Introducing Curator HD…

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One of the things that has been keeping me so busy recently is the release of our new iPad app – Curator HD. Curator HD is the first full featured curation application for the iPad, combining a great feed reader with commenting and sharing options for social channels, email, and even custom newsletters. It also allows for the creation of folders to store and organize stories that you might not be ready to share yet.

I put together a video overview of Curator HD, both to introduce it to the market and to help people get started using it:

Curator HD is available now for FREE in the productivity section of the iTune App store.

Just click here to download.

A Downside Of The App Store Model…

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About a month ago we launched a newsletter publishing app – Publisher HD – on the iTunes App Store. We were really pleased with the response we got to the app, and were jazzed that it even spent some time in both Apple’s “What’s Hot” and “New & Noteworthy” sections for productivity apps.

Publisher HD allows you to hook in to your free Google Reader account (or your professional InfoNgen account) and use content you find there to assemble and customize newsletters for redistribution. It lets people act as web curators, picking out things of interest that they find, commenting on them, and packing them up for redistribution to a targeted audience. (This is effectively the same model some popular publications like the Huffington Post use to serve their readers).

About two weeks ago, Google decided to make a change to the technical methodology they use to authenticate with Reader. Since Google doesn’t publish a formal API to access Reader, this change ended up breaking Publisher HD in a significant way – feeds from Google Reader would no longer refresh. Once we found out what happened, we were able to push out an update, test it, and upload it to the app store all in less than three hours.

Unfortunately, the rest of the App Store process doesn’t move as quickly.

We had to wait about 9 days before the updated version of Publisher HD became available for download. During that time, our download count went way down, and those folks that did download it ended up with an application that probably didn’t work for them. We had to modify our application description on the iTunes Store to let people know that there was an issue and that an update for it was done and awaiting approval. (We didn’t want to pull the App from the store since our professional InfoNgen clients were not affected). It was incredibly difficult to watch all this play out, knowing that we’d already made the fix but were powerless to influence it’s release.

While the App Store’s 7-10 day review window is manageable when dealing with planned updates and enhancements, it can end up being incredibly damaging when something urgently needs to be updated. There should be some avenue made available to developers for the delivery of critical fixes, even if it involves additional costs or an upfront certification that would let them do this directly. Perhaps it would make sense for Apple to allow a certain number of updates with a ‘post release’ review, and with severe penalties for anyone that abuses it. Though situations like this will ideally be infrequent, their typical severity when they do arise should earn them some special consideration.

The fixed version has now been available on the app store for about a week. Even though this episode dampened some the incredible momentum we had from the initial app launch, downloads have started picking up again and I’m optimistic that everything will get back on track. We’ve been lucky in this regard.

Despite having gone through this, I still love the entire app store concept. It provides a delivery and service platform that we could never realize alone as a small development shop – especially in the mobile space. Hopefully, Apple will consider the impact of these kinds of situations as they evolve their app store policies. I’m sure many other development teams have found themselves in a similar situation and have their own tales of woe to tell.

Sadly, some of them probably have a less happy endings.

InfoNgen 'Publisher HD' Is Now In The App Store…

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I wanted to let everyone know that the first cut of InfoNgen’s iPad newsletter generation application – Publisher HD – is now up and available in the Apple App Store. Equally exciting is the great reception the app has received. It was even featured in the New & Noteworthy section for productivity apps:

If you get the chance to download it, I would welcome whatever feedback you have. There are a lot of things we want to add, refine and extend in the current release of Publisher HD, and we are already hard at work on putting that next version together. You can leave suggestions in the comments section for this post, or just email me directly.

Best of all, Publisher HD is free – just bring your own iPad. You can download it via the link below:

ENJOY!

InfoNgen Named a 2009 CODiE Awards Finalist…

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We received some good news yesterday…

My company, InfoNgen, has been named a finalist in the 2009 SIIA CODiE Awards in the category of Best Content Aggregation Service:

blog-infongen-codie2009

For those not familiar with them, the CODiE Awards were established over 20 years ago by the Software & Information Industry Association (SIIA), as a way to showcase the software and information industry’s best products and services.

According to the SIIA’s website:

The CODiE Awards hold the distinction of being the industry’s only peer-reviewed awards program, which provides member companies with a unique opportunity to earn praise from their competitors. Now in its twenty-fourth year, the CODiE Awards program has raised the standard for excellence and serves as prestigious representation of outstanding achievement and vision in the software and information industry.

There are a lot of people at InfoNgen who have worked very hard to get us to where we are today, and it’s great to see their effort recognized by our peers in the technology space. And though we’re excited by what we’ve been able to accomplish this past year, we’re even more excited about some of the new features and capabilities we’ll be rolling out in the coming months. This is a fantastic time to be involved with textual analysis and information discovery.

We have a lot of good things planned for 2009.

NOTE: If you’d like to do a review of InfoNgen, just contact me (email, twitter) with your details and I’ll get in touch with you right away to follow-up.

Best Practices In A Bad Market…

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Without a doubt, it’s a tough market out there…

I’ve been a tech entrepreneur for nearly 25 years. Over that time, I’ve seen some incredibly good markets as well as some incredibly bad ones. And while I most certainly prefer operating in a good market, I know from experience that it is possible for your business to be successful even through a downturn.

The key is to be sure you focus on the right things.

While there is no way to guarantee success in business – even in good times – here are five “best practices” that I believe can improve your odds of successfully navigating today’s choppy markets:

1. Deliver immediate, measurable value:

    People today aren’t making buying decisions based on a vague value propositions or glossy sales fliers. If you aren’t offering something that addresses real business challenges in a way that clients can benefit from right away, forget about making any near term sales.

    Realize that you aren’t selling a product – you’re selling a solution. The “product” is just the packaging the solution comes in. You need to understand in detail what a prospect is focused on now, and be able to explain in very specific ways how your company offers them the best solution to deal with it. Also remember that “value” is a function of both “capability” and “cost”. People will only be willing to pay for the specific capabilities they need regardless of what else may come packaged with it.

    You’ll need to price that capability competitively, but avoid the temptation to do whatever it takes to close a deal. Even in a down market, not all business is good business.

2. Treat existing clients like gold:

    As budgets tighten and sales cycles grow longer, every client you already have becomes even more valuable to you. While the revenue they generate for your business is a critical element of your relationship, clients also can provide a lot of value beyond that.

    First, they can offer you real market feedback on what you are doing. This can help you refine the capabilities you bring to the market, and give you a better sense of where to focus and what to prioritize. Some of the best features I’ve developed in products have come directly from client suggestions. And those features helped me win new clients.

    Another value you get from having a resume of clients is credibility. Prospective clients are much more comfortable doing business with someone that is already selling into their marketplace. The fact that others are willing to pay for your service can instill confidence in people considering doing business with you. The clients you already have are a measure of your success. And in any market, success attracts more success.

    Happy clients are also likely to recommend you to other people in the business, helping you grow by word of mouth. Referrals from satisfied clients can be powerful.

    So what do you need to do?

    I have a simple rule for taking care of clients. Stop looking for ways that they can make you successful and instead look for ways you can become an invaluable part of making them successful. Good things will follow from that.

3. Listen, listen, and listen some more:

    Talk is cheap, but listening is completely free. You need to get out and start hearing first hand the conversations going on in your marketplace. This isn’t just attending conferences and trade shows. You also need to go out in the trenches where business is actually happening. Try to understand the full range of issues people in your market are dealing with – the day to day issues as well as the macro challenges they face. Call people up and just ask for a meeting – you’d be surprised how many will say yes and be willing to talk to you!

    To make this exercise worthwhile, check your ego at the office before you head out. Don’t go out looking to justify your own perspectives and plans. Explore the outliers and seek out opposing points of view. Welcome criticism. Reality may not always be flattering, but it’s what you ultimately need to deal with if you want to be successful.

    Be open to being wrong, and willing to make adjustments. Talk less and listen more.

4. Grow your “contact footprint”:

    The more conversations you have going on in the market place, the better your chances of finding new opportunities and closing new business. It’s the basis for most marketing, and ultimately a matter of statistics. So does that mean you should your start sending out mass emails and printing out product brochures?

    Hardly! People just tune that out, especially in a tight market.

    The key here is to aggressively network. Scour through your contacts looking for potential opportunities. Leverage sites like LinkedIn to target people you’d like to reach and looks for ways on- and off-line to get introduced to them. Become involved in industry groups and organizations that improve your odds of connecting with people that can help you. Reach out to relatives, friends, and even fellow commuters – they can all be sources of leads and opportunities.

    If you’re thinking that this is standard operating procedure for everyone on your sales team, you’d probably (hopefully!) be right. The point here is that networking like this isn’t something that just sales should be doing. Programmers, secretaries, administrators, and managers – people at all levels within your company – have something of value to contribute here, and you need to find ways to capture it.

    You need to develop a “networking culture” across your entire organization. Reward people that bring in new opportunities or open doors to difficult to reach prospects. Make it a habit to brainstorm as teams for new, specific opportunities. Challenge people to make creative suggestions.

    Most people tend to do what is expected of them, so create an expectation here. If you’re not tapping into the networking value of everyone in your company, you’re leaving money on the table.

5. Sell to markets and relationships, not just to customers:

    All of your customers have customers of their own and are looking at ways to strengthen those relationships. They face competitive pressures that drive their priorities and create unique demands. They have partners they work with, and suppliers they depend on. In short, your customers are members of a complex business/social network.

    So go beyond just selling to them as if they were isolated entities.

    Approach the market the same way an M&A firm does. Look for opportunities that exist between various people or various companies and start selling both side of it. Look for compelling combinations of content or capabilities that are being sold independently, and find ways to package them for customers that can increases their value or reduce their integration costs.

    You’ll find opportunities like this in every market once you start looking for them.

    While these types of opportunities may be more complex to pull together than ‘single client sales’, they do offer some meaningful advantages. These “strategic sales” can let you leverage the selling power of other individuals or organizations, extending your reach and helping you grow more quickly than you could on your own. Many of them can having multiple revenue streams associated with them, making them more dependable sources of income. These types of deals also become ‘stickier’ for clients since the cost of unwinding them tends to be much higher than the cost of replacing just a single vendor. You’ll also find that deals based on relationships between a firm and its clients can be less price sensitive then deals done directly with one firm. They are also less likely to be unwound when times get tough.

    Exploring opportunities like these should become a component of your overall selling strategy.

Hopefully, these “best practices” will inspire you think more creatively about things you can do to optimize your own business. I’ve tried to make each one specific enough to be meaningful, but general enough to remain relevant to most corporations. That said, there’s no “one size fits all” when it comes to running a business.

The title of this post not withstanding, I think the points I’ve made here are applicable during both good and bad times. I’m visiting them now because bad times can be a lot less forgiving, and demand that we pay a lot more attention to the business decisions we need to make. Good times have the grace to cover a multitude of sins.

To wrap up, I’d like to share two quotes that I think really capture the spirit of what it takes to be successful, regardless of the market:

      “I’d rather be lucky than good.”

      – Lefty Gomez

      “The harder I work, the luckier I get.”

      – Samuel Goldwyn

There’s a lot of wisdom packed in a those few simple words…

Good Luck!…

News Flow, Public Opinion, And Trends…

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There seems to be an interesting relationship here…

This is trend chart from our product InfoNgen plotting significant media mentions of both John McCain and Barack Obama for the period July 3rd to November 3rd.

Click Chart To Enlarge

You can see from the chart that Obama tended to have more media coverage than McCain for most periods outside of a brief window following the announcement of Sarah Palin as the Republican Vice Presidential nominee. You can also see a significant Obama spike that happened around the Democratic national convention.

After looking at that chart, I wanted to see how this media centric view to election coverage compared with contemporaneous public sentiment. To do that, I grabbed this chart from Pollster.com showing polling data trends for the two candidates over that same period.

While not identical, there are some interesting similarities between the two charts…

Both charts follow roughly the same shape, though with less overall volatility in the polling data. You can see the same brief crossover for McCain at the same point in both charts, as well as the broadening gap in favor of Obama as the election drew closer.

There isn’t enough evidence here to draw any hard correlations between the two data sets, but the similarities do suggest that the two are not completely unrelated.

There are three possible factors at work here:

  • Advertising spend by the two campaigns influenced both public sentiment and media coverage. That would certainly be an interesting additional pair of trend lines in the chart.
  • Media coverage directly influenced public sentiment. Media bias has often been cited as a factor in various election cycles.
  • The media is simply responding to swings in public sentiment. This could raise some interesting questions about the balance in media between integrity and profits.

No doubt, the truth here lies in some combination of each of these.

But this does point to something broader and very significant…

As we start to collect more and more data points around any complex subject we follow, we’ll start to see trends, patterns, and relationships emerge that were never apparent to us in the past. Some will help to illuminate the causes of past behaviors, and some will even be useful in predicting future behaviors. Our continually improving ability to connect the dots in these data sets is probably one of the most exciting area in information discovery.

Finding the data that is in no one place, but is hidden everywhere…

*Many thanks to Karen Smith, one of my colleagues at InfoNgen, for originally sending me the trend chart of media coverage of the candidates.

Cutter Associates' Technology Alliance Conference…

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For those not familiar with Cutter Associates, they are a premium provider of objective analysis and consulting services in the financial marketplace. I had the chance to deliver the keynote talk today at their Technology Alliance Conference in Boston.

This conference explores a broad range of issues related to the operational infrastructure financial firms need to support. I decided to focus my talk on some of the significant trends that I believe will shape the way that firms will discover information in the future. Of the seven big trends that I covered, there are three key ones that I’d like to share with you here:

    Discovery Will Become Personal – It will become increasingly important for individuals to be able to discover information using personal taxonomies that reflect their unique perspective on the key topics that they need to follow. These personal taxonomies will complement the shared global taxonomies that are provided broadly, and create a more effective and efficient way for people to discover and organize the information that is really relevant to them.
    Text Search Will Become Secondary – Though it’s central to the way the web is mined today, text search will fade in importance as a tool for information discovery. It is simply too imprecise and delivers way too much noise in the results it returns. I believe that it will be replaced by tools that provide more thematic based discovery. These tools will be based on weighted, non-Boolean matching, rules based qualifications, and statistical analysis. These approaches will make information on complex concepts much easier to find in the future.
    Discovery Will Become Pervasive – While most discussions around content discovery focus on the web, effective discovery actually needs to embrace ALL of the content sets you have available to you. This includes the content on your own desktop and email, as well as in corporate file repositories and data stores that you may have access to. Having a contextually rich framework that encompasses all of these sources will allow a new discovery model to evolve that transcends the silo limited approach most people need to deal with today.

At the heart of each of the trends I discussed in the keynote is the creation of more detailed and more personalized context that can power new approaches to information filtering. The core technologies required to create this contextual backdrop are actually all available now. They can be leveraged effectively in many of the most challenging information discovery domains firms are struggling with today.

The future of content discovery is at lot closer than most people realize…

Content Discovery: Bridging The Gap…

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The internet has transformed how information is published…

There are no “gatekeepers” anymore. Anyone, anywhere, can create and distribute all manner of content to a global audience. It happens in real-time and at almost no cost. The breadth and depth of content that is freely available today is testament to transformative power of this new publishing model.

It has left traditional media struggling to adjust to the “new order”…

But while the web has redefined the way content is published, it has had a far less significant impact on the way it is consumed. Advances in information management and discovery simply haven’t kept pace with the explosion of new content – and new content channels – that advances in publishing have enabled.

But I believe that gap may soon start to close…

I gave a talk yesterday at Enterprise Search Summit West discussing some of the changes in the content arena that advances in technology are starting to enable, and the impact those changes could have on the way we discover and consume content.

During the talk, I called out three key attributes of this evolving “discovery framework” that I would like to share with you here:

    It needs to be Persistent: Given the continuing growth in content production, discovery can’t be a transactional exercise. It needs to be a continuous process – a framework that makes us aware of any content specifically relevant to our interests. For this to happen, it needs to create a sufficiently rich contextual framework around all the content we need to connect with, allowing for effective filtering and ranking.
    It needs to be Pervasive: The content we need to work with every day comes to us in many formats, is delivered across many channels, and is stored in many different information silos. Discovery needs to happen seamlessly across all of them, and still provide granular insight within each of them. To become really effective, it needs to be a natural extension of every aspect of our daily workflow. – not an isolated portal or a bolted on feature.
    It needs to be Personal: While having common, global taxonomies is an essential dimension to information discovery, on their own they aren’t sufficient. We all think about information differently. We may look at certain subjects with expansive depth and breadth, while barely acknowledging that others even exist. The taxonomies we use to discover and navigate information need to reflect this personal perspective. These global and personal taxonomies can effectively coexist – but they do both need to be there.

This is an incredibly interesting and rapidly evolving area of knowledge management. It offers the potential for totally new ways of navigating and consuming content.

The days of the traditional content portal are numbered…

I am planning put together a video (or several) covering the full presentation I made. Stay tuned.

Targeting Events…

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Having a presence at select industry events can be important for your business…

As old-school as it may sound, becoming involved in conferences and trade events is an important component of establishing a growing business. That said, it typically isn’t the best use of your money and time to go to the mega-shows that are out there. They are expensive to attend, and small companies tend to get swallowed up in the noise and dwarfed by the scale. I’ve also found that at these types of shows, you can end up with more competitors than prospects coming to watch your presentation or visit your booth.

And that won’t do you a lot of good…

A better approach is to choose smaller events that are important to your target market. The theme of the conference should align well with your value proposition to the marketplace – that should be one of your top criteria. As you research potential conferences and events, the organizers will typically give you lists of the companies that have attended in the past. Remember that is only part of the story. Companies don’t come to these conferences – people do. If you plan on making your investment in the event a success, make sure your products or services will be relevant to the likely individuals that will be attending. Look into the specific sessions that are being held there to be sure the fit is good. Talk to some of your existing clients to see if they will be attending.

And if not, find out why…

My company InfoNgen is ramping up to participate at a series of conferences through the end of the year. The next one coming up is the Pharma CI Conference and Exhibition on September 15th.

It’s a perfect example of a highly focused event that is well aligned with the value we bring to the marketplace.

Beyond just having a booth at the conference, I will also be giving a keynote presentation on leveraging the web in the fight against Third World diseases. Looking for openings to actively participate at conferences is another way to engage with prospects and clients. Many conferences are looking for engaging panelists and speakers, and also have sponsorship opportunities that may offer the chance to network or present on a topic. The thing to remember here is that you should leave the hard-sell back at your show booth – that will be a turn off for most people. Instead, try to make a connection with your audience. Demonstrate that you understand the challenges they face, and explore new ways they can address them. Share their interest and passion, and be open to their comments and questions

If you do that successfully, they’ll show up at your booth when you’re done…

The Future Of Competitive Intelligence…

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My company InfoNgen was invited to present at SLA 2008…

In a prior post, I wrote about some of the key points I made during a presentation to competitive intelligence professionals at this year’s Special Librarians Association Conference in Seattle.

As a followup, I’ve produced a video of that presentation that is now available over on our companion video blog The DIGITALedge.TV.

At just over 14 minutes long, it’s not the ideal ‘web video’ length. However, the presentation does cover a lot of ground, and provides a clear overview of the semantic based capabilities InfoNgen is currently bringing to the marketplace. Analyzing trends across information sets – covered in this video – is an especially interesting component of what we do, and it will continue to grow in importance over time.

This feels like a marketplace on the verge of taking off…