Saturday, August 30, 2008
Does Wikipedia Play a Role in The Presidential Election? Someone Named "Young Trigg" Appears to Think So!
An individual identified as "Young Trigg" made over 30 changes to the Wikipedia entry of Sarah Palin on the day before her nomination was announced.
Trigg BTW is the name of one of her sons. The 5 month old one. Young Trigg joined the day the edits were made, and made edits only to this entry.
Manipulation of Wikipedia entries is of course nothing new.For people or companies or countries or parties or I expect politicians, "Young Trigg" is clearly not her 5 month old son.
But whoever Young Trigg is, it points to the importance of digital info sources in all decision making, including apparently the Vice Presidency.
If you would like to see a list of Young Trigg's edits, you can find it here.
Friday, August 29, 2008
Guess Where I'm Headed...
Me and my four legged pal Sleepy are headed up to Tahoe to do a bit of camping and, if I can get him to get in the seat, kayaking.
Don't worry about his safety as I got him an Outward Hound Life Jacket. Far too many pictures of dog camping antics when I return.
In the meantime, I've prepared about 75 posts for the two weeks I'll be gone. Just cuz I am away from the PC doesn't mean you won't be getting your daily dose of walker-with-tennis-ball-feet OLDMTA goodness. Because the love I feel for you, dear reader, is absolute. ;-)
Ah, the 80s, when the hair and the beats were BIG! Oh, and young'uns, check out the (lack of) quality in this video! We used to watch this low quality stuff on MTV all bloody day. As I recall, Vacation was considered a high production value video -- it was, after all, released when the Go Gos were big! As big as their coiffs, in fact.
Digital Leads The Way on Full Disclosure
While in Chicago on earlier this month I had the misfortune of tuning into the WBBM TV early morning news broadcast. While I had no stopwatch to measure precisely, here’s my estimate of the breakdown in content of the 6AM to 7AM news hour:
6 minutes: news
20 minutes: ads
34 minutes: infomercial for Sonic Burger
The 34 minute bit was an absolutely horrifying whore out of broadcast journalism to support the opening of the first Sonic Burger in the ChicagoLand area. Now, if you are like me you are thinking, well effin la-dee-dah, another burger joint. But WBBM will have none of such cynicism. They had multiple reporters on the scene, an interview with the manager, and a happy talk segment during which one of the anchors endorsed Sonic’s decision to have a tasty 900 calorie burger on its menu because, I’ll paraphrase, WTF, you only live once.
Between each segment of the infomercial there was cinema verite of groups of consumers happily eating burgers. Presumably of the 900 calorie variety. I was interested to note the paucity of heavy people in the film as well – just loads of nice, fit, wholesome Midwestern people. The anchors drank from Sonic cups on the set, talked about how much fun it is to eat in a drive in, how delicious the food is, how it’s great to eat fast food, the unmitigated brand prostitution was relentless.
I am told by a coworker that the hour I saw was not the only portion of the program devoted to Sonic Burger. Rather, they had been at it since about 3AM.
So, clearly one of two things are at work here. Either:
1. WBBM sold their morning news broadcasts to Sonic.
2. WBBM editors need to look in a dictionary or Wikipedia to see what the words news and journalism mean.
I am certain the truth is the former. That, in short, WBBM local news is for sale, which perhaps won’t surprise anyone reading this, but was never disclosed in the hour or so of infomercial I saw.
And it got me to thinking – there are so many people in the offline world that still view digital as the second sister of the TV business. That somehow we are second rate. Well, I simply want to point out the spirit of full disclosure online. That paid search listings are prominently marked “sponsored,” that brand videos are clearly marked as produced by brands, and the like. There is no attempt to put lipstick on the content pig on line. Maybe WBBM TV should learn from we second tierers. And get back to the business of covering news instead of paper fast food hat fashions.
Off my soapbox.
Thanks for reading, and don’t forget to write.
6 minutes: news
20 minutes: ads
34 minutes: infomercial for Sonic Burger
The 34 minute bit was an absolutely horrifying whore out of broadcast journalism to support the opening of the first Sonic Burger in the ChicagoLand area. Now, if you are like me you are thinking, well effin la-dee-dah, another burger joint. But WBBM will have none of such cynicism. They had multiple reporters on the scene, an interview with the manager, and a happy talk segment during which one of the anchors endorsed Sonic’s decision to have a tasty 900 calorie burger on its menu because, I’ll paraphrase, WTF, you only live once.
Between each segment of the infomercial there was cinema verite of groups of consumers happily eating burgers. Presumably of the 900 calorie variety. I was interested to note the paucity of heavy people in the film as well – just loads of nice, fit, wholesome Midwestern people. The anchors drank from Sonic cups on the set, talked about how much fun it is to eat in a drive in, how delicious the food is, how it’s great to eat fast food, the unmitigated brand prostitution was relentless.
I am told by a coworker that the hour I saw was not the only portion of the program devoted to Sonic Burger. Rather, they had been at it since about 3AM.
So, clearly one of two things are at work here. Either:
1. WBBM sold their morning news broadcasts to Sonic.
2. WBBM editors need to look in a dictionary or Wikipedia to see what the words news and journalism mean.
I am certain the truth is the former. That, in short, WBBM local news is for sale, which perhaps won’t surprise anyone reading this, but was never disclosed in the hour or so of infomercial I saw.
And it got me to thinking – there are so many people in the offline world that still view digital as the second sister of the TV business. That somehow we are second rate. Well, I simply want to point out the spirit of full disclosure online. That paid search listings are prominently marked “sponsored,” that brand videos are clearly marked as produced by brands, and the like. There is no attempt to put lipstick on the content pig on line. Maybe WBBM TV should learn from we second tierers. And get back to the business of covering news instead of paper fast food hat fashions.
Off my soapbox.
Thanks for reading, and don’t forget to write.
When You Know A Lotame, You Can Target Better
Social media has been, as well all know, a bear to monetize. Because of the nature of UGC, advertisers have been somewhat reticent to come into these pages, and then rather unwilling to pay much for the ads if they do.
Fixing that is what Lotame is about. Founded in 2006, Lotame is focused on monetizing social media by collecting information about page users and then using that data to help advertisers find the right eyeballs.
So it's behavioral, contextual, and demographic all at once in a way, and those concepts are probably old hat to you. But the key challenge with social is that a lot of it is long tail, and monetizing that stuff really isn't the strength of the BT and ad network majors.
Enter Lotame, a startup in Maryland that just got $13MM in its second round. As I understand it, Lotame is collecting anonymous info from page visits, online profiles, and other interactions for the purposes of identifying PRECISELY targeted consumer segments that help advertisers reach the most productive eyes, and publishers make mroe from their traffic, ad views, and users.
They describe themselves in this manner:
Lotame Solutions, Inc., founded in 2006 in Elkridge, Maryland, is a company dedicated to providing solutions within social media. Our Crowd Control Technology™ offers social media sites the most advanced monetization techniques and allows brands to build and target customizable consumer audiences. We aim to increase revenue for our publishers and allow advertisers to target unique users across multiple social media sites. The company has now grown to include offices in major metropolitan areas.
Here's Andrew Monfried, Founder and CEO, interviewed on WallStrip:
I am just guessing here, but the filtration of available data from social media pages must be an enormous challenge. How do you skim out the PII, as well as all the holla holla talk, to identify the bits that are going to determine who can be expected to respond to a marketer message.
There's is an extremely data driven business -- not surprisingly a number of their employees are vets of the ad network biz, where managing and "usefulizing" enormous quantities of page visitation and other data are core to the revenue streams.
Regular readers of this blog know that I believe deeply in the value of data assuming it is actionable data. As a market research vet, I know a lot of the info out there is perhaps nice to know, or interesting to know, but not need to know. This is even more of an issue today than it was, say 5 years ago, because there is so much mroe data available. Most of it not actionable in your quest to improve the bottom line. One visit to Lotame's site shows that hey are very much focused on the data points that will drive results.
Check out their site. There's lots of video and a really interesting action-oriented take on how to make social media visits and page views actionable and lucrative.
Thanks for reading, and don't forget to write.
EasyAutoSales: Sell That Car Online For Free
Auto is of course the most active category of advertising online. And auto makers lament that there are not enough in market venues on which to advertise. Behavioral helps to suck up excess bucks, but so would new venues that meet needs that can drive in market auto buyers to visit.
And what better way to attract in market consumers (and therefore advertisers) than a site that matches car buyers and sellers?
Atlanta based EasyAutoSales.com is just that. They offer a free, ad supported venue where individuals as well as dealers can list cars and find ready buyers.
How it Works
You join, you list, buyers find you. Easy peasy.
There are absolutely loads of vehicles listed. My search for an F150 within 50 miles of my house in Oakland turned up over 200 ranging in age from new to 10 years old. That means lots and lots of options for the buyer. Naturally, you can cull that list by age, mileage, and a variety of other factors.
The site, in beta, is already attracting a variety of industry advertisers. While a bit of the inventory is being sold to bottom feeder DR advertisers, much is being taken up by manufacturers, insurance companies, and dealers.
Here is an example of a car ad, this one from a car dealer.
Consumer seller ads look very similar, natch.
I would imagine that this site will do very well indeed. With zero publisher produced editorial, this kind of database site can make a fortune because a small team can support millions of pages -- all of which can bear lucrative high CPM ads.
Thanks for reading, and don't forget to write.
Kindle Sales Massive? Not Quite So Fast, Matey...
Were earlier estimates of Kindle sales a bunch of unfounded hype? Silicon Valley Insider is reporting that Amazon spokespeople are...distancing themselves from the high estimates that leading bloggers (and me) reported a couple of weeks ago. Here's an excerpt from a Seattle Post Intelligencer story they cited in their story:
Amazon officials gave McAdams Wright Ragen analysts the impression that high-end estimates on Kindle sales reported by TechCrunch and a Citigroup analyst are not reasonable.
Amazon managers "told us that the Kindle is definitely selling very well, but they also said the analysts and reporters giving out these extremely high estimates 'did not run them by company,'" Bueneman wrote.
To my knowledge, Amazon has NEVER released sales figures for the device. Why that is is anyone's guess. As a public company it is unlikely that they would consciously leak such info -- the initiative is important enough that IF they release the data, they need to do so publicly and openly.
The Problem With Technology and Government
You may be aware that Obama has vowed to create a national CTO to help the country deal with challenges and opportunities in the tech area. Naturally, there are fans and foes, pros and cons. The most compelling pro I see is that perhaps the government will do a better job of understanding technology and its ginormous implications on the economy, privacy, and a bunch of other stuff.
The con being that many have a lack of faith in the government's ability to do anything. To wit:
Me, I like the idea. I have faith that government can do things if you don't appoint former heads of the Arabian Horse Association to key jobs. ANd government needs to play a role in ensuring, among other things, freedom of expression and compeittiveness in the space, along with safegoarding privacy. But the role of the CTO needs tro be well defined, and the focus needs to be on enablement and oversight rather than control.
Thanks for reading, and don't forget to write.
The con being that many have a lack of faith in the government's ability to do anything. To wit:
Me, I like the idea. I have faith that government can do things if you don't appoint former heads of the Arabian Horse Association to key jobs. ANd government needs to play a role in ensuring, among other things, freedom of expression and compeittiveness in the space, along with safegoarding privacy. But the role of the CTO needs tro be well defined, and the focus needs to be on enablement and oversight rather than control.
Thanks for reading, and don't forget to write.
Thursday, August 28, 2008
RotoHog Takes Aim At The Fantasy Sports Goliaths
The fantasy sports business is becoming enormous. I believed that portals like Yahoo and the sports site majors would have more or less a lock on this business. They have the eyeball prospects literally in their sites. Arr Arr.
Sorry about that little bit of attempted humor.
But the lock I imagined is like all forms of hegemony -- it cannot last forever. The web is miraculous in that it can truly operate in a David and Goliath manner. Because everything is just a click away, little guys can put a rock in their electron slingshots, take aim at the giants -- and win.
But you need a great idea. And Rotohog, a website focused on fantasy sports, is taking aim with a sports celeb strategy that I think holds a ton of promise.
Today they signed Colts Running Back Joseph Addai to a deal that creates an Addai Fantasy Football League that people can join for free. Addai is the fifth celeb assigned for this purpose.
What's more, the announcement comes on the same day as the launch of the Rotohog Trading Floor, where fantasy players are bought and sold auction style. Addai's IPO price? $56.
The Trading Floor is part of their premium paid service. A free service is also available on the site.
In our celeb culture, this strategy seems like a great gambit for attracting thousands of new members. While the strategy is not entirely defensible in that others, including the Goliaths, can follow suit, the correct selection of star athlete partners can help this David win his fight.
Hey. If you don't understand how fantasy sports works, read this lifted from the Rotohog site:
The RotoHog Stock Exchange game is a lot like other fantasy football games where you manage your own team and try to score as many points as possible each week based on real-life NFL games. The difference is the trading floor, which is a lot like a stock market where player prices move up and down based on supply and demand.
You start out with a budget of 300 RotoHog dollars used to assemble your team at fixed prices on the pre-season trading floor opening August 3rd. Player prices will stay at their IPO price until August 29th, when the market goes live and fun really starts.
Everyone who plays the RotoHog Stock Exchange game is automatically entered into the global contest, dubbed the 2008 RotoHog Stock Exchange Fantasy Football Championship. To win the championship (and the $25,000), you need to score the most points over the entire season. There are also weekly prizes and dozens of other leagues and contests to play in. Make sure to check out all the leagues as well as set up a private league to play against your friends.
I am by no means a big sports fan, but this stuff can be quite addictive. I have played Fantasy Baseball and the action was completely entangling. Baseball is by its nature a stats obsessed game, and fantasy takes that to a logical extreme while making the tracking of scores and ratings and rankings, and and and all automatic. I am not a football fan so I won't be using the service, but I'd be blind not to be able to see the business potential here.
But this stuff can also mean big money for the site providing a great platform. I cam going to print RotoHog's price list to show you how many revenue streams a site like this can offer.
Game Basics
2008 RotoHog Fantasy Football 101: Introduction to the Game
RotoHog Premium Service
Take advantage now of Pre-Season pricing on all Draft Kits and Premium Service.
RotoHog Stock Exchange Premium Service $7.99
Live Stats & Scoring · Entry in Premium-only Weekly Contests · Live Rank
RotoHog Stock Exchange Platinum Service $9.99
Live Stats & Scoring · Entry in Premium-only Weekly Contests · Live Rank
PLUS: RotoWire NFL Draft Kit & RotoHog Pricing Guide
RotoHog Championship Service $19.99
· Live Stats & Scoring
· Entry in Premium-only Weekly Contests
· Live Rank
PLUS: RotoWire NFL Draft Kit & RotoHog Pricing Guide AND 50% off RotoHog League Manager
RotoHog Draft Kits & Pricing Guides
Be in the know when the market opens with insights from RotoHog and Rotowire experts.
RotoHog Pricing Guide $4.99
IPO pricing for all over 200 players and the market maker notes.
Rotowire Draft Kit $9.99
The best in the business with in-depth analysis. Sells elsewhere for $19.99 and more.
RotoHog Stock Exchange Cash Leagues
Entry fees from $25 to $500. Win up to $5,000. Best payouts in the industry. Learn more about the different leagues below.
Workin’ Man’s League
$25 Entry12-Man ChallengePayouts: $200/$50/Free ’09 Entry
Date: 9/4-12/29
Money Maker League
$50 Entry12-Man ChallengePayouts: $500/$50/Free ’09 Entry
Date: 9/4-12/29
All About the Benjamins
$100 Entry12-Man ChallengePayouts: $1,000/$100/Free ’09 Entry
Date: 9/4-12/29
High Roller League
$500 Entry12-Man ChallengePayouts: $5,000/$500/Free ’09 Entry
Date: 9/4-12/29
Week 1 Points Race
$25 Entry 12-Man ChallengePayout: $250
Date: 9/4-9/9
Week 1 Points Rally
$50 Entry 12-Man ChallengePayout: $500
Date: 9/4-9/9
Half-Timer League
$100 Entry 12-Man Challenge Payout: $750/$250/$100
Date: 9/4-10/28
RotoHog Stock Exchange Jackpot Leagues
Low entry fees and big payouts. Play for a week, or all season long.
Week 1 Smash & Grab
$10 Entry Payout: $1,000
Date: 9/4-9/9
Full Season Jackpot League
$25 Entry Payout: $2,000/$400/$100
Date: 9/4-12/29
All for electrons, people! Electrons!
Anyway, while y'all know I shill for Yahoo all day long because I love them so, I also have a soft spot for a feisty David and his virtual slingshot. Let the rocks fly, RotoHog!
Thanks for reading, and don't forget to write.
Veoh: Not Guilty! A Great Day For Online Video
This NYTimes blog post by Miguel Helft reports o n the implications of the decision by Federal Court that Veoh is NOT GUILTY of copyright infringement for videos that were posted by users. The case had been filed by IO Entertainment, an adult company that owns gay adult film maker Titan Media.
The decision does not say that online video sites can sit back and pretend they don't notice when consumers post copyrighted material but rather that Veoh had made good faith efforts to prevent copyright infringement.
“Far from encouraging copyright infringement, Veoh has a strong DMCA policy, takes active steps to limit incidents of infringement on its website and works diligently to keep unauthorized works off its site,” Magistrate Judge Howard Lloyd, of the U.S. District Court in San Jose, wrote in the decision.
The case has implications on another case between Viacom and YouTube over the same issue. Or so says YouTube. Viacom has other views:
But in a statement, Viacom said the ruling did not weaken its case against Google: “Even if the Veoh decision were to be considered by other courts, that case does nothing to change the fact that YouTube is a business built on infringement that has failed to take reasonable measures to respect the rights of creators and content owners. Google and YouTube have engaged in massive copyright infringement – conduct that is not protected by any law, including the DMCA.”Oh, them's fightin' words.
Here's what Tech Crunch had to say about the Veoh argument:
A key issue of the case turned on whether or not Veoh should lose DMCA safe harbor protection because they transcoded user uploaded videos to the Flash format, something every online Flash video site does as a matter of course.
IO Group argued that the transcoding made Veoh a direct infringer and that the materials were under their direct control. Lloyd disagreed, saying “Here, Veoh has simply established a system whereby software automatically processes user-submitted content and recasts it in a format that is readily accessible to its users. Veoh preselects the software parameters for the process from a range of default values set by the thirdparty software…ButVeoh does not itself actively participate or supervise the uploading of files. Nor does it preview or select the files before the upload is completed. Instead, video files are uploaded through an automated process which is initiated entirely at the volition of Veoh’s users.”
Thanks for reading, and don't forget to write.
The decision does not say that online video sites can sit back and pretend they don't notice when consumers post copyrighted material but rather that Veoh had made good faith efforts to prevent copyright infringement.
“Far from encouraging copyright infringement, Veoh has a strong DMCA policy, takes active steps to limit incidents of infringement on its website and works diligently to keep unauthorized works off its site,” Magistrate Judge Howard Lloyd, of the U.S. District Court in San Jose, wrote in the decision.
The case has implications on another case between Viacom and YouTube over the same issue. Or so says YouTube. Viacom has other views:
But in a statement, Viacom said the ruling did not weaken its case against Google: “Even if the Veoh decision were to be considered by other courts, that case does nothing to change the fact that YouTube is a business built on infringement that has failed to take reasonable measures to respect the rights of creators and content owners. Google and YouTube have engaged in massive copyright infringement – conduct that is not protected by any law, including the DMCA.”Oh, them's fightin' words.
Here's what Tech Crunch had to say about the Veoh argument:
A key issue of the case turned on whether or not Veoh should lose DMCA safe harbor protection because they transcoded user uploaded videos to the Flash format, something every online Flash video site does as a matter of course.
IO Group argued that the transcoding made Veoh a direct infringer and that the materials were under their direct control. Lloyd disagreed, saying “Here, Veoh has simply established a system whereby software automatically processes user-submitted content and recasts it in a format that is readily accessible to its users. Veoh preselects the software parameters for the process from a range of default values set by the thirdparty software…ButVeoh does not itself actively participate or supervise the uploading of files. Nor does it preview or select the files before the upload is completed. Instead, video files are uploaded through an automated process which is initiated entirely at the volition of Veoh’s users.”
Thanks for reading, and don't forget to write.
Parody Presidential Campaign Ads: Osama McSame
AdWeek asked agencies to make camapaign ads for the candidate of their choice. Here are the hilarious results:
Morning Again?
http://link.brightcove.com/services/link/bcpid1328265983/bctid1747212993
Experience...Or Age?
http://link.brightcove.com/services/link/bcpid1328265983/bctid1747213028
Looks Like He Kinda Could Be Muslim
http://link.brightcove.com/services/link/bcpid1328265983/bctid1747213019
Thanks for reading, and don't forget to write.
Morning Again?
http://link.brightcove.com/services/link/bcpid1328265983/bctid1747212993
Experience...Or Age?
http://link.brightcove.com/services/link/bcpid1328265983/bctid1747213028
Looks Like He Kinda Could Be Muslim
http://link.brightcove.com/services/link/bcpid1328265983/bctid1747213019
Thanks for reading, and don't forget to write.
Digital CW and The Need to Grow Up
The opportunity to be a part of this transformation of the media world is something I am very thankful for. There truly has never been a more invigorating time to be part of communications.
But as someone of the older set in this business, I do feel it is appropriate to critique the manner in which the conventional wisdom is created in the space. Our world unfortunately has a tendency to think and speak and move in terms of black and white, rather than recognizing that most of life and work and enterprise and selling and serving and operating lies in the grey area in between.
What do I mean by that? Well, consider how what’s hot and what’s not get defined and parroted across the web. I am thinking for example of the “gotta have a widget” craze of exactly 12 months ago, when a few people were predicting the complete widgetization of all forms of content, and dozens of companies poured into the space. Everyone wanted a widget, though few actually had a well defined business need that made pursuing widget development for their brands a sensible or even rational marketing strategy. Because most brands don’t have content that anyone in their right mind wants constant access to. Or, generate a steady stream of content that makes having a widget at all valuable for the consumer.
But damn the torpedos. Full steam ahead. So out come the bajillions of widgets, most boring and useless. Six months later, a few writers talk about the death of widgets. And because of the structure of the way our digital media stories move and spread, hundreds of other follower pundits take the mort du widget as fact instead of opinion. And inside half a year, the CW goes from widgets are the second coming of the Messiah (or first coming if you are a Jewish person) to widgets are a smear of turd on a square of Charmin. Widgets are miraculous. Widgets are shite.
When the reality of course is that widgets are neither. They are a remarkable way for consumers to access some forms of content, which relate to some brands, or not to others. They are not a substitute for websites or TV ads or what have you. They will not supplant all established forms of marketing with their portability and magically simple UIs. Of course they won’t. Rather they are another tool in a crowded arsenal of marketing options. Quite a productive tool in some cases, I might add. But no more the be all and end all than anything else. There is no be all and end all in a fragmented market.
Before I give you the impression that this post is about widgets, let me point out that this is but one example of this black and white parroty CW. Want some others?
- "I gotta have viral. Viral is the be all and end all. Six mos. later: Viral is a pain to produce and doesn’t work."
- "My brand needs a chat. Chat is a great way of connecting with customers. Six mos. later: Chat sucks."
- "OMG OMG OMG. It is the year of mobile. Mobile is going to be bigger than anything this
year. Six mos. later: Mobile is a waste of time and effort."
- "Gotta create an ad network. We can make huge money as an ad network. OMG OMG, drop the words ad network from the web site immediately. All ad networks are doomed."
I have a few old guard marketer friends that look at the digital space and laugh their asses off. One recently said to me,
“How can you expect me to take you and your brethren seriously? Inside of a single brand planning cycle an agency will recommend 4 things and then unrecommend them six months later. A lot of these so called digital experts are just parrots following the buzz online and changing recommendations as fast as they make them.”
She’s right, you know. She’s also using the immaturity of our space as an excuse for not leveraging digital, of course, and I told her that. She admitted as much. But she has a point
So let’s move on to the next area of black and white. So many people try so hard to be visionaries in this space – some day there will be no ads, the consumer is in control. That second one really gets to me. If the consumer is in control of your brand marketing plan, then WTF are they paying you for? I recognize and indeed am thrilled by the idea of consumers having greater options and influence on the overall marketing environment. But the idea that we as an industry should accept consumer control as absolute and indeed desirable is ridiculous.
Here’s is what the consumer wants. Everything, now, for free.
Which perhaps explains the “monetization models” I sometimes uncover in my little company reviews on this blog. But mostly it points to the need for people in our space to grow up and evaluate businesses and ideas as businesses rather than as religious visions.
Thanks for reading, and don’t forget to write.
But as someone of the older set in this business, I do feel it is appropriate to critique the manner in which the conventional wisdom is created in the space. Our world unfortunately has a tendency to think and speak and move in terms of black and white, rather than recognizing that most of life and work and enterprise and selling and serving and operating lies in the grey area in between.
What do I mean by that? Well, consider how what’s hot and what’s not get defined and parroted across the web. I am thinking for example of the “gotta have a widget” craze of exactly 12 months ago, when a few people were predicting the complete widgetization of all forms of content, and dozens of companies poured into the space. Everyone wanted a widget, though few actually had a well defined business need that made pursuing widget development for their brands a sensible or even rational marketing strategy. Because most brands don’t have content that anyone in their right mind wants constant access to. Or, generate a steady stream of content that makes having a widget at all valuable for the consumer.
But damn the torpedos. Full steam ahead. So out come the bajillions of widgets, most boring and useless. Six months later, a few writers talk about the death of widgets. And because of the structure of the way our digital media stories move and spread, hundreds of other follower pundits take the mort du widget as fact instead of opinion. And inside half a year, the CW goes from widgets are the second coming of the Messiah (or first coming if you are a Jewish person) to widgets are a smear of turd on a square of Charmin. Widgets are miraculous. Widgets are shite.
When the reality of course is that widgets are neither. They are a remarkable way for consumers to access some forms of content, which relate to some brands, or not to others. They are not a substitute for websites or TV ads or what have you. They will not supplant all established forms of marketing with their portability and magically simple UIs. Of course they won’t. Rather they are another tool in a crowded arsenal of marketing options. Quite a productive tool in some cases, I might add. But no more the be all and end all than anything else. There is no be all and end all in a fragmented market.
Before I give you the impression that this post is about widgets, let me point out that this is but one example of this black and white parroty CW. Want some others?
- "I gotta have viral. Viral is the be all and end all. Six mos. later: Viral is a pain to produce and doesn’t work."
- "My brand needs a chat. Chat is a great way of connecting with customers. Six mos. later: Chat sucks."
- "OMG OMG OMG. It is the year of mobile. Mobile is going to be bigger than anything this
year. Six mos. later: Mobile is a waste of time and effort."
- "Gotta create an ad network. We can make huge money as an ad network. OMG OMG, drop the words ad network from the web site immediately. All ad networks are doomed."
I have a few old guard marketer friends that look at the digital space and laugh their asses off. One recently said to me,
“How can you expect me to take you and your brethren seriously? Inside of a single brand planning cycle an agency will recommend 4 things and then unrecommend them six months later. A lot of these so called digital experts are just parrots following the buzz online and changing recommendations as fast as they make them.”
She’s right, you know. She’s also using the immaturity of our space as an excuse for not leveraging digital, of course, and I told her that. She admitted as much. But she has a point
So let’s move on to the next area of black and white. So many people try so hard to be visionaries in this space – some day there will be no ads, the consumer is in control. That second one really gets to me. If the consumer is in control of your brand marketing plan, then WTF are they paying you for? I recognize and indeed am thrilled by the idea of consumers having greater options and influence on the overall marketing environment. But the idea that we as an industry should accept consumer control as absolute and indeed desirable is ridiculous.
Here’s is what the consumer wants. Everything, now, for free.
Which perhaps explains the “monetization models” I sometimes uncover in my little company reviews on this blog. But mostly it points to the need for people in our space to grow up and evaluate businesses and ideas as businesses rather than as religious visions.
Thanks for reading, and don’t forget to write.
White Paper Thursdays: How Influence Works
A nice white paper on influence from CNET. Go full screen to read it more easily.
Thanks for reading, and don't forget to write.
Thanks for reading, and don't forget to write.
Ever Visit the Nielsen Blog?
It's quite good and available here. Lots of summarized insights and ideas related to their data and other industry resources. It's a good read. Check it out.
Thanks for reading, and don't forget to write.
Thanks for reading, and don't forget to write.
Odeo: Oh Dee Video
Have you discovered Odeo yet?
Oder offers the features of a social media platform, video search, bookmarking, broadcasting for channels, all in one very attractive and very easy to use site.
In short, Odeo offers a variety of functionalities for the true web videophile. Want to see something on a particular topic, like the elections, sports, or spirituality? Explore the videos by tag and channel. Searching for specific content? Well, you know the score there. See something great, index it for the community to see.
One of the advantages of this system versus say, YouTube, is that this covers a broader range of video content than just UGC. So for example, if you want an episode of SNL, you know that they get scraped off YouTube pretty fast, or indeed get filtered out before they even go up. But Odeo links you over to Hulu content, so they get the ad view and you get your content all in one place. They do this by embedding the various players in a common templated vid page.
They describe themselves thus:
Home to millions of audio & video episodes from thousands of podcasts and media sites across the web, Odeo.com is part search engine, part media directory, and part social network. Users can search & explore media channels covering just about any topic or area of interest – from automotive to technology, comedy to cooking, education to entertainment. With Odeo, it’s easy to subscribe to channels and be alerted when new episodes are published, save favorites & create playlists to share with friends.
We know from a variety of sources that there is a segment of the web -- between 10-20% of users -- who watch A LOT and I mean A LOT of video in a week. They fit that profile of the innovator/early adopter that is so often discussed online that I will refrain from wasting the electrons reviewing the stats here.
I would imagine that these people are going to be the ones who really populate this site with the content links and embeds that will make it even more useful and entertaining than it is now. In turn, they will, along with the rest of us, be the consumers of this rich and diverse content indexing offering.
I wasted about an hour -- or perhaps I should say productively utilized -- on the site when I made my first visit. As with sites like OMG, this one is very entangling. Every video takes you to another place with other great videos. It's like YouTube in that respect, though with significantly more pro content.
Give it a whirl. It's a goodie. While you're there, check out Kyle Piccolo: Comic Book Therapist.
Thanks for reading, and don't forget to write.
BackPack: An Intranet in 30 Seconds.
There's a big difference between a steamer trunk and a backpack. They both are used to lug stuff. But to move a steamer trunk around, you need help, special strength, perhaps even moving equipment. The backpack, you just grab, load, and go.
Which is surely the idea behind the name choice of BackPack, an intranet in a box now in use by 350,000 companies and organizations. With all of the various options for Intranets, collaboration, email, IM, and the myriad other productivity packages and applications, I was intrigued by the idea of having everything all rolled up into one easy to get started web based offering.
And I liked what I found.
Really it's broader than an intranet. Scheduling, group communications, collaboration platforms, file sharing, team management, reminders, whiteboards (called "writeboards") and more.
The following screens dissect the various features and screens. Click to expand them for greater readability. If you are feeling a little too lazy for that, zip over to the front page and watch their concise and clear vid demo.
Designed for small and medium sized companies/groups, they offer four pricing plans:
A free individual account.
A basic account with 4 gigs for up to 6 desks.
A plus account for up to 15 users with 10 gigs of space
A super account for up to 40 users with 20 gigs
Larger versions include more features, and the super package offers SSL encryption security and free Campfire.
It's a very solid package that looks like it could add a lot of value for small and medium sized orgs. In fact, I am going to recommend that we at Catalyst:SF try it.
Head on over, it's worth a visit.
Thanks for reading, and don't forget to write.
White Paper Thursdays - Statistical Abstract for the UK
If you EVER need a stat on UK people and society, this preso is the place to start. 264 pages of high quality, independedntly verified data that will meet most any research or insights need you may have.
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Read this document on Scribd: Social Trends 38
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White Paper Thursdays - Future Web Trends
It's a scosh long in the tooth, but this preso about trends in Internet technologies and marketing is a good use of 2 minutes.
Thanks for reading, and don't forget to write.
Thanks for reading, and don't forget to write.
White Paper Thursdays - Brand Related UGC
I'm not going to tell you there are astounding insights in this one, but it makes for a good read, and some great examples of brand related UGC are contained herein.
Thanks for reading, and don't forget to write.
Thanks for reading, and don't forget to write.
White Paper Thursdays: Piper Jaffray Study
A good Piper Jaffray deck on the concepts and drivers of online advertising is available below:
Thanks for reading, and don't forget to write.
Thanks for reading, and don't forget to write.
Wednesday, August 27, 2008
RollYo: Roll Your Own Stuff Without the Crud
So search engines use a variety of strategies to separate the wheat from the chaff, by which I mean the better stories, coverage and opinions from the billions of pages of junk. With Google, the broad concept is relevance through links, which operates on the presumption that stuff that is more linked and better trafficked is more likely to be good.
Fair enough.
But this is the Naught decade, and one of the magnificent/horrible aspects of information searching and knowledge today is that you can have knowledge on your own terms. So, for example, I choose to avoid right wing news commentary, so I bypass those Fox news links, even though they may receive more page views than the sort of pub I find credible.
The pleasure of this is that we get to filter the myriad range of possibles to a short list. The danger is that we live in worlds where everything we see agrees with our world view. 301,139,941 bubbles.
But let's skip over the danger. Because in reality, we all need some way to take the billions of pages of stuff and boil it down to the relevant-for-mes.
And that is the marvelous idea behind RollYo, the search engine that lets you "roll your own" results. Now what the Hell does that mean, pray tell?
Let's let them tell you:
Rollyo is the fast, easy way to create personal search engines using only the sources you trust.
Are you tired of wading though thousands of irrelevant search results to get to the information you want? Ever wish you could narrow your search to sites you already know and trust? With Rollyo, you can easily create your own custom search engines - we call them Searchrolls - and explore, save, and personalize those created by others.
WHY ROLLYO?
Rollyo puts the power of search in your hands, by giving you the tools to create your own personal search engines - with no programming required. All you have to do is pick the sites you want to search, and we'll create a custom search engine for you. Not quite ready to roll? We've created a starter kit of Searchrolls you can personalize.
What you do is:
1. Join
2. Select a list of sites you want searched or use some of the starter rolls that provide prefab lists of content sites grouped by theme.
3. Start searching
An example might be for me to do a political search on TPM, HuffPost, and RawStory. All left of center. Or news of Brangelina from OMG and Perez. Nothing else. Just my short list of sites.
Now, because it is 2008, you can also share and learn from one another. Share your search rolls, or borrow someone else's. You can still customize, it just gives you a starting point.
Additionally they offer a toolbar, and access to celeb searchrolls from leaders in poltiics, entertainment, lit, etc.
I have reviewed a semantic search site or two, and talk about my Yahoo Love more than you care to hear, I imagine. But I generally avoid reviewing all the little search engines because the space frankly needs some consolidation. I just stick to the few that seem really innovative and remarkable.
Well, RollYo is genuinely different, and remarkably cool. Roll one of your own today!
Thanks for reading, and don't forget to write.
Mobile Is the Net Platform of Choice for Millions
As someone with mediocre eyesight, I am amazed by how many people use their phones as their primary web browsing device. I use mine that way sometimes, but can't imagine it replacing the big screen of my PC. But millions live this life every day. This eMarketer chart of ACNielsen data from the study "Mobile Media Marketplace" shows you how fast this trend has taken off:
I wish I had some sage strategic insight for this, but all I can think to say is "Wow!."
Thanks for reading, and don't forget to write.
I wish I had some sage strategic insight for this, but all I can think to say is "Wow!."
Thanks for reading, and don't forget to write.
Coming Soon: A Svelt, Curvy iPod Nano
Engadget is reporting that the new Nano will look very different indeed. This photo shows you the new device.
A lot of the info on the new iPod line is from Kevin Rose, who put together this video for your perusal that contains this and a lot of opther Apple news.
So there ya go, Applephiles...
A lot of the info on the new iPod line is from Kevin Rose, who put together this video for your perusal that contains this and a lot of opther Apple news.
So there ya go, Applephiles...
Is The Onion a City Search Killer?
Well, not exactly, but their new site, Decider.com, is out to grab a hefty chunk of the local search business. If you ever read the print version of The Onion, you know that local restaurant and entertainment advertiser is its lifeblood. It's only natural, then, that they would create their own local search sites centered around these same categories.
Tech Crunch says:
Decider will be facing off with a number of sites, including CitySearch and Yelp, which both have large established user bases that will be hard to compete with. That said, Decider isn’t serving as a standalone business, and will do just fine as an extension to The Onion’s newspaper.
I find the site gorgeous, inviting and clean, and the content (all 2.5 reviews I read ;-)) well written. Going up against City Search and Yelp may not prove easy, but since The Onion already has established relationships with many local businesses, driving ad revenue may be easier than we might expect.
Thanks for reading, and don't forget to write.
Olympics: 65.8MM Chinese Uniques, 4.6 B Pages PER DAY!
ACNielsen's latest figures for Olympics viewership show some solid numbers globally, and astronomical ones in China. Here are the figures for average daily streamers by country:
Nielsen also reported that a colossal 65.8MM uniques within China are viewing pages across more than 250 sites. 4.6 Billion pages to be exact. Pretty heady stuff indeed!
Thanks for reading, and don't forget to write.
Nielsen also reported that a colossal 65.8MM uniques within China are viewing pages across more than 250 sites. 4.6 Billion pages to be exact. Pretty heady stuff indeed!
Thanks for reading, and don't forget to write.
ExpatFinder: Check It Before The Last Boarding Call
What's an expat to do???
One of the realities of the global economy is that millions of people -- tens of millions actually, move from their home countries to other places to work and live. And of course hundreds of millions travel overseas each year for business or pleasure.
I had an early life crisis when I was 26, right about when the Berlin Wall came down. I went to Europe to live for about 8 months, mostly in the newly free Eastern Bloc. One of the things you learn fast as an extranjero in another country is that it can cost you like 10X more to do daily life than it does a native.
First there is the phenom of locals versus tourist pricing, then there is the fact that getting from point A to point B can be rather complex until you know the ropes. Finally, every culture has its expectations about living spaces. For example, Americans tend to want a lot more living space than say, Swedes. Other culture may value bona fide urban life that can be very hard to find in much of the US, where cities sprawl.
For all these needs, now there is ExpatFinder, a new search engine geared specifically to the foreigner in a new land. Want to know cost of living in London? Whether to change money in the US or Paris? The need for health insurance in Dubai? You can find the answers to these and millions of other questions on this site.
A product of French and Singaporean firms in collaboration, this site clearly has a finite niche market, but that niche ain't tiny, and as someone who has tried to use conventional search engines, including my beloved Yahoo, to try to learn more about other countries -- even other US cities, the need it there.
When you look up, say, Hong Kong on a conventional search engine, you will be inundated with flight and hotel offers, but very little advice on what neighborhood would be a good place for a Yank to live.
And it is for that reason that ExpatFinder is out there. It'll be interesting to see how well they are able to monetize this set of needs.
Thanks for reading, and don't forget to write.
US GameMakers Don't Want to Sue Customers. Sounds Like a Sound Decision To Me.
ARS Technica is reporting that US gaming companies are rather reluctant to follow the lead of UK gamemakers, who are suing P2P game sharers over copyright infringement.
Peter Moore, head of EA Sports, makes this poignant statement:
"If we learned anything from the music business, they just don't win any friends by suing their consumers," he told Eurogamer. "Speaking personally, I think our industry does not want to fall foul of what happened with music."
Now clearly piracy is a problem for gaming companies, and will become even more so as bandwidths of broadband connections continue to grow. But US gamemakers are focusing on innovation rather than lawsuits to mitigate the problem. Says the same ARS Technica piece,
EA actually has some plans in that direction, including free, microtransaction-based games like Battlefield Heroes and of course MMOs like Warhammer Online, games that are functionally impervious to piracy.
Since MMOs are clearly the key growth area of the industry, these seem wise steps indeed.
Thanks for reading, and don't forget to write.
Peter Moore, head of EA Sports, makes this poignant statement:
"If we learned anything from the music business, they just don't win any friends by suing their consumers," he told Eurogamer. "Speaking personally, I think our industry does not want to fall foul of what happened with music."
Now clearly piracy is a problem for gaming companies, and will become even more so as bandwidths of broadband connections continue to grow. But US gamemakers are focusing on innovation rather than lawsuits to mitigate the problem. Says the same ARS Technica piece,
EA actually has some plans in that direction, including free, microtransaction-based games like Battlefield Heroes and of course MMOs like Warhammer Online, games that are functionally impervious to piracy.
Since MMOs are clearly the key growth area of the industry, these seem wise steps indeed.
Thanks for reading, and don't forget to write.
Tuesday, August 26, 2008
Print Your Photobucket Snaps At Target
Photobucket and Target have inked a deal to offer printing services whereby web users can print and pick up their pics at Target.
This is the third deal that Target has, as they also offering printing services with Shutterfly and Kodak Gallery (nee Ofoto.com.)
This seems a very sharp strategy to me for both target and Photobucket. For Target, these partnerships enable them to monetize the web without having to build their own photo sharing community online. They can simply act as a service improvement to massive existing photo services. And to Photobucket, it offers a way to make money AND get photos into people's hands far faster than through the mail. I've used Target to print some Kodak Gallery photos and found the service excellent. And while Kodak Gallery has always offered shipping services that rival the speed of lightning, the target offering was even faster.
Win Win.
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The WB Lives
WB, the now defunct TV network that merged with the UPN to make the CW, is now back, this time as an online TV venue. The site, which Tech Crunch is reporting opens tomorrow, has all of your WB favorites ready for the looking!
I think it is an excellent evolution for a network that was geared toward youth, who are in front of screens instead of tubes today. And we can watch Veronica mars again, so what could be betta?
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100 Million People Bitten By Vampires!
Shelfarizon???
Amazon has purchased Shelfari, the smallish social network built around books. The two companies have always had a financial relationship -- Amazon after all was an early Shelfari investor.
The book-centered social media business has been growing at a healthy clip, and this acquisition seems to signal that Amazon has no desire whatsoever to be anywhere but at the center of any relationship anyone has with books.
ReadWriteWeb noted the innovative UI in this post, which is a clear advantage over the larger but rather spartan LibraryThing. Now, don't get me wrong, I am a LibraryThing user, have been for well over a year, and I am satisfied with it in its current form. That being said, I will be the first to note that LibraryThing's appearance is a bit...unzippy. Given the size advantage LT has over Shelfari, however, it is apparent that LibraryThing's more featured experience is preferred by many bookies.
Thanks for reading, and don't forget to write.
Scrabulous Ends
The success of Scrabulous, the unauthorized version of the popular boardgame Scrabble, was remarkable. Like a 9 letter word with two qs and a z across two triple word score squares.
But it is now no more. Rights owners Hasbro, Mattel, and EA were naturally disturbed by this flagrant rights violation.
But addicts, don't despair. There's an official Scrabble game out there now, and a reworked Scrabulous called wordscraper. So the game can go on.
R E I N C A R N A T I O N would drive quite a score, especially over a triple word tile!
RYZ: Shoe 2.0
OK, so I am 44 and not particularly athletic, so forgive me if ALL of you know about RYZ already, but for those of us using walkers with tennis balls on the feet, RYZ is a premium sports shoe company that offers blank shoes as a tableau for web artists to design on, and the winning designs are put into production.
Here's how they explain it.
Our designs are created by artists, DJs, poets, students, dreamers, doers and other unique individuals like you. But that doesn't stop them from achieving design immortality – or sharing in the profit, each winner receives $1000 + $1 for every pair we sell online.
We'll post the design entries online and let our community decide what’s hot and what’s not. The design that receives the most votes wins. It’s produced and sold to adoring fans from around the world. Bragging rights and a share of the profits included.
Yes, this is a popularity contest – and like all democracies, participation is important. So download your template, create your design, then tell everybody you know to vote early and often. And may you RYZ to the occasion.
This of course makes RYZ the quintessential new media company because it does not presume to tell you want to wear but rather takes its design lead from the community.
And the designs are nothing short of remarkable.
Naturally, the endorsement of a 44 year old decidedly uncool blogger will destroy its chances of winning, but am I the only one who would be Deelighted to have a pair of piano mans?
So, people submit designs and then the public votes, selecting the designs it wants produced. And voila, RYZ cranks them out. Now how cool is that?
Go to the store and check out kicking television, the test pattern shoe.
Shoes that RYZ to the occasion. Sure beats a walker with tennis balls.
Thanks for reading, and don't forget to write.
Pool.com And The URL Auction Phenomenon
OK, OK, we all know that the great URLs were taken long ago in a lot of categories. And you're probably aware that a half dozen or more super speculators buys huge numbers of domains in hopes of arbitraging the difference between the $20 GoDaddy fee and the $22,000 someone might be willing to pay. And by the way, these speculators also have a monetization strategy going while they lie in wait for your desperation. Many many speculative URLs feature a cluster of AdSense ads, in hopes of the odd click while they wait.
I have worked with a number of clients that have tried to buy a domain from the current owner. The prices demanded are usually patently absurd. So I was interested in learning about Pool.com, the domain auction site that offers eBay style competitions for good URLs.
The prices are naturally insane for three letter or very short, very intuitive names, but for less short or less intuitive monikers, the auction prices can actually be pretty reasonable. Here is a screen of current auction prices for what they consider "sales, marketing, and advertising" names.
Another service they offer is "backorder domaining", the idea being that as domains expire they can help you obtain them. The watch the expiries and hook you up if they come up without a renewal.
They can also help you negotiate for a specific domain.
Naturally, a system like this is really geared for domains owned by speculators. The individual that has a handful of domains for future plans or pipedreams is probably not trawling the site very often.
But the thing is, many many of the good domain names are owned by speculators. After all, they are going to speculate on names that have a reasonable likelihood of getting purchased so they can grab that arbitrage $.
So there it is, a rational place to find a domain name before you blow $20thou on IMme.com or whatnot.
Thanks for reading, and don't forget to write.
Widgets: Coming to a TV Near You
Yahoo and Intel have announced an initiative that will bring widgets to the TV viewing experience. Here’s how Yahoo is defining these TV widgets:
TV Widgets are small Web applications that make it easy to surf your favorites sites with your remote control. Watch Web videos, track your favorite teams or stocks, interact with friends and family, or stay current on news and information by clicking on the compact, interactive apps that sit on top of your normal TV picture.
The web site for this offering, which essentially says that these services are coming soon, promises that its first widgets will be in the following areas:
Sports
Photo sharing (Flickr)
News
Weather
Finance
Only thing missing from that list of most popular web activities is email. I am guessing that’s on the way as well.
Intel and Yahoo have collaborated on TV initiatives before, but it is widely believed that those moves were just a bit too early for mainstream acceptance.
Methinks the market may be ready new.
Thanks for reading, and don’t forget to write.
Search Shares - Google Up Again in July
Music: MySpace's Killer App
Tech Crunch offered an interesting piece last week about how, while Facebook is larger than MySpace globally, MySpace still dominates the US. Why? Well, they postulate that is MySpace's stranglehold on music.
Here's an excerpt from this excellent thought piece:
Facebook, by contrast, has no real internal music strategy. Artists can set up Pages to promote themselves, but the pages are no different to any other fan pages (for example, no streaming music) - there is nothing music or artist specific on the site.
Next month MySpace is rolling out a new music joint venture with the major labels that will have music streaming, playlists, downloads, merchandise sales, ring tones and other features. It’s not only likely to be a major destination site for music but also a significant revenue driver for MySpace and the labels (a little may trickle down to the artists as well).
Music is a huge part of what drove historical MySpace growth, and I believe it is a major factor in perpetuating their lead over Facebook in the U.S. market.
Here's an excerpt from this excellent thought piece:
Facebook, by contrast, has no real internal music strategy. Artists can set up Pages to promote themselves, but the pages are no different to any other fan pages (for example, no streaming music) - there is nothing music or artist specific on the site.
Next month MySpace is rolling out a new music joint venture with the major labels that will have music streaming, playlists, downloads, merchandise sales, ring tones and other features. It’s not only likely to be a major destination site for music but also a significant revenue driver for MySpace and the labels (a little may trickle down to the artists as well).
Music is a huge part of what drove historical MySpace growth, and I believe it is a major factor in perpetuating their lead over Facebook in the U.S. market.
iPhoo Search Debuts
ReadWriteWeb has reported that Yahoo now offers a search application optimized for the iPhone. They are a late arrival to this having lagged behind Google by over a year.
RWW's reaction? It's nice. Very nice. Great if you're a Yahoo user, but nothing to drive Google users to switch.
As much as I love Yahoo, I have to agree with their assessment. A nice offering. But nothing to shake the barn down. That's what I expected though, so I am not disappointed. Any Yahoo effort to convert Gooeys has to start with the web product to really make a difference.
Thanks for rerading, and don't forget to write.
Kablam! 25% Worldwide Growth in Social Network Users
Comscore released a recent press release that demonstrated 25% growth in worldwide users of soc nets, versus just 9% in the US. As the business has begun to mature here, the nets, most especially FB and Hi5 have been driving massive growth via localization and cultural relevance. Check out da stats!
Facebook's localization efforts have been faster, according to reports, because they are leveraging team members for translations, etc., while MySpace has taken a more top down country team approach.
Thanks for reading, and don't forget to write.
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