Feeds

Maya's Mom

  • Maya's Mom

Recent Posts

The personal web and the real world

The personal web is a phrase I'd love to say I coined myself last year, but a quick search proved me wrong.  John Battelle delivered us this term when he introduced readers to Furl - a precursor to delicious - almost two years ago.  It seeems the folks at Furl were fond enough of John's description to adopt it as a tagline.

The concept of a personal web had a big impact on the creation of Mozes.  When I started thinking about building a new business, I wanted to participate in an area that would continue to grow for a very long time and it  seemed obvious that the web would continue to grow not only as a place to find information, but a place to store, manage and share it too.  I explored a lot of ideas in this area, from bookmarking to online storage, and concluded that expanding the concept might be the most fun.

As we launch our beta, Mozes fits within the larger context of the personal web.  As John pointed out, having your personal web is a pretty cool thing because anything you see on the web is saveable,  searchable and shareable.   Wouldn't it be cool if many of the situations we encountered in the real world were saveable, searchable and shareable too?  Mozes will deliver a platform to help make that happen.

Are social networking sites just like bars?

When I was at university, my friends and I would hang out at a few bars now and then.  The popularity of any one bar over the years was not guaranteed - the hit bar one year was not necessarily the hit the next.  Hearing that a bar changed owners, subsequently declined in popularity or just shut down was never really news.  What was guaranteed however was that every popular bar  in succession was usually owned by the same guy or guys who ran the last one.   "This new club  is cool," I would say.  "It reminds me of Barneys. "  And my friend, much more in the know, would say "Yeah, well that's 'cause Barney owns it."

Rafat points us to the new company from a founder of Friendster:

Socializr's Raising About Half a Million Funding: A new stealth social network, Socializr, founded by Friendster founder Jonathan Abrams, is raising about $0.5 million seed funding, and has raise about $0.35 million out of that, a birdie told me at the conf.


Friendster was cool once, but it continues to decline in popularity even in the hands of new owners.

So the big question for me is whether social networking sites have staying power, particularly those going after the fickle younger market.  The idea of social networking sites as bars was introduced to me by a good friend at one of the big media software companies, who tells me he's had intense internal debates with colleagues in the strategy group as to whether the analogy has merit.

On the one side, arguments can be made for the viral nature of the sites and, where mountains of user content is generated, enormously high personal switching costs associated with porting data elsewhere.  Even hosted blogging sites make it a pain to move plain text.  On the other side, an 18 year old may not always relate to the stream of content they posted at one spot when they were younger, like, say, 17.  They might just choose to shut down their page altogether and move on, especially if a cool friend decides to do it first, or they hit college and meet the Facebook.  Ads seen all over the web from Tagworld make the point for anyone regardless of scholarship:  tired of MySpace?

I don't think we have seen a complete cycle of social networking sites to know the answer for sure, but the fact that one guy named Tom can host
778256 comments on his blog - pretty much all positive and screaming that they love him - may give a few hints.  You have to wonder if, in addition to snapping up the property itself, companies like News Corp should be structuring their deals to lock up people like Tom and Barney for a very long time.

What is happening?

So Zillow.com launched today, an anticipated real estate site that has now publicly released data on some 60 million homes.   As you know, this isn't the blog for breaking company news but early this am in New York I was probably one of the first to check it out while running through morning mail.

First, I was delighted at what Zillow thought about our home price since we bought it 16 months ago.  From where I sit, Zillow is already a winner.

Here's what I don't get: the site  went down while I was visiting it.  Now I didn't think much of it at the time, but here in Starbucks 5 hours later I decided to check it out again (to see if my home price had fallen any) and got the same message.

Zillow_2A Mozes team member and I were talking about Gmail lately and its slowness.  In a separate email exchange,  a smart friend confirmed he'd heard similar things (but as he said "Maybe [he baffles] it with all [his] Greasemonkey scripts!").  Combined with scale problems of lots of different companies profiled on Techcrunch (example here) , and even the phrase itself of being Techcrunched,  there just seems to be lots and lots of problems with handling web traffic these days.   I don't get it.  What is happening?

To be even more specific about Zillow, we're talking about a Benchmark backed company with the same founding team as one of the busiest all time travel websites of all time in Expedia.  Is it really possible that an email blast and a few high profile blog mentions can wreak this much havoc on a team on the first day of go-live?  It probably not  economical to plan for the exception (i.e. the day people flock to see the site the first time) as opposed to the rule (the steady state of web traffic a site like  Zillow will attract in the coming months).   But messages like the above sure leave a bad first impression, and I'm pretty certain we're not talking about that much traffic.

Famous last words I'm sure.  As we get ready to launch Mozes publicly I definitely don't want to be using Gmail and Zillow as justification, but I'm sure going to ensure our team does everything we can so that we don't have to.

(No one seems to have come up with a better site down message than the Fickr Massage message - shame on me for thinking we should even try).

My buddy Google

If I told you that I said 8,462 different things to another person in a single year (even if it was my wife), I suspect you wouldn't believe me.  But that's how many things I have said to my buddy Google in just 255 days.

I was planning to wait until my first anniversary of having Google know everything about me to write this post.  That would have been April 22, 2006, one year after I agreed to turn on personalized search at Google.  But today, for about the 3rd time in about as many months, I logged into personalized search and noticed "Trends" and I am too fascinated to resist posting what I have learned.

Google's "Trends" outlines Top Searches, Top Sites, Top Clicks, Monthly Search Activity, Daily Search Activity, Hourly Search Activity and, what I suspect may turn out to be the most important long term feature, "People with searches similar to yours also searched for..." for my personalized search history.  Today I learned:

*I have performed a search in every hour of the day (not necessarily every day)
*My busiest hours are around noon and 10 pm
*My busiest search days are Tuesdays
*My busiest month was last August (not surprisingly, the first full month I was working on Mozes)
*My top search at Google is for one of Google's own services: Google Blogsearch.  Don't ask me why I haven't bookmarked it yet (or why Google doesn't link to it from its homepage)
*I was disappointed to learn and am embarrassed to report that searches for my own name not only occupied one of my top ten search spots, but two (with and without quotes)
*Of my 8,462 searches (and to combat accusations of egotism), you should note that it only takes 10 searches of one particular item to knock off my most searched item, or a mere 6 searches to knock off #10

It is truly fascinating to me that of over 8,000 searches, I have never searched for the same thing more than 10 times.  My very first recorded search was "text messaging magazines", interestingly related to one of the ideas that sparked Mozes.  I have searched everything from the "washington post" to "seniors online" (I dont' remember why) to "short term interest rates graph". I have hundreds if not thousands of searches without clicked results.

So what does all this tell me?   Google knows a lot.  Enough to make five simple search suggestions at the end of my trends report:
1.  "business plan"
         -Yikes, Google, does it really look like Mozes needs one?
2.  "venture capital"
         -I told you Google, we want to make just a little more progress...
3.  "mendocino"
         -Ah... vacation - great idea Google!  I haven't had one in a while.
4.  "email marketing"
         -Funny you should mention this one Google as another smart fellow (but more human) recently told me to look into this business as a benchmark for Mozes.
5.  "search engine submission"
         -Don't worry, Google, I'll remember you.  You're my buddy.

Maybe it's time for me to start paying a little more attention to the good work of the folks at the Attention Trust, and, as Seth Goldstein often discusses, get a more explicit sense of the trading costs I am incurring.  A good writeup here.

But as Google reminds me, I should tackle my business plan first.

I can't wait for 2006

John Battelle has kicked off a great conversation to end 2005 that I predict will carry over well into 2006.  Fred Wilson picked up on it and made it the basis for number 7 of his New Year's Resolutions.

John was letting us know about the amazing work of Phil Torrone of Make Magazine.  There are many people in the world who pretend to be extremely busy and fewer who actually are.  Phil Torrone is one of the busiest guys on the planet.  Phil is associate editor at Make (in addition to being an author, artist and engineer).  If you don't know of Phil but want to get a small glimpse of what I am talking about,  check out the MAKE: Blog.  Not a day goes by that Phil hasn't written at least a post or two, if not 4 or 10.  He not only blogs to tell us what other amazing people do but also fills us in on his incredible trials, errors, experiments and inventions (like how he celebrated New Year's tonight). 

Phil created the MAKEbot.  In John's opinion, it sets the stage for how mobile gets plugged into the web in a way that makes sense for the average person.  John's post generated a lot of comments on the last day of the year, and it should - he believes that Phil's work might just spearhead something truly new and important for mobile.  I'd bet Phil agrees with him, and I'd bet even more Phil already has about 50 ideas that will truly stun John and everyone else once they are released.  That's the kind of thing Phil tends to do.

IM is an important input/output vehicle for what Mozes is doing in building a platform for many types of mobile services.  We see SMS as probably more important for the business early on, but there is no doubt in my mind that a ubiquitous free wireless Internet (see Fred's number 5 resolution) means that over the long term non-carrier means will really drive innovation.  We registered an IM account for Mozes for all 4 major networks in September, but the possibilities that John writes about get really interesting if and when IM networks converge.  As C. Enrique Ortiz wrote just a few days ago:  With respect to mobility, this convergence translates to a real-time, dynamic alternative to SMS and MMS.

In 2 weeks, Mozes will have a real website and production environment (not a vicious circle).  We also have our own AIM bot that I hope many people will want to help test as well.  I disagree with a few of the comments on Searchblog because like John I see Phil's work as truly innovative.  Even though it wasn't Mozes who made another one of John's predictions come true in 2005, we can't wait to be a contributor to the success of it in 2006.

(When searching for the post to Phil's location based dog video, I noticed Make's new section called "Something I want to learn to do..." - I want to learn how to get as much stuff done as Phil does).

 

Back and forth

I was speaking to someone smart yesterday about Mozes, and I presented a brief and rather inarticulate theory about how the consolidation of user interfaces into a single mega-interface is coming, and he replied "Really, I think it's getting worse."  Can we both be right?

I just noticed that Google released an api for developers to create widgets for the iGoogle home page today.   They have released a few less than impressive hacks orchestrated by some of Google's developers.  It would have been nice if they had done something a little more splashy, like announced a widget developer reality tv show and a prize of $1 million with Mark Burnett.  But this is Google, and so a simple blog announcement and I think we have a significant extension of Google's  assault on the  desktop.

A few months back, I wrote "The Battle for Start" to describe what I believe was the major battle upcoming between GYM.   Today, I think Google is proving that the desktop and the  homepage is about controlling the central place where we manage all tasks and activities all day.  One thing I am sure Google knows about us in search is that we tend to go back and forth - we do a search, we check a site, we come back, we check another site, we come back, we do another search and it goes on from there.  Sound familiar?

Like search, Google sees the desktop as another place that we  all go back and forth from.   To date, it has been primarily about going back and forth from applications, but that's changing dramatically.  Content is starting to treat applications and interfaces like water from a running sink treats a container of an ice cube tray.  The free flow of content is  impossible to stop, and is going to continue.   As the lines between application, web page and interface blur, I may be willing to concede that the mega-interface to which I referred is probably more accurately considered as a landing point to go back and forth between thousands of specialized ones.

I think Google is smart to allow developers, and ultimately users, to create their own unique paths to build it.  I'm sure the others will quickly follow.

LinkedIn Needs to Disintermediate Itself

I love LinkedIn.  There is no better way in the world to get business done than through relationships and LinkedIn couldn't have built a better nor prettier way to discover them.

Yet I  find it downright annoying that LinkedIn wants to participate in the actual brokering of relationships. There is something disturbing about receiving an html email from a friend (or not) which is one part from the friend and five parts telling me what to do next, despite the friendly Q&A at the bottom like "What's an introduction?".  Despite the brilliance of the underlying service (Who's in my network?), it seems to me that LinkedIn has to find a way to stay out of the way.  I almost always avoid it when I do find a connection, instead choosing to send a note directly to the friend to see what he knows about the person who knows the person I want to talk to.  That may sound a bit high schoolish but I'm guessing I'm not much different than anyone else.   LinkedIn needs to act less like the mother at the school dance and more like the limo driver waiting to take you to the next party.

I do think LinkedIn deserves to find ways to make money and grow its services, but I am confident that no great business believes that it deserves anything from its customers.   That's why I shouldn't have to take the bad with the good, and LinkedIn is going to have to find ways to build on the underlying service in a way that shows real value for users without intermediation.  In the spirit of constructive criticism, I was going to write some ideas for LinkedIn but decided to do a blog search to save time.  Here's one recent post I found  that the team at LinkedIn should be reading.

The Irony of Bubble 2.0

A few days ago, a good friend sent me an email with  a link to David Hornick's piece on Built to be Bought in Bubble 2.0 and asked if I had seen it.  I replied defensively: "Yes.  I hope you don't think I'm this dumb."  In retrospect, the reply deserved a lot more.  If you read the comments to David's post, they add a lot to my gut reaction.  To paraphrase them:

*There are quite a few feature companies.
*Feature companies are big gambles.
*Talk of web 2.0 is limited to a pretty small group.
*An acquisition is a legitimate exit strategy.
*Getting bought out isn't so bad.
*If you're even thinking about it, build on an existing platform and market space.
*Bubble 2.0 talk is boring.
*Sh*t happens.
*There is a larger, interesting trend at work around the web.
*VCs are the ones who are feeling the pressure.
*Rem tene, verba sequentur (I didn't really follow this guy but I kind of got the sense that I agreed with him - I think the next bullet point actually sums it up).
*It takes serendipity, not luck.

Silicon Beat says Riya is built to be bought.  By its own description on its home page, Riya automatically tags people in photos.  Is there any online photo product manager in the world who hasn't put this on a roadmap only to be told "Whoaaa.... slow down there partner" by the engineers?  Moreover, despite Riya's bold mission statement (We will be successful when we can find every digital photo in the world), we know at least one company who eats that kind of thing, accompanied by a team of quality engineers, as a side order at breakfast.  On the other hand, Munjal Shah has written that Riya has just finished the "process" of Series B and Peter Rip is talking about founder buyouts in lieu of acquisitions (likely unrelated, and a great piece in its own right, but too hard to resist making the inference).   Riya makes for a great bubble 2.0 case study then.

First, Munjal Shah seems to me to be the type of person who wants to build and is capable of building a great company.  When I first started blogging, I looked for blogs of other founders/CEOs to follow and he is one of the first I came across and instantly liked.  I believe Munjal totally understands that while every company must sell differentiated features (and he's got a fine one), that is not enough to justify a long term standalone existence.   Second, Riya's focused technology in a defined market is precisely what would make it an attractive acqusition target.  I don't think we have seen many examples of companies being acquired by any of the big players where there is no technology or other meaningful innovation. 

More importantly, I also think that if you look at how any of the big companies got to their own position of dominance, it was precisely because of highly focused innovation.  Just as Russell Beattie does, we  all tend to wonder where the next great company will come from, but I am willing to bet that it is a company we already know, that has a highly committed founder/leader and is quite narrowly focused in a big market.  Great companies in the making are almost always happy to stay highly focused on getting one thing really right, which allows them to accelerate innovation in even greater ways later.  That's where the genius of the serendipity comment above comes in.

I get tired of bubble 2.0 talk because it is mostly anecdotal, example free and certainly lacking statistics - perhaps more aptly it could be called a blogger bubble.  While I do find that a lot of venture capital folks are feeling pressure to invest, it does seem that it is much easier this time around to pick the weak companies from the strong, and the weak are really not getting much attention from any community - user, investor or potential acquirer.   In other words, it does seem to take a real company to be successful by any measure in bubble 2.0. 

 

Reputations are portable

Link: Sessions Top Ten Insights - Six Reputations Are Not Portable | Union Square Ventures.

I got stopped in my tracks in my RSS reader today because of Fred Wilson's title "Reputations are not portable".  He was referencing Mary Hodder's comments from Union Square's Sessions in which she pointed out that reputations are not portable.  She makes a great point about how she doesn't give EBAY's reputational system a whole lot of credibility.  Neither do I, but I think she's wrong on her larger point.  I also hope Fred hasn't totally abandoned his original concept.

I've already written down some of my thinking here.  I put less emphasis on the idea of reputations being portable as I do identity, but suffice to say that reputation is often a critical element of a person's identity, offline and on.   If and when identity becomes portable, then so too will reputation.

EBAY's reputation system is important to a lot of people, and I'm willing to bet those people would love to know another person's EBAY reputation if they encountered them in other circumstances.   With respect, the test is not whether Ms. Hodder buys into the reputation system of what she considers "a bizarre social environment", but whether the people who use it and rely on it everyday do.   I don't know, but I bet the rating of fellow auctioneers has been raised a time or two among power sellers talking face to face at EBAY Live.   If those same power sellers instead met on Match.com, don't you think the ratings would be interesting to them there too?

The EBAY reputation is a very important data point for certain social groups and a far less important one for others.  As a mix of a million social circles on the web, there is no single source of reputation data that will work for all of us.  That's why I think we should avoid hanging the concept of portable reputations on the credence some of us may or may not give to just one data point.  Looked at as data points, it would be enormously valuable for reputation type information to flow as freely as any other type of data.

For us business types, we can think of some data points we'd like to know when dealing with someone online.  What if someone went to our alma mater?  What if they had worked for the same employer as we had?  What if they knew someone we knew?  Similar to the real world, the biggest obstacle to the portability of reputation is verification.   Yet, the Internet holds a bigger promise for verification than the physical world.  Whereas employers still need to make a phone call to a university to verify educational credentials, we should expect web services to one day seamlessly and securely take care of it.

Currently, it is not in the interests of many holders of reputational data to freely contribute these data points to a larger identity initiative.  Robert Young made this point well.  However, as the web becomes more open and fluid, a course many of us cheer for,  I believe in many cases their own community will demand that they do.

Identity is an exceptionally hard problem, but it is a very interesting one.  I am committed to learning more in the coming year about the ongoing initiatives of some smart people like Libby Miller and  Dan Brickley.   I like the idea of Sxip, but I'm less into a private company making identity its mission and a little fearful that we will one day become a little too locked into some really large for-profit companies.  I sometimes wonder if a group like the Mozilla Foundation could play a  role.  I have lots more to think about on this topic, but I do hold hope for a community and technical solution and I think it will permit identity, and therefore reputation, to be portable. 

Can anyone be really good at everything?

A few weeks ago, Fred Wilson wrote a great essay on Point Solutions vs. End to End Solutions and I've been slowly working on my own thoughts on this topic.

His thesis is that "end to end solutions aren't going to work as well as highly integrated but separate services that build and hold emotional connections with their key users."

To me, Fred asks this question of web companies: what are you really good at?  For Google, it is search.  For Flickr, it is photo sharing.  For Craig's List, it is community classifieds.  For delicious, it is content saving and sharing.  He points out that in a world of open standards and APIs, the user can and will roll their own personal, unique web experience.  When we think about successful Internet companies, I think it is fair to say that we all tend to think of our favorite specialists.

EBAY is putting this question to the test.  Given the price it paid for Skype, it’s admittedly hard to tell whether EBAY has a grand vision of supporting all of the world’s communications needs or simply inserting world-class technology into an existing business.  If you believe what they say, that “Skype will accelerate commerce on EBAY”, then they really do want to stay really good at one thing - putting the world’s buyers and sellers together.  I believe them.  (Sometimes I think EBAY ought to have been the one to have bought Overture and made it clear to the world that brokering anything online, including advertisements, was its domain.)

I find that companies are often distracted away from specialization when they are fortunate enough to build an enormous user base.  After all, in the consumer Internet world, a loyal and committed user base is the key to revenue for even the smallest of companies.  It is no wonder that there is a push on the part of the largest Internet properties to become super-communities in order to satisfy every need of every user , and attempt to attract more.

This trend has even started to carry over into more traditional businesses.  Last week, I attended a Churchill Club breakfast at which Jonathan Schwartz made comments that some really big businesses are starting to realize that their online services are about aggregating people,  so they are evaluating ways to capitalize on their “communities”.  He suggested a not-so-distant future in which we could see Citibank Online enter telephony and auctions as a competitor to EBAY.  I think that idea is pretty dangerous and distracting for a financial services specialist like Citibank (and I’m sure many Citibank directors would agree).

The idea plays into a future where us users will be left with 15 or 20, or fewer, massive communities to choose from in order to satisfy our needs. While Sun might benefit from that environment, I do think it is counter to what is emerging on the web.  Fred writes about how Ning, the new social software builder, is making it even easier for users to build and create point solutions to satisfy the needs of specific users and groups.  You should also check out Chris Anderson’s take on the concept. As Fred describes, by putting the ability to create point solutions in the hands of the every day user, there are some serious forces against end-to-end solutions.

There is a simple and perhaps obvious passage buried in a book I am reading called “Personal, Portable, Pedestrian: Mobile Phones in Japanese Life”, edited by Mizuko Ito, Daisuke Okabe and Misa Matsuda (2005):

Communities and societies have been shifting toward networked societies where boundaries are more permeable, interactions are with diverse others, and linkages switch between multiple networks (Wellman 1997; 1999; 2001; Castells 2000).  Hence, many people communicate with others in ways that spread out across group boundaries.  Rather than relating to one group, they cycle through interactions with a variety of others, at work or in the community.    

I repeat it here because it leads me to believe that it is impossible for two persons to relate to the same set of groups, which makes the idea of end-to-end solutions even more difficult to accept.  Sure Google, Yahoo!, MSN and AOL each have massive user bases and they do their best to create sticky applications, but I've yet to hear of any person, let alone a group of people, claim their fettered loyalty to any one of them (as hard as AOL and Yahoo! now are trying to fling the shackles at our legs when we download any piece of software).  Most people I know are most satisfied when they engage with each of the services for particular purposes.  The big players therefore face a dilemma: the more open these large portals become, the more at risk they are of setting users free from their applications; the more closed they become, the more likely users will be frustrated in their need to interact with others outside a single network.

Tom Evslin is starting to describe this problem perfectly in the context of self-interest, and he has me waiting with bated breath for his own answer to his question: “Does the conflicts of interest between users who want to be on the largest possible network or interconnected system of open networks and network providers who want to retain value for themselves by remaining closed means that we are doomed to walled gardens?  Nope.  Stay tuned for why not”.

I believe much of the pressures against walled gardens come from the fact that we as users are exponentially increasing the number of interactions we can and want to maintain on the web.  In this post, I talked about the idea that our social networks, or at least the overlapping portions, need to become more portable and the solution must emerge outside of any single "community".   Instead, the larger players seem to think that they should be the ones to solve the increasingly obvious user pain points around social networking and identity authentication.  I am really waiting for a company (or perhaps better yet, a movement) to come along to make this arena the thing that they are really good at.

So like Fred, I do see connected point solutions as the best scenario for users, although I do wonder if it is the most likely.  Despite some emerging forces, I suspect there is the same nagging thought at the back of the mind of everyone interested in web 2.0 that Fred’s friend might ultimately be proven right – that stitching together a variety of point solutions in order to create and manage one’s own web experience will not appeal to the mainstream user.  In reviewing Microsoft Live earlier today, Tim O’Reilly wrote this:  “you have to realize that for ordinary users, it may not work that way. Even a configurable portal like MyYahoo or Windows Live is a stretch for many users.”

For a while, I suspect we will see a few big Internet properties attempt to make the end-to-end solution their specialty.