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Daily Life

Communitelligence

The conference wraps up today and I have a dilemma. I really want to go over to Universal Studios to hang out but I looked over the agenda and there are no sessions that I can say “That’s a good one to skip”. That’s the best endorsement I can give for any conference. Hopefully we’ll stick to the timeline and wrap before 4pm so I can get myself a fake plastic Oscar for my desk.

The other related important stuff: I got to check out SkyBar. I need to pick up a striped collared shirt that I can leave untucked, and some better jeans.

Mike Tyson was having dinner there. There are a lot of critics out there but to me he’s still the young guy that went on an undefeated tear years ago that was incredible to watch.

Mr. Penn and I still cranked out a Marketing Over Coffee via Skype, looking forward to getting back to Studio DD next week.

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Daily Life

Excess

Just some random observations today:

A friend of mine that works for a Fortune 500 company asked for some brainstorming on a contest: whoever comes up with the best name for the company store wins a trip for two to Europe.

From my hotel I can see Vivid Entertainment (they make enough on adult films to have a building near Universal Studios), I thought “Wow, that’s right across the street”, but then I counted – that’s 20 lanes of traffic.

And with that, it’s back to work.

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Brain Buster Productivity Booster The Marketeer

Widgetmania

Covering the dry technical stuff first. From everything I’ve seen over the past couple of days I’m boiling widgets down into three types:

Type 1: These are additions to web pages, most often tools over in the sidebar that provide some additional functionality, most often for a blog or (shudder) a MySpace page. A classic example would be a flickr widget, it grabs some photos from your account and makes a little slide show type thingy (technical definition, I know). See it in action, and grab your own if you want from here. Most of these are trying to enable a viral spread of the application.

Type 2: Freestanding tiny little applications. Folks over on the Mac side are very familiar with these, you activate the widget page and all these crappy little clocks and temperature gadges pop up. Like most cool features on the mac, they’ve showed up in the next edition of Windows (Vista). I’ve found these things to be of not much use since you can do most of the same stuff on web pages, but that’s probably the cranky geek in me shining through. If you have a personalized Google desktop you can run Google Gadgets, which are similar and supposedly if you have Google desktop installed you can run them in pre-Vista Windows. This is all heresay, I don’t have Google desktop installed.

Dr. Penn made a good recommedation in this week’s Marketing Over Coffee, there’s an app called Amnesty that allows you to transform widgets from one form to another, or promote them up to a Type 3.

I didn’t take good notes yesterday so I can’t find the name of the presenter that described Type 3, but it’s the most interesting category. He referred to them as BDAs – Branded Desktop Applications. These are full fledged apps that often reside in the tray on Windows and are running all the time allowing content to be pushed out to them. Some great examples are Southwest’s Ding, and a Disneyland’s Thing that I can’t find a link to. Both of these are full fledged apps, and in Ding’s case provide unique pricing that is available only through the app.

This category has a ton of potential as it elbows even the browser out of the picture. Thinking about it now, I realize that the best example of this is iTunes. I’ve had a mental block because I’ve always considered widgets to be small items, not apps capable of going full screen, but these are the most powerful. It’s also interesting to note that apps of this type have tried to get on to the desktop before, but were hammered down by the fear (and actual use) of spyware.

So, why would you build a widget? We can see from Ding and iTunes that if you have some exclusive content this can cement your relationship with your customer, and eliminate the allure of other web pages which is always a risk from within the browser. Another reason would be to encourage the viral spread of your application. You’ll also have to consider the impact widgets on your analytics and bandwidth. These aren’t going to be page views but will start requiring serious bandwidth (especially if you do go viral). Again, as cranky geek I don’t want to add more to my tray, but I think Joe Sixpack is looking for simple apps since he has some trouble with “the tubez on tha intranets”

Another interesting application would be using a flash widget as an alternative user interface – think of the mini player for itunes. There’s a lot of potential there to make things easier to use, and opening them up for content to be pushed to them (get a pop-up when your favorite artist has released a new tune, etc.).

All of this is pretty cool but not earth shattering, until you consider widgets for cellphones. This is an area that could explode. The fedex package tracker, or drop off box locater is not worth more as a widget vs. web page on my PC, but when I’m driving around looking for it a phone widget could be a killer app. As I think more about it – how about GPS enabled widgets? Your phone pings you when you are within 100yds of a Starbucks. Better yet, in your car the widget on your GPS starts telling you to drive there.

Ok, that’s it. Brain exploding…

Thanks again to David Beisel over at Venrock for hosting the event, and Christopher Penn for dropping some Widget Wisdom on me so I had some ammo at the session.

Addendum: My new Arch Enemy Mike Champion took much better notes than I did. *shaking fist*

Seriously though, if you are into live music check out his Tourb.us project.

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Daily Life

Bad day?

Have you ever had a day where you just can’t pull it together? Like my yesterday. The 9-5 was fine, but I was going to a meeting that night and it was one of those deals where everything went wrong. I thought I would try Route 2 instead of 95 and that meant 30 minutes lost waiting to get through a traffic light. That meant showing up late (but fortunately not late enough to look bad).

Here’s another bizarre problem. The office I work in is always 60 degrees or less. Even in the dead of summer there are people wearing sweaters and using space heaters. Have you ever seen the pictures of Shackelton’s South Pole Expedition? These guys were in the cold so long that when it “got up to 20 degrees” they’d be outside with no shirts on playing football.

I’ve become one of those guys. Put me in a room at 70 degrees with a golf shirt and I start to sweat.

Thankfully I was able to shotgun 2 ice cold sodas so I didn’t look like a freak, which was great because by luck of the draw I got to sit next to a guy who sold some software to Microsoft. You may have heard of it – Internet Explorer?

But the good news is, I got to meet some great people working on very cool stuff. And I’ve got a line on one of those astronaut suits to keep my temperature down outside the office. That will make me look cool.

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Daily Life

Brain Blowout

Some interesting discussion about widgets tonight but I’m too tired to try and wrap it all into a coherent post. You can get a good primer from today’s Marketing Over Coffee which is taking shape nicely.

More tomorrow.

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Brain Buster

Earth-2

I felt like I slipped into an alternate universe this morning when Chris Pirillo had a post where he is seems to be channeling David Meerman Scott (who has a new book out this month).

If David announces Gnomedex East I’m going to have to grow an Evil Spock goatee.

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Brain Buster Geek Stuff SalesForce.com The Marketeer

Widgets and Snippets

Tomorrow night some of the greatest minds in business and technology (and yours truly) will be talking about widgets. David Beisel (who just announced a move to Venrock) will preside. I have to admit that I’m old school and have been loathe to use widgets. I’m even not really comfortable with snippets, but do use them because the benefit is too great.

For those who don’t think web page structure is “wicked dope”: Widgets are little boxes on a web page that do things – calculators, Flickr photo slideshows, audio players, etc.

Snippets are chunks of web page code that you can’t see but they do things behind the scenes. Most common is a few lines of code that many add to their pages so that Google can give them site analytics.

I still fear the dark side, an both snippets and widgets are passing your site traffic data on to the party that provides the widget or snippet. Being raised in the age of dial-up there was also the issue of having to wait for a page to load until someone else’s snippet or whatever downloads. Broadband has made this no longer an serious counter argument for any but the curmudgeonly (ie – again, yours truly).

On the other side are widgets that can make you money, such as playing Revver videos or running Google Adsense. I’m all for making money.

More on this as I get it. Any favorite widgets or snippets out there? I currently nominate the Salesforce.com / Google Snippet as the greatest of all time (GOAT).

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Brain Buster The Marketeer

Are your people bigger than your brand?

This was a revelation I had this week. For small group of companies the brand name is more important than the people working there. The McDonald’s hamburg needs no human next to it, nor does a Firestone tire, Starbucks, or Neiman Marcus.
The majority of businesses do not have name brand recognition. As a result, blogging is more important for these organizations. The brand is not symbol for these companies, it is an unknown. For these companies their people do stand for something and do have name recognition. Notice how the organizations that make these transformations may still have a person buried in the core of the brand (or perhaps not so buried in the case of one “Big Bill” Gates). Ray Kroc, The Colonel, Berry Gordy. Many small organizations are afraid to give their employees a voice on a company blog – there’s unused potential there.
On an unrealated sidenote – in my teens I lived to find obscure 80’s dance remixes. If you share this affliction here’s a link to nirvana.

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Daily Life The Marketeer

Villians Unite!

Christopher Penn had some advice today about being an asshole which has been contrary to his superpowers thread. The previous posts talked about how we all have amazing powers now that we can access the web. The A-Hole post talks about some of the powers of the dark side.Villian

All that’s left is to put these two posts together to see why being a Super Villain is much better that being a wuss Super Hero. The reasons are many:

  1. Villains take the initiative. The heroes always play defense hoping to salvage a victory against the nefarious schemes the villains have assembled.
  2. Villains are entrepreneurs, they try to shape the world to meet their vision. The heroes stand for the status quo, worse yet, some of them are working for The Man.
  3. Villains are rarely held back by moral dilemmas they have the mission set and follow it with reckless abandon.
  4. They have something to prove. Vengeance is a great motivator

Enough with the fanboy stuff. Tomorrow we get back to Marketing (and taking over the World!)

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Daily Life Podcasting

Beer and Coffee

Wrapped up a good weekend today, so let’s get you starting the week off right with a new M Show.

I got to tour the Samuel Adams Brewery this weekend and meet Matthew Ebel in person (seen below with Kroosh). We then drove away…

Matthew Ebel and Kroosh