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Web 2.0

May15th

Top 10 Sins of Widget Development

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I found this article at Sexywidget.com that discussed this list of 10 Sins of Widget Makers at Sniperoo.com.   Their list includes these among others:

  1. Sorry, you can’t choose a colour.
  2. We’re going to put our logo and our name in it. And also under it
  3. Oh, we just can’t be bothered to let you resize it unless  you want to hack the code (YouTube)
  4. Nope, you can’t change the heading.
  5. Look, every part is necessary, you don’t get to pick and choose (MyBlogLog)
  6. Look, the whole point is that we get to slap our huge logo on everyone else’s work (Google Web Gadgets)

I can understand most of the Sins, but some of them can be argued.  Choosing a color?  Sure, that’s easy.  But, putting a logo and name on it?  Why wouldn’t you?  Change the heading?

All in all I think they are good suggestions and I’ll definitely relay them to our design and development team.  As a relative newbie to the widget space I didn’t think of a lot of these points when embarking on our project.

And on Sexywidget.com they mention:

“I agree with most of them with the following caveats:

  • Sometimes you have to get stuff out before it’s perfect
  • Sometimes you have to have sacrifice functionality for simplicity”

I couldn’t agree more.  If you take a year to build out your product someone else is going to beat you to the punch…and in that same year they’ll probably release a V 1.2, etc.  A better option would be to build a slimmed down version for a phase 1 launch that still offers the core functionality and allows you to build a user base while you are working on phase 2 in the background.

May14th

New Social Search Engine 50 Matches

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 50matches.gif

Mashable has a post regarding a new social search engine called 50 Matches.  It only crawls sites that have been bookmarked or voted for on sites like Digg, del.icio.us, Reddit, etc, and only returns 50 results per query.

search_engine_evolution.png

On their about page they state “For some time, people feel that Google search results are not good as sites fight to appear in its first results. Google seems to be broken and its time for search to evolve again.”  Well, you have to agree with part of what they’re saying.  Yes, it is time for search to evole and yes, Google has some of the knobs turned too far to the right.

It’s an interesting concept, but it appears to need some fine tuning.   One thing I noticed was across all searches was that the results were almost 100% articles.  No home pages, no category index pages, etc., which you typically find on higher level, generic queries.

I don’t know if I completely trust the social bookmarking sites to fulfill my queries, especially queries that exist outside of news, how-to articles, top 10 lists, etc.  As some of my sample queries suggest, they either need to implement some sort of query intelligence to serve different results for non-article based queries, or they will only cater to a specific niche.

Also, as Mashable.com suggests, their index doesn’t appear to be very large.  I did a couple searches on domains that I know have multiple links from the social bookmarking sites they crawl and it only had a few listings.  It doesn’t even bring back 50 listings for authoritative sites like CNN.com.

Like I said though, it’s a cool concept.  I think it would have potential if implemented with other features and logic.

May14th

Yahoo to Rebrand MyBlogLog

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Daviddalka.com recently posted his inside scoop regarding some upcoming changes with MyBlogLog.com and Yahoo!  Apparently they have a few things in the works which is great to hear.  You never know how things will pan out for a small company once they are sucked up into the large corporate machine.

Here are a few things to look forward to

1) A new brand for MyBlogLog

2) Site Redesign

3) A new “Widget 2.0″ is coming with some hover features.

Thanks David.

May13th

Why Your Business Needs Widgets

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I’m a huge fan of widgets. I’ve had a lot of discussions with some others within the office regarding the new age of content consumption and Web 2.0. Widgets are a big part of this. There are few key reasons why you should be using widgets and things they can accomplish for your business and website.

New to widgets? Basically, they are portable applications that can either sit on a user’s desktop or a web page and perform a function. There are desktop (Yahoo and Vista) and webtop widgets (webblog, Netvibes, Pageflakes, Myspace, Google, etc.) made available via Springwidgets.com, Clearspring.com, among other platforms, with many different functions that they can perform.

So what can a widget do for you?

  • Drive Traffic
    • As I mentioned, the way people consume content has changed. Why visit 200 websites every morning to get the latest articles when you can load it up in your favorite RSS reader?  You need to have a push and pull relationship with your users and the way you serve content to them.  Ideally we would be able to pull all of our users into our site as it is best situation for monetization, but this is not always possible.  Widgets, and RSS based widgets specifically, are a good tool for pushing content to users.  Well built widgets will drive traffic to your website through value to the user.  You can serve them a Tip of the Day, or Photo of the Day, or latest Blog post, or a Sale of the Day for widget users with a hook to lead them back to your site.  Construct your widget in the right way and you’ll have a repeat visitor to your site once a day or once a week that was previously not there.  If your widget catches on and spreads virally it may results in thousands of extra users, visits, and page views.
  • User Connection & Engagement
    • Part of building a business is connecting with your users on a personal level.  How can you do that with millions of people out there?  I was on a call recently with a widget development company and they were describing their opinion why desktop widgets were better than webtop widgets and how we should be using them.  They said that desktop widgets allow for a deeper connection with the consumer because they’re letting you into their private, personal world: their desktop.  Due to this you need to show them an immediate value in the form of personalization or convenience.  They showed me some well-performing desktop widgets.  An interesting thing about a few of them was that their value to the user had very little to do with their brand.  For example, a nationally known pet products brand offered a desktop widget that allows users to get updated local weather and have a photo of their pet as a background.  They know that pet owners love to look at pictures of their pet, especially when they are away from them at work, and then adding in some updated weather features make the widget functional.
  • Push the Brand
    • This ties in closely with the aforementioned point.  Some marketers might be out for pure traffic and sales, but companies in it for the long haul need to worry about branding.  You want your name in front of the consumer as much as possible.  If you could tattoo your name on the inside of their eyelids, you would.  They may visit your site once a week, but they see their desktop about 100 times a day and might visit their Myspace page 10 times a day.  Earlier I mentioned someone’s opinion regarding a desktop widget’s ability to connect with the users on a level that webtop widgets can not.  This may be true, but the webtop widgets have a clear leg up on the competition in the ability to be spread virally.  Most widgets are displayed with a “Grab it” or “Get this widget” icon so any user that sees it can get and embed the widget into their own personal space in a matter of two or three clicks.  If you build the right widget that satisfies a need or desire that has to be filled it has the chance to spread like wildfire.
  • Build links
    • If you build your widget correctly, and for the right audience, it can get you some great links.  There are two ways to go about this:
      • 1) Custom Webtop Widgets - Most of the widgets via Clearspring.com, Springwidgets.com, etc, won’t get you any links.  Your widget may be on 500,000 webtops and profile pages but the widget is build in Flash and thus will not credit your site with any inbounds.  But, if you build the widget in-house using a different platform like JS or you build it in Flash but embed a static link at the bottom of the code you’ll get a link from every site that embeds the widget.  We built a widget in-house earlier this year and when I check right now Yahoo shows 47,000 pages displaying the widget.  This means 47,000 additional links to our site.  And a lot of them are high quality links from authoritative sites like major media networks and news stations.  We identified a need and a gap in the market and we attacked it.
      • 2) PR Blitz - If you decide to build your widget via one of the larger widget development platforms like Springwidgets.com or Clearspring.com you can still build some quality links using a PR blitz.  Create a dedicate page on your site to host your widgets and when the time comes to launch your product have a PR firm send out press releases to all of the major networks announcing your new, free widget that gives the consumers ____.   Send out emails to the big bloggers in your industry letting them know about it and offering them a trial run before it publicly launches.  Send out emails to the big bloggers in the tech and web 2.0 industry doing the same.  Creating a buzz about the product can result in some great links from authoritative sites that wouldn’t be discussing your site under normal circumstances.


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