Canadian entrepreneur wants to raise funds for his wedding by listing websites on his del.icio.us account for $20 per listing. Patrick Ryan, 37, hopes that the effort will attract advertisers.

Perhaps what's most shocking here (other than the press release itself) is that he has raised $280 so far! Wait. Before you go blog about this, it seems as though I am partly to blame, according to this FAQ ...

“Tagtextual is a term coined by Steve Rubel on his blog in January 2005, it means using tags to advertise. Rubel suggests that tagging will 'give the marketer new ways to reach engaged consumers by sponsoring tags'. He says that this might be over various websites. I am giving advertisers the opportunity to do it here for the first time. This will serve as a time capsule as the first Tagtextual Advertising website.”

The picture says it all. Oh and he takes PayPal.

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Sunday, November 27, 2005

A Call to Action

The following byline appears in the new issue of PR Week out tomorrow. It is reprinted with permission from the publication. It's largely a rehash of an earlier post and prior calls to action for the PR community to start using social media technologies. Richard Edelman has been blogging on this subject as well. The news today is that the discussion I promised to start is now underway on The New PR Wiki.

So far we have three individuals who work at mid-large size PR firms participating. I would love to see more of us join in the discussion. If you work at a midsize or large PR firm (e.g. 15 or more employees) please email me to get involved. If you're not comfortable making wiki edits, I would be happy to make them for you.

It is my intent to make this process transparent, yet manageable so that those who are participating are actually the ones able to effect change. Once our group has reached a set of best practices and/or recommendations, we will definitely open our ideas up for broader input by the PR community. We are interested, for example, in hearing what ideas boutiques and solo practitioners may have. If you blog, however, I am sure you won't wait for that moment - which I personally welcome.

If you have other suggestions for how we should manage this discussion, I am all ears. The important thing is that we complete it and then take the learnings back and apply them where possible inside our own organizations. Let's go the distance!

PR pros must act on new media lest they get left behind
Steve Rubel

For all of the hype about blogs and citizens' media, the PR community still has a long way to go before we can say that we've learned the bare minimum to stay afloat in these new waters.

The good news is that interest in these subjects has skyrocketed. Attendance at industry events on blogging, podcasting, and RSS has been very strong this fall. The bad news is that we're stuck in the pen-and-paper stage. It's critical that the PR industry - particularly firms - start mobilizing and training its communicators to work hands-on in this new world. It's time for us to go the distance.

While hard data doesn't exist, anecdotally, the number of PR pros subscribing to RSS feeds is probably in the single-digit percentile. And while the number of PR bloggers globally has swelled into the hundreds, we're still a minority. In other words, very few people in our industry have decided to venture into the jungle to learn, the way Jane Goodall did. We're still stuck in our car at Lion Country Safari.

My conviction here is not just a byproduct of my own passion for citizen's media or even of my blog, micropersuasion.com . Rather, it's reinforced by listening to leading thinkers from both the worlds of PR and technology.

Take AlwaysOn's Tony Perkins, journalist and new media pioneer, for example. He recently told me that the PR community has 75% of the skills needed to survive in a world where everyone is considered a “journalist.” He says, and I concur, that we need to start executing on this now. We need to put our knowledge into action by jumping into the pool - what he calls the last 25%.

Tony's opinions are very consistent with what Andrew Bernstein from Cymfony is seeing. Cymfony is capitalizing on the growth of consumer-generated media. Companies are turning to the vendor to help better understand what consumers are saying about their products, companies, brands, and clients. The problem is, many of them don't know what to actually do with this data. Andrew, like Tony, wants to help the PR community go the distance. But, you see, he can't. That's not his job. It's ours.

This is where the PR agencies and internal corporate communications groups must respond - and do so quickly. We need to actively encourage our clients and our teams to put all of this knowledge into action. We don't need more surveys or seminars. That's paralysis by analysis. We need on-the-job blog training - and fast.

We need to show all PR pros how to read RSS feeds. We need to help them get immersed in writing blog posts so they get a feel for what works and what doesn't. We need to show them how to monitor blog search feeds and then, appropriately, respond. We need to go the distance through immersion.

Here are three ideas I put forth on my blog:

Hands-on workshops. PRSA, Ragan, the IABC, and other organizations need to start running hands-on industry workshops - not just panels with bloggers. Rent hotel meeting rooms that have computers and wi-fi, not pens and pads.

Integration. PR agencies are beefing up the ranks in their interactive divisions, but they often remain in a separate fiefdom. We must have every traditional PR pro thinking about how they might use these tools in their current campaigns. Give blogs, RSS, and podcasts just as much thought as press releases and pitch letters. New media is everyone's job.

Encouragement. There's no easier way to get people learning about social media than by getting your own workers to dabble in it. We need to get more agency heads blogging or podcasting, and we must encourage their teams to do the same.

These ideas are just a start. I have publicly called upon the senior leadership of the top US PR firms to participate in a transparent dialogue on “the last 25%” over on The New PR Wiki.

This will hopefully identify some best practices and next steps that we all can implement inside our own firms. This is the only way the industry is going to evolve quickly. We need to think participation and indoctrination, not just education. I invite you to join our conversation.

Steve Rubel is VP at CooperKatz & Company. He runs the firm's Micro Persuasion practice.

Sunday, November 20, 2005

Track the Most Bookmarked Links in a Blog Format

Livemarks has a new tool that tracks the most popular items bookmarked on del.icio.us over the last 24 hours in a nice blog view. Alex Bosworth, can we get an RSS feed on that page?

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Friday, November 18, 2005

Riffs Web 2.0 Consumer Review Site Debuts

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Riffs is a newcomer to the world of consumer review sites. This category to date has been dominated by epinions and Planet Feedback. Riffs - which was developed by a startup called attap - is trying to break in with some neat Web 2.0 features.

For example, Riffs has Blikis - a combination of blogs and wikis. Using Riffs the community can decide on the content for any given item being reviewed, how riffs should be organized and more. Each user also gets their own page, where he/she can organize their riffs and record your commentary about anything. They also offer RiffRolls that bloggers can incorporate into their own blogs as well as a nice set of mobile features.

Take a look at this in action. It's pretty cool. Here's a review of the iPod nano. It includes the usual thumbs up/thumbs down reviews plus user comments. But look closer and you will notice that this product has its own wiki history, user tags and an RSS changes feed. Outstanding!  Great work gang. (Hat tip: 37 Signals)

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Wednesday, November 16, 2005

Swicki Debuts

Michael Arrington talks about a new service called Swicki that allows anyone to create deep, focused searches on topics you care about and then share them on your site as tags. It sounds very similar to Dave Pell's Rollyo - except with tags. You can see Swicki implemented on this site.

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Tuesday, November 15, 2005

Make Your Own Google Map with Wayfaring


Here's a real innovative Web 2.0 company - Wayfaring. Using the service you can create, tag and share your own Google Map. More in this tutorial. (Via Google Maps Mania)

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Yahoo! Shoposphere

Yahoo today launched the Yahoo! Shoposphere. The site let you tag and share wish lists through RSS feeds. Michael Arrington has more.

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Monday, November 14, 2005

Oh Please Uncle Bob Just One More Tag Site?

This morning I was thinking... gee if only there were just one more social tagging/bookmark sharing site. Then I turned to Uncle Bob and I asked, “can we buy one? Pretty please. Maybe we can ask Uncle Kleiner and Uncle Perkins for the money. They have it. We'll take that special tagging site and put it next to the pony. I mean then we'll really be complete.” He said, “son, your wish is my command.”

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Amazon Adopts User Tagging

Michael Arrington says that Amazon is now allowing users to tag products. Tags are public by default and can be managed under a “your tags” area. Amazon tags will make it easier for you and others to find relevant content. Combine this idea with the patent they just received for customer reviews and you can see big things coming.

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Tagtextual Ads Arrive - Sorta

Awhile back I blogged about tagtextual advertising. Well, it's here. Tagtextual Ad claims it's the first advertising destination website built with tags. On the website advertisers will be able to buy space on sites through the purchase of letters. The letters will then link to the advertiser's website of choice. I'm not sure I get this. More info in their FAQ.

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TagWorld Aims to Bring it All Together

TagWorld is an ambitious new effort to bring together photos, blogs, social networking, storage and social networking in an environment powered by tags. Has anyone tried this yet?

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Sunday, October 23, 2005

Riya Facial Recognition Photo Search Site Set to Launch

Riya is a powerful new photo search site with an interesting broader vision: to make it easy to find every digital photo in the world. The site right now is in private alpha, but its set to roll out more broadly this week.

Using Riya, you can search by both tags you assign and/or the auto-tags Riya adds to photos. Riya add tags to photos with the help of what appears to be incredible face recognition technology. They remind me of LTU Technologies, a French company I worked with four years ago when I was with another agency. The Riya tour starts here. They also have a FAQ up on their wiki and much more on their blog. All photo searches are also output as RSS.

While I haven't personally tested this site. Their entry into the market is welcome. With Flickr now part of Yahoo and Picasa part of Google, we need nimble competitors to keep these guys playing their A game.

Lm-Screen-Myalbum

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Saturday, October 22, 2005

Yahoo Slays del.icio.us in Battle of the Tagging Sites

PC Magazine rounds-up all the tagging sites into one big review. Oddly enough Furl and Spurl are completely overlooked. ClipMarks and Yahoo My Web 2.0 took home top honors. Meanwhile, del.icio.us got trashed. Shadows and Jeteye are also reviewed.

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Friday, October 21, 2005

Flock Not Ready for Primetime

Last night I tried out Flock, a new Mozilla-based browser that's getting a ton of buzz. The press is chiming in here too. Originally just a handful of people were invited to try Flock, which is in developer preview. Unfortunately, Flock installers quickly spread around town and the company released it out to everyone to try.

On the whole, I like the concept of Flock. It's a social browser. Your bookmarks, instead of being housed on your PC, are stored online at del.icio.us. You can also add tags to your bookmarks. And last but not least, the browser also features integrated RSS reading and blogging. You can try it here. Oh and if you don't have a blog, they will give you a WordPress weblog.

Unfortunately, the product really isn't ready for prime time use. (Wordpress.com isn't either from what I saw, but that's another matter.) Flock is horribly slow - at least on OS X - and worse, the feature set is really really confusing. Firefox, even when it was a 0.x release, was ten times more mature. Maybe that's why it hit 100M downloads - it works! Like Om, for now I am scratching my head over Flock. My suggestion is to keep it simple, guys. Give me something that makes my life easier, not harder. So thumbs down for now, but I will give it another look when you ship.

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Tuesday, October 11, 2005

Google Search History Adds Tags

Nathan Weinberg says that Google has added bookmark/tagging features to “My Search History.” This enables users to quickly tag and comment any web page you’ve visited. He speculates that if Google opens this up, letting users share their bookmarks and see bookmarking data in searches, we could see something very useful and popular.

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Thursday, October 06, 2005

del.icio.us.spo.tt.ing

LiveMarks shows you what people are bookmarking on del.icio.us in real time. On the left are the most recently popular bookmarks. On the right, a river of bookmarks flows by as people add links on del.icio.us.

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Wednesday, October 05, 2005

Folksonomie$

The New York Times jumps on board the folksonomy/tagging train with a notable focus on the implications for commerce.

Friday, September 30, 2005

Jeteye Fuses Search and Tagging

I am hearing lots of good things about a new service called Jeteye. Jeteye lets you create, save, search, tag and share collections of web links, notes, images in what's called jetpaks. So far it looks great. I like how it's built on Google, but also enables me to search other engines as well. Give it a go.

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Wednesday, August 31, 2005

Flickr Rolls New Contextual Ad Format

Flickr, a division of Yahoo, is experimenting with new contextual ad format that includes both images and links from the Yahoo Publisher Network. (via MarketingVOX)

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Tuesday, August 23, 2005

Build Your Own Corporate River of News

Matt McAlister explains how to build a custom news aggregator using del.icio.us. I think this is something we're going to see a lot of corporations doing in the near future to establish/build thought leadership. Domain experts will collaborate to share links via hosted “rivers of news.” Each site will present an array of news/blog links around a specific topic that are filtered based on their own unique perspectives. As I see it, this is a great way to add value to any Web site because it turns them into more regular reads. (Via Rex)

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Wednesday, August 17, 2005

Bean Rocket Creates a New Way to Read/Tag Feeds

Check out Bean Rocket. It's an RSS aggregator that for now only includes some feeds. The neat thing about Bean Rocket is that users can not only use it to read articles, but tag them.

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Monday, August 15, 2005

Auto-Generate Tags for Your Blog

Here's a nifty bookmarklet that will auto-generate Technorati and del.icio.us HTML code for tags for your blog.

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Tuesday, August 09, 2005

YouTube - It's Like Flickr for Video

TechCrunch profiles a startup called YouTube that's like Flickr, but for videos. Others in this emerging space include OurMedia and the Open Media Network.

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Thursday, August 04, 2005

Del.icio.us Domain Experts

Check out a cool project out of The University of New South Wales in Sydney, Australia, called CollaborativeRank. They have identified the 500 most active contributors to del.icio.us - a bookmark sharing site - and their areas of expertise.

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Tuesday, August 02, 2005

New Flickr Features

Flickr has added some new features that help consumers find interesting photos. This includes tag clusters.

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Friday, July 29, 2005

SearchFox

Today's new media equation...

Google + del.icio.us + MyWeb 2.0 + Firefox = SearchFox, a new search engine/tagging tool

Take a look at the site. It was developed by a team that includes some heavy hitters from the tech industry. It's got RSS integration as well.

Tuesday, July 26, 2005

Domain Experts Emerge from the Tagosphere

Caterina Fake highlights a few domain experts that are emerging from Yahoo!'s My Web 2.0 bookmark sharing site. I'm not sure if these are really domain experts or just aggregators, but they're certainly invaluable. Meanwhile, in related news, Yahoo has added RSS support to Yahoo! 360 - its blogging platform.

Friday, July 22, 2005

Journalists Using Tags

Infoworld's John Udell writes that tagging will alter the information landscape in a fundamental way. What's notable for PR professionals is how Infoworld puts tags to use in the newsroom. The editors are using del.icio.us to learn. Udell writes...

"At InfoWorld, for example, we've been tagging the stories we publish. In a progress report on the experiment, I showed how it's not only helping InfoWorld editors to work collaboratively toward a common vocabulary, but it's also enlisting readers to enrich and refine that vocabulary.

There's more. The set of InfoWorld items bookmarked and tagged by our editors leads, indirectly, to del.icio.us users who have bookmarked and tagged those same items. When I checked today, there were 5,644 of them. These are people whose interests, by definition, intersect with ours."

Thursday, July 21, 2005

10 for 10

Recently, a few people asked me over lunch: what's next after blogging and podcasting? Jeremy Zawodny is also posing the same question. This has all got me thinking about what technology-driven trends will revolutionize how companies communicate. Here's my list of 10 trends to keep an eye on for the next 10 years. They are in no particular order...

1. The Long Tail - small players can collectively make up a market that rivals the giants. As Seth says, small is the new big. This applies equally for journalism as well as for marketers.

2. The Read Write Web/Web 2.0 – technologies like Ajax will make the web more dynamic, turning it into a full-fledged platform. Wither the desktop.

3. Timeshifting – consumers will increasingly want to devour media on their own time, on the mobile device of their choice and without commercials

4. Collaborative Categorization – consumers, using technology, will create their own taxonomies that make it easier to find information. This is sometimes called tagging, social search or folksonomies. However, this is just the beginning.

5. Citizen Marketing – consumers will organize – either on their own or with the help of companies – to evangelize products they love and vilify those they don’t

6. The Daily Me – it’s finally here; RSS, AI and personal search tools will make it easier for people to seek out only the news they care about and tune out all else

7. It’s All a Conversation – as journalism becomes a conversation, so will marketing - just like Cluetrain said.

8. What’s Inside is Outside – mobile devices and consumer generated media mean that whatever a single eye beholds so can the world.

9. Trust Marketing – people will increasingly use social networking technology to tune in messages from individuals they trust (including citizen journalists) and tune out everyone else

10. Decentralized Communication – armies of individual employees will use technology to become the voice of every company; like it or not. The solo singer is dead. Long live the chorus.

What's on your list?

Tuesday, July 19, 2005

IceRocket Introduces Tags

IceRocket - one of my favorite search engines - now has blog tags much like Technorati. Here's how to make sure your blog is included.

Monday, July 18, 2005

Flickr Spam?

Over the weekend a Flickr member uploaded an ad for his Web design services, Jim Heid says. After creating uploading the image spammer added it to several Flickr photo pools, including the Macintosh pool. Heid calls it spam. He also notes that the community is having fun tagging it.

Sunday, July 17, 2005

RSS and Google's Future

I missed this one before, but check out Kevin Hale's comprehensive breakdown of the state of RSS, taxonomies, advertising, and how it relates to the future of Google. He thinks RSS is Google's biggest competitor.

Thursday, July 14, 2005

Wikipedia Community Weighs Deleting "Folksonomy" Article

There's a debate going on over on Wikipedia whether or not the entry on Folksonomy should be deleted. Folksonomy is the practice of collaborative categorization using freely chosen keywords or tags.

Monday, July 11, 2005

Yet Another Tagging App (YATA)

Here's yet another tagging app. This one is new and it's called Shadows. Shadows is a free, social bookmarking community. Like del.icio.us and Yahoo's MyWeb2,0, it includes tags and comments. However, it goes a step further by adding ratings. More info in their FAQ.

Friday, July 08, 2005

Is It Tag Spam or Not? Let Us Decide!

Chung-Man Tam, My Web Product Manager, writes on the Yahoo Search blog that people should be able to tag and share they links what they want and that if you don't like it, then tough toenails ...

"Why can I say that? Well remember folks, My Web 2.0 is a social search engine where your community shares their insights with you. While the web can sometimes seem like the Wild Wild West, the trusted web is a place where you decide who you want to listen to. If I like the stuff that someone saves and the tags that they’re using, I’ll connect to them! If I don’t…well, you know."

Chung-Man, with all due respect, I agree but disagree. Yahoo has gone to great lengths to talk about how My Web 2.0 is a system that lets you find stuff from people you trust. Thats' cool, but at the same time you're not making it easy for the user to block out results from users they don't trust!

Right now, the only way to accomplish this really is by broad omission - e.g. to only listen to voices one trusts. Unfortunately, this then means users will miss out some of the gems the broader tagging community is sharing. You need to add a feature in the broader cloud view that says "aha, I think this is spam so don't show me any results from Joe Schmo anymore." You already let users block results from Web searches, so why not do the same in the tag cloud? For example, it turns out all the links I blogged about yesterday were not intentional spam, but rather the result of innocent human error. It doesn't matter because tam spam - or spag - is a coming. I should be able to block those results or the user out if the system is truly personalized.

If Yahoo is really all about personalization and trust, then it needs to step up to the plate and again take a leadership role in making it easy for users to tune out questionable results they don't want to see. Give us the tools to create a truly personalized tag cloud. Right now, what you have is a one-way street. Go the distance.

Thursday, July 07, 2005

Yahoo MyWeb Becomes a Haven for Tag Spam

In a little more than a week since it launched, Yahoo's MyWeb 2.0 social search engine has already become a haven for tag spam. A closer examination of the most popular tags reveals that crapware, nhw: bad crapware, nhw: bad and nhw: dangerous are among the leaders of the nearly 34,000 pages filed away and categorized on MyWeb 2.0. Each of these tags is filled with link spam. This provide a stark contrast to the most popular tags on del.icio.us. More fodder for the skeptics out there. I hope Yahoo can remedy this fast because it's a pretty promising tool, although it still needs some work.

Yahootagspam_1

Tuesday, July 05, 2005

HonorTags Help Readers Gauge Content-Creator Intent

Dan Gillmor's Grassroots Media has launched a tagging system called HonorTags that allows any content creator - be they journalists, bloggers, PR folks, enthusiasts, etc. - to label/control over how their content is identified. Gillmor's hope is that the tag system will make it easier for readers to gauge intent, while at the same time helping "birds of a feather flock together."

For starters, Grassroots Media is launching six tags - journalism, professional, advocate/enthusiast/fan, personal, fiction and one called "untag." All tagged posts will show up in Technorati. Here's the page of posts tagged to date as works of journalism.

I am throwing my support behind the HonorTag system. I believe that as the majority of Web pages are created by consumers, rather than corporations, it will be harder particularly for those who do not create content to read the intent of its source. This system - while far from foolproof - will make it easier for people to seek out the content from sources they deem credible.

What HonorTags really lacks right now is some sort of editing/policing system. This way, the community can weed out tag offenders who are inappropriately spam tags. In other words, if Grassroots Media can somehow recreate the same kind of self-policing community that watches over Wikipedia, HonorTags will become a more reliable system. Perhaps some merging with social networks will help facilitate this.

Monday, July 04, 2005

CNET Quietly Debuts Photo Tagging Site

CNET's Webshots division has quietly debuted a new photo sharing site called Shoebox. The site is basically a giant tagged collection of bookmarked photos added from various sources on the web. Think of it as "When del.icio.us Met Flickr." You can take the site for a test drive here. More info is up on their blog.

Thursday, June 30, 2005

CNET Introduces Tags

CNET News.com editors are now tagging each published story with one or more topics, all of which are now displayable in a tag cloud.

Wednesday, June 29, 2005

Yahoo Unveils Tagged Social Search

Hey Yahoo! I guess I should have patented this tagged search idea way back when I had it, because you went out and built it. Good for you! According to the YSearchBlog, using My Web 2.0...

Anyone can save, tag, and share knowledge with their community. Any page on the web with your comments and insights. Your community can do the same. The result – a new search experience that combines web search with what your trusted community has tagged and shared. Users can build their community by inviting their contacts via email or by importing existing social relationships from Yahoo! Address Book, Messenger, or their 360° community. My Web 2.0 then leverages the Yahoo! 360° personal network platform to enable people to manage their search community.

Go check it out here. It's in limited beta right now. I have access to the beta and plan to play with it in the coming days. It looks very promising.

Monday, June 06, 2005

del.icio.us Adds New Navigation Schemes

del.icio.us has added a number of new features that change how tags can be navigated. You can still view them alphabetically, but you can also sort by frequency. Even better, you can then layer on a "tag cloud" to either sorting. So, for example, you can sort your bookmarks alphabetically, but also view it as a visual metaphor as well - e.g. the larger the tag, the more prevalent it is in your bookmark database. Try it out by clicking on the links below my tags in my bookmark database.

Tag_cloud

Monday, May 30, 2005

Citizen Journalism Meets Online Dating

The Washington Post reports a handful of new Web sites are making it their business to let users review their online dates. What's next, giving members blogs? How about categorizing dates by tags?

Sunday, May 22, 2005

Feedster Gets Into Tagging

Feedster is experimenting with tagging, Scott Rafer says.

Wednesday, May 11, 2005

Yahoo News Categorized by Tag

Yahoo! News Tag Soup uses the Yahoo API to categorize news into folksonomies.

Sunday, May 01, 2005

The Year of the Tag

You know tagging is mainstream when AP covers it. Like I said back in January, 2005 is the year of the tag.

Saturday, April 30, 2005

Influencers Pen Blog on Tagging

Christian Crumlish, Clay Shirky, David Weinberger, Don Turnbull, Jon Lebkowsky, Mary Hodder and Timo Hannay have started a new blog on folksonomies/tagging, called "You're It." Subscribed.

Tuesday, April 26, 2005

Video Tagging

Vimeo is like Flickr and del.icio.us meets video. Worth a look.

Monday, April 25, 2005

Yahoo Trip Blogs Use Tags

Yahoo! users can now create travel blogs right on their travel site. Note the use of tagging. (via Lifehacker)

Wednesday, April 20, 2005

Google Search History Foreshadows Google Tags

Google today launched a new opt-in feature called My Search History that aggregates all of your personal web searches into a searchable date-stamped blog-like archive. This is just the beginning. Google will eventually layer on a tagging capability to enable individuals to categorize/share searches. After that - it's Tagvertising time. Google will serve Adwords ads on these pages. Marissa Mayer even hinted that ads are in their crystal ball.

Tuesday, April 19, 2005

Is Tagvertising Toast?

FlickradsenseKevin Ryan says tagvertising is bunk...

But to my mind tagvertising has about as much chance of providing value to the searching public or advertisers as I do of becoming the next Pope.

OK, fair enough. But it might be too late. Flickr is already showing Google Adsense ads to non-members who access tag pages. See image at left. My bet is that these will become Yahoo sponsored search ads once Flickr has been fully integrated into Yahoo.

Thursday, April 14, 2005

Danny Sullivan Throws Water on Tagging

Search guru Danny Sullivan is dubious that tagging will be the great savior for search. Like others, he says that controlled tagging - in the form of directory categorization - has already been prone to spamming at places like the Open Directory.

Wide-open tagging, where anyone can get their pages to the top of a list just by labeling it so, is going to be a giant spam magnet.

OK, that's fair. So my question for Danny is, why did Yahoo buy Flickr? Somehow I gotta believe they were intrigued by the site's tagging features. I can see Yahoo mashing up Flickr and  Y!Q into a powerful image search tool that not only includes results from the Web but also a distinct column of user-generated images that have the same keyword. Conceptually this might look like what Technorati is already doing or even A9 Opensearch.

Wednesday, April 13, 2005

Targeting Through Tagvertising

The following is also my April column for iMedia Connection...

Tagvertising = Blogging 2.0... Already?

As you read this, millions of individuals are working under their own volition to create a new Dewey Decimal System for the internet. In the process -- perhaps without even realizing it -- they are laying the groundwork for a new contextual online advertising paradigm called "Tagvertising."

The consumer phenomenon is called “tagging” or “folksonomies” (short for folks and taxonomy). Tagging is powerful because consumers are creating an organizational structure for online content. Folksonomies not only enable people to file away content under tags, but more importantly also share it with others by filing it under a global taxonomy that they created.

Here’s how tagging works. Using sites such as del.icio.us - a bookmark sharing site - and Flickr - a photo sharing site - consumers are collaboratively categorizing online content under certain keywords, or tags. For example, an individual can post photographs of their iPod on Flickr and file it under the tag "iPod." These images are now not only visible under the individual user’s iPod tag but also under the broader community iPod tag that displays all images consumers are generating and filing under the keyword. As of this writing, Flickr has more than 3,500 photos that are labeled "iPod."

Tagging is catching on because it is a natural complement to search. Type the word “blogs” into Google and it can’t tell if you are searching for information about how to launch a blog, how to read blogs, et cetera. But using del.icio.us you can bookmark this page or subscribe to its RSS feed. Then, everyday you will find the latest interesting links consumers are finding and sharing about blog marketing. Now imagine you run a blog marketing consultancy and you want to advertise to users who follow these tags. This is what’s we’ll see this year as tagvertising takes hold.

Already, large and small sites alike are getting on to the folksonomy train. They are rolling out tag-like structures to help users more easily locate content that’s relevant to them. For example, The Guardian, a U.K. newspaper, last week added tags to its news blog. Metafilter, a popular community weblog that anyone can contribute to, also recently incorporated free-form keywords that writers can use to categorize their posts. The larger news sites, particularly CNET, may not be far behind.

Of course the big search engines have tagging on their radar as well. Yahoo recently purchased Flickr. Furl, another bookmark sharing site, was absorbed by LookSmart. Ask Jeeves now has tagging. And Amazon invested in a site called 43 Things that lets people tag-based build wish lists. They might even be the silver bullet search engines need to deliver truly personalized search results. When this happens folksonomies and tagvertising will usher in the next great advancement in contextual advertising.

Here are a few ways in which tagging will create new opportunities for marketers. Some are applicable today while others are on the horizon in the near future:

  • Although tags are far from perfect (they generate a lot of false/positives), marketers should nevertheless be using them to keep your finger on the pulse of the American public. Start subscribing to RSS feeds to monitor how consumers are tagging information related to your product, service, company or space. These are living focus groups that are available for free, 24/7.
  • Folksonomy sites can be also be carefully used to unleash viral marketing campaigns - with a caveat. Marketers should be transparent in who they are, why they are posting the link/photos and avoid spamming the services
  • As tagging grows and the search engines begin adding this feature to their sites, Google and Overture will allow advertisers to buy keywords across certain tags. Watch for this later this year.
  • Last but not least, one or more entrepreneurs will launch a tagvertising network that facilitates a keyword buy across all sites that use folksonomies.

Thursday, April 07, 2005

Guardian Blog Adds Tags

The Guardian is now using tags to categorize posts on its Observer weblog. This is just the start of mainstream media interest in tagging growing. (Via Matt McAllister)

Monday, April 04, 2005

CNET Buys Photo Tagging Site

Rafat hinted at it yesterday, but now it's official. CNET bought HeyPix - a photo-sharing site that incorporates tagging. Obviously, tagging is indeed "it" in 2005.

Tag Toys

Here's a round-up of toys that play with tags/folksonomies (for more on this topic, check out this post on the Guardian blog)...

Sunday, April 03, 2005

When It Comes to Tagging, You're It

BusinessWeek takes a good look at tagging (sometimes called folksonomies) from an interesting perspective - the threat they pose to search engines...

The trend represents a new approach to organizing and finding information online, and industry watchers expect it to draw people away from the traditional Net search offered by Yahoo and Google Inc. Tagging won't replace Google et al. But people may turn to tags more frequently over time, reducing their use of established search engines.

The risk? It could cut into the search-advertising revenues that are all-important to Google and Yahoo. No one has estimated the potential toll, but losing even a few minutes of people's time each day could be costly. "Search is no longer the only way to find things," says Howard Rheingold, author of Smart Mobs: The Next Social Revolution.

As I told Wired News earlier this year, I believe that Yahoo and Google will eventually enable their users categorize and share searches under specific tags. This way, someone looking for REM will be pointed to other similar tagged "saved" searches that are filed under "rapid eye movement" or the name of the musical group and/or other tags. My bet is that Google Labs or Yahoo Next will debut something along these lines later this year.

The BW article also underscores the rising importance of tags for marketers. Often I am asked why I think tags are a big deal. The reason is simple - it makes consumer-generated content a lot more discoverable.

Friday, April 01, 2005

Blog Buzzword Overdose

You can find an explanation for this disease here and a cure here.

Thursday, March 31, 2005

Newsgator Digs Into RSS Usage Patterns to Solve Info Overload

Bud Gibson says that Newsgator - a popular RSS aggregator - has hired a taxonomist to use its Newgator Online feed archive to create user profiles based on usage patterns. According to the post, this would help Newsgator better target consumers using a sort of collaborative filtering approach. Newsgator is also considering adding folksonomic features. I wonder if Newsgator will also use this data to try to court advertisers via behavioral targeting. (Via del.icio.us/tag/micropersuasion)

Wednesday, March 30, 2005

del.icio.u$

Congrats to Joshua Schachter at del.icio.us. His folksonomic link-sharing project has secured VC funding.

Sunday, March 20, 2005

Yahoo! Acquires Flickr

Yahoo! has acquired the Flickr photo-sharing site. One of Flickr's treats is how it uses tags that help you find user-uploaded content. It should be interesting to see how Yahoo integrates them. It's another sign though that folksonomies are important - at least this year. More from Yahoo blogger Jeremy Zawodny.

Saturday, March 19, 2005

Folksonomies Turn Chaos Into Information

eWeek: The new term "Folksonomy" has emerged to describe the potential for user-defined tags to organically develop structure out of what might appear to be chaotic collections of information. One of the uncertainties about tags is how they can fit together among various services and what meaning can be gleaned from the tags of a large mass of users.

Tuesday, March 15, 2005

Meet the Folksonomies

Seattle Times Columnist Paul Andrews: One of the more tantalizing, if not confounding, innovations in how people share information on the Web has to do with a new process called tagging.

Monday, March 14, 2005

A Del.icio.us Screencast

Jon Udell from Infoworld has put together a killer screencast that shows the power of using del.icio.us as a backup brain and as a link sharing service.

Tuesday, March 08, 2005

g-WH!Z Baits Me With a Delicious Pitch

In response to yesterday's call for pitches via del.icio.us, Gerald Buckley writes:

Mr. Rubel,

I don't know the finesse of a Del.icio.us pitch. So, at the risk of being permanently and very publicly embarrased here goes...

I was recently on the forefront of a very fun wave (corporate podcasting) which you haven't apparently bought into yet. However, I'd like to see if there's more wind in those sails somehow and wonder if you have some insights.

Let 'er rip! and please tell me if I'm pitching curve balls here :)

Gerald, thanks. First, Mr. Rubel is my father. Second, there's nothing to be embarrassed about. I do buy into corporate podcasting. In fact, I call it podvertising. When I linked yesterday to the Forbes.com article I was merely paraphrasing Arik Hesseldahl's point of view.

Hmm, I am liking this transparent way of pitching bloggers. It's very Cluetrain.

(Via del.icio.us/tag/micropersuasion)

Monday, March 07, 2005

RSS 101 Screencast Tutorial

I am wayyy late to the game here, but Alex Barnett at Microsoft has put together the single best RSS tutorial I have ever seen -it comes in screencast form. If you want to get started using RSS then this is the tutorial for you. Roger Ebert says "Walk don't run to Alex's screencast. I cried." If you like what you see, also check out Alex's sequel on how to use Technorati Tags.

Pitch.Me Del.icio.usly

Nick Denton's on to a killer idea. He is guest blogging this week on his company's travel blog and he is asking readers to send him links via del.icio.us.

Meanwhile, I am getting overwhelmed with reader mail. Don't get me wrong, I love hearing from you, but many of these are just link/PR pitches. I am going to try this approach. I ask from here on in that you please pitch me only via del.icio.us unless I already correspond regularly with you. I am doing this not only to cut down my mail but to make the PR pitching process transparent so that everyone can see what I blog/don't blog. This will hopefully make those who pitch me better at what they do.

So, if you want me to take a look at something to link/comment on, please post it to del.icio.us with the tag "micropersuasion" and include your pitch in the extended entry. Here's how to use del.icio.us.

Bonus Nick Denton link -IWantMedia interviews Gawker Media Managing Editor Lockhart Steele who reveals, among lots of other things, that Nick Denton's company is profitable and that it plans to take on Matt Drudge with a tabloid blog.

Saturday, February 26, 2005

Digg Marries Folksonomies and News

I just stumbled on a new site called Digg - a technology news website that gives editorial control back to "the community." According to their FAQ...

Most technology websites allow users to suggest content by submitting links or stories to an editor. If the editor believes the story to be relevant to the masses, he or she moves the story to the homepage. With digg, users also submit links for review. But rather than allowing an editor to decide which links go on the homepage, the users do.

Tuesday, February 08, 2005

Amazon Invests in 43 Things Folksonomy Project

Amazon.com has invested in the start-up behind folksonomy (definition) project 43 Things. Another company, called 37 Signals, also collaborated on this project. On 43 Things consumers tag their goals and aspirations and can see what others are sharing as well. This may all be part of a grand plan to make Amazon a social commerce site. Remember this?

How to Spread a Meme

Bud Gibson explains how to propagate a meme (definition) through Technorati and del.ico.us.

Tuesday, February 01, 2005

Folksonomies Tap People Power

Wired: A growing number of websites with user-created content are relying on user-generated tags, also known as folksonomies, to let people know what's available.

Friday, January 28, 2005

The Editable Search Engine

Ross Mayfield points to a new search engine called Webs Biggest. What makes it unique is that users can add/edit search results. A natural next step would be to add tagging features as well so that users can create sets of search results and share them with fellow searchers of like mind.

Everything You Want to Know About Tags and More

WSJ.com reporter Jeremy Wagstaff has interviewed several leading thinkers on tagging/Folksonomies on his blog - including Josh Schachter of del.icio.us. Interviews are posted here. Also, be sure to check out his column this week on the subject.

Tuesday, January 25, 2005

Blog Crisis Communications Planning 101

At the Blog Business Summit this week my blogging Yoda's Robert Scoble, Buzz Bruggeman and Anil Dash tackled the thorny topic of crisis communications. They emphasized how blogging can help when things get bad by projecting a human face or voice for an organization and by providing a forum for soliciting specific feedback from customers. In the immortal words of the Hulkster, "Amen brother."

These thoughts directly reflect several conversations I had today during a private meeting with the Internet Manager's Consortium at Coca-Cola Headquarters in Atlanta. The group's members all hail from Fortune-500 companies and are charged with running their global Web sites. They are just beginning to fully appreciate just how blogging and citizen journalism are changing their jobs. With this in mind, here are five steps every company should take to prepare for a PR crisis that might emerge from the blogosphere... 

  1. Continually Listen and Analyze - Use the various tools to listen to what people are saying about your company, brands and/or clients in the blogosphere and on sites like Flickr and del.icio.us. Figure out which bloggers have the greatest potential to become your vigilantes and group them into hubs. Analyze their tendencies and those of their readers. Watch the time stamps of their in-bound links and comments to assess who reads them and how quickly they respond to posts. Map this network out like the FBI charts the mafia.
  2.  
  3. Develop a List of Vulnerabilities - Conduct a thorough group audit of all your organization's vulnerabilities. Be honest with yourself. Are there people who blog who might already have a beef with you? Find out for sure if any of your disgruntled employees are already blogging - or have blogged.
  4.  
  5. Build a Lockbox Blog - While times are calm, build a special crisis communications blog and keep it locked down under password protection. Figure out your key messages (based on your vulnerabilities), which employees will write the blog and under which kinds of circumstances they will be tapped. Consider how moblogging and vlogging (video blogging) might be used to vividly depict how your company is responding to a crisis - particularly in a product recall. Also be sure to address where the blog fits into your broader crisis PR efforts with the mainstream press. Blogs are not a panacea.
     
  6. Build a Network of Blogging Allies - As the trio suggested today up in Seattle, continually nuture your network of blogging allies. This will make it easier to turn to them in the event of a crisis. Regularly feed them news links in good times that are unrelated to your company or cause. This will earn you points in the "favor bank." In addition, consider developing a network of non-blogging influencers who you might be able to call off the bench to blog on you behalf when lightning strikes. Again, blogs aren't the only place to wage the battle. Don't ignore Flickr and del.icio.us networks either.
     
  7. Ride the Long Tail - Last but not least, don't forget the law of the Long Tail when planning for a blog PR crisis. As the Kryptonite example showed us, bloggers typically have the greatest impact at the beginning and end of a story's lifecycle. Use this to your advantage. If you're in a crisis and you have generated some positive mainstream/blog coverage that hits your key messages, be sure to feed those links to the bloggers who are on the "back nine" of the analysis tail.

These are just some tips to get your started. Just like with the big media, the key to surviving a blog PR crisis is preparation and detailed planning.

Monday, January 24, 2005

As Sites Add Tags, Tagtextual Advertising Will Follow

Here's new evidence that 2005 will be the year of folksonomies - commonly known as tags. Metafilter, a popular community weblog that anyone can contribute to, has just incorporated tags. Metafilter's tags are simply free-form keywords people have used to describe their posts. They are launching tags to create "a great bottom-up way of organizing everything that has ever been posted to MetaFilter." The larger a word is, the more times it has been used to tag a MetaFilter thread. The site has also posted a page that breaks out the top 150 tags.

This year many web sites will incorporate folksomic structures to make it easier for users to find and share information. Currently, tags can be found on Furl, Del.icio.us, Flickr, Technorati and now Metafilter. By the end of this quarter I bet that other social media sites like OhMyNews, Kuro5shin and even Slashdot will incorporate them as well. By mid year the bigs will join the fun. At least one major news outlet - perhaps CNET - will also start use tags to organize their stories and feedback. (John Roberts, you listening? I just gave you a free idea!)

Tags are a natural complement to search because they empower users to create structures that organize unstructured consumer-generated media. Last week I wrote about the need for marketers and communicators to monitor folksonomies. However, the online marketing opportunity here is actually much greater. As tagging takes off, the next step will be for all of these sites to monetize this content by launching contextual advertising programs, perhaps powered by Google Adsense. This will give the marketer new ways to reach engaged consumers by sponsoring tags across one or more sites that carry folksonomies. I call this "Tagtextual Advertising" and it's a coming.

Tuesday, January 18, 2005

Feedmarker

A new Web-based RSS news reader called Feedmarker has popped up. It tries to incorporate news feeds and two of the best features of del.icio.us - tagging and bookmarks.

Saturday, January 15, 2005

Get Folksy with Folksonomies

One of the most important social media trends to watch this year is the increasing influence of tags, also known as folksonomies. According to Wikipedia, folksonomy is the collaborative categorization of user-generated content using simple tags. Folksonomies are wildly popular on Flickr, a photo sharing site, and on del.icio.us, a social bookmark site. However, it doesn't end there.

Technoratitags_1Increasingly you will see many sites adopt tags to create more structure around user-generated content. Just this week, Technorati launched a tagging mechanism for blogs. Here's their Apple tag, for example. In the months ahead I bet we will see other sites - including open source news sites like OhMyNews, mainstream news sites and even wikis  - incorporating tag structures. For more on folksonomies, read Adam Mathes' terrific paper on the subject.

Folksonomies present both a threat and an opportunity for marketers. Tags make it easy for consumers to share and discover user-generated content in the subjects they are passionate about. On the downside, I predict that this year at least one company will watch in horror as its top-secret, stealth product shows up on Flickr, thanks to the handiwork of an ambitious moblogger. And there will be little they can do but watch.

Although tags are far from perfect (they generate a lot of false/positives), you should nevertheless be using them to keep your finger on the pulse of the American public. Right now, at a minimum, you should be monitoring your company/brand tags on Flickr as well as your competitors' folksonomies. I wrote about this last week. Jeremy Zawodny smartly advised marketers to take in del.icio.us as well. Good advice.

Although it's natural to view folksonomies as insignificant or even a threat, they hold tremendous potential as well. For example, you can use them to get some early buzz going around your product/service before it officially debuts by planting links and/or photos on these sites. However, be careful. While some praise this approach, others criticize it. In addition, tags also make it easier to find your true customer evangelists.

Regardless of whether you view folksonomies as a threat or an opportunity, they are here to stay. I am going to be blogging about this topic throughout the year so I have created a new category on my blog and also set up a PubSub subscription as well.