Hell’s Kitchen - Tips for Startup Growing Pains

May 26th, 2008

ast week, Mick and me I spoke at Transaction 2.0 (part of CeBit). Mine was about some tips for surviving mid-stage startup growing pains.

Thanks to everyone that attended the talk in the room, and also via The Chaser, for encouraging me to swear alot and providing great feedback.

Here is the latest deck on slideshare:

Hells Kitchen Notes on Slides.

Here is the uStream recording from The Chaser. Its a bit hard to hear so probably not a great deal of use. Hopefully CeBit will release something better because it looked like everything was filmed professionally.

I will blog each slide in more detail in the weeks to come because I think the message is important.

In the meantime, I have had a few requests for links to the tools I mentioned in the talk. When we formed Pollenizer, we invested immediately in Confluence and Jira from Atlassian. Because we made that decision we have collected all internal IP as we go in the Confluence Wiki and tracked tasks across all projects and (globally distributed) teams using Jira. It was some of the best money we have spent. Everyone has access to the information they need and there is never a question of who owns a certain task. More on this in a later post.

Mick was a total star with his Focus or Fail talk. He juggled AND managed to smash a glass in the audience as well as grabbing our interest with some important lessons he has learned working with startups.

On a final note, it was my great pleasure to meet Jason Calacanis and Tyler Crowley from Mahalo. Frankly Jason’s reputation had preceeded him and (like a true Australian) I had him marked as a bit full of himself. Instead, he came into Sydney like a whirlwind, inspired everyone (I actually think he did meet EVERYONE in the whole city) and left, leaving us whinging a little less and getting down to business as a community of awesome startups ready to take on the world. He encouraged us to just to get on with it!

My CeBit Presentation: Hell’s Kitchen

May 12th, 2008

Next week, I am speaking at CeBit’s Transaction 2.0 Conference about some of the things I have learned working with start-ups. Here is the synopsis:

Hell’s Kitchen: Technology and Business in Start-ups

You’ve just binned your prototype, brought on a crew of five, had your first server melt down or hired a sales guy and he sold something you don’t have. Welcome to the hellish (and common) world of mid-stage-start-ups. Get ready to deal with it. Phil will present some delicious recipes from start-ups that have already burned in Hells Kitchen.

I’ve had some Twitter feedback that the ‘Hell’ theme could be a little strong. Perhaps. But it is hard in a start-up. Under the hype where we grapple to make money and keep our infant websites humming it can be… well… hell.

Here’s the presentation:

Monetization and the Facebook Ecosystem

April 11th, 2008

Platform eco-systems need a way for developers and creators to make real money or they will die. My question of the day: Does Facebook have this?

As a developer, the Facebook platform gives me a terrific opportunity to attract many users virally in a way that is not possible on my own domain. But am I building a business or just working for Facebook for free? Word Ads can be as low as $0.05 CPA (thanks @shalunov) and users are already at their destination (rather than on a search results page) so are not inclined to click away via an ad.

At the launch of the MySpace Developer Platform Launch in Sydney this week (nicely organised by Randal and streamed by Pollenizer) Markus Weichselbaum, the CEO of TheBroth , was asked: “What’s My Stripper Name - How did you monetise that?” 17 mins into this video of the event:

“It’s monetised by a product by IAC. IAC is a very large company called Ask.com and they have a whole division called FunWebProducts. This is a browser based toolbar that allows you to glitterise stuff, send smileys and in return, for them, basically installs a search box in your browser which will then, for them, show sponsored results. So if you do install the toolbar, and you use the search, they make money and in order for you to do that they offer you the extra stuff so you can glitterise things.”

Hmm. Sounds like an adware strategy to me. No different to the kind of business Kazaa found itself in when the value of ads in a popular social destination site were driven to nothing. I couldn’t actually find the toolbar download in What’s My Stripper Name? but did find it on TheBroth’s ClicktoGlitter. The toolbar is Webfetti. The terms of use show that it is classic adware that puts a large amount of junk on your machine to maximise revenue generation even when you are not using the app that installed it.

2. Features of the MyWebSearch Toolbar

By downloading the MyWebSearch toolbar, you will be installing a toolbar in your Internet browser (and any supported email functions and instant messenger functions) with the following features:

SEARCH BOX: This is a search box located within the toolbar that will help you search the Internet with search results from Ask.com.

SEARCH ASSISTANT: This provides relevant links and results when you make a search request in your browser address bar or if your browser address (DNS) request is invalid, misspelled or incorrectly formatted.

WEBFETTI: This feature enables you to customize a social networking profile page with layouts, graphics, custom cursors, music and video.

ZWINKY: This feature allows you to create and modify avatar characters, and use them in a social networking environment. If you use Windows XP, the ZWINKY feature will also automatically provide you with an icon that will appear in your Windows XP system tray at the bottom right of your desktop. Use of the Zwinky feature is subject to separate terms of use at http://info.zwinky.com/zwinkyinfo/tos.jhtml.

SMILEY CENTRAL: This allows you to insert smiley face emoticons and other graphics into your web-mail, Outlook, Outlook Express and instant messages.

POPULAR SCREENSAVERS: This provides you with photos and images that can be added to the user’s screensaver or PC desktop wallpaper. Also includes the ability to add personal digital photos.

MY FUN CARDS: This provides access to free electronic greeting cards that you can personalize on the Web and send to any email address.

CURSOR MANIA: Free computer mouse cursors that allow the user to change the look of his/her default cursor to something more fun and expressive.

FUN BUDDY ICONS: Free icons that can be added to an instant messenger client.

HISTORY SWATTER: This allows you to delete easily computer cookies, URL history, temporary cache, and other stored browser files.

POP SWATTER: Free tool that swats pop-up ads before they appear. Includes a “Safe List” to allow pop-ups from user-specified web pages.

SMOTOS: This enables you to post, upload, share, download and store images, and allows you to send such images to email addresses of your choice.

MY INFO: This provides one-click access to news, sports, weather, finances, horoscope, movie listings, lottery results and more, which appear in a thin window to the immediate left of your main browser window.

MY MAIL NOTIFIER: This allows you to use animated characters to alert you to new web mail messages.

MY MAIL SIGNATURE: This allows you to create signature designs to place in the footer of outgoing email messages.

MY MAIL STAMP: This allows you to insert digital stamp designs into outgoing emails.

MY MAIL STATIONERY: This provides you with background images, colors and themes to enhance the look of outgoing email messages.

Is this the destiny of Facebook applications?

Returning to the MySpace launch, Mick relayed a question from Richard McMannus at ReadWriteWeb: “Is Hypertargeting hyperhype? (19:30 on the video). Markus answered:

“I don’t think so. I’ll be very straight… Currently Facebook gives you absolutely nothing to help you monetise.  But, with MySpace and Hypertargeting, even if its just 10% as good as it sounds, it will be a substantial help for developers to monetise.”

Who can say whether Hypertargeting will work, but I think that MySpace are correctly thinking about the ecosystem in adding it. Without it, developers fail to make money, so they trick people into inviting their friends, create booster apps that have no value other than to get you to install another app, cover the screen in a cacophony of  ads and then install adware on your PC, then…  the users leave.

Am I being too simplistic?  Does anyone have any great examples of Facebook applications making money and retaining users? I’d love to hear about those if you do.

Join us at the MySpace Developer Platform Launch

April 8th, 2008

At Pollenizer we have created this concept of The Conference Chaser. It’s like the TV show here in Australia called The Chaser, except we rock up to conferences, open the lid of our laptops and start a combined broadcast and live blog of the event using a mashup of uStream and Tangler.

Tomorrow night is the Australian launch of the MySpace Developer Platform. If you can’t get there, join us via the chaser and we will relay the fun to you.

Check-in on Wednesday 9th April @ 6pm (Official Kickoff @ 6.30pm AU-EST).

Before that, please pop in and throw in all things you want to know from the MySpace team and we’ll be sure to ask. Or just throw them into the live discussion below.

The Need for Magic

March 30th, 2008

What makes great software?The magic of software is in the small things. Often, these things are tiny and not noticed by users because they silently make the application a pleasure to use. All the user knows is that they are happy. A thousand tiny moments.

Here’s some examples from my experience:

  • Google Reader: When I scroll down my list of news, Reader starts to load the next batch of news before I run out. The timing is perfect. I don’t need to worry about webby things like ‘next page’ etc… I just want the news so I scroll down, infinitely with a smile on my face. It works equally well with the keyboard, mouse and scroll wheel. If I want to scroll down my folders instead, Reader changes intuitively when I move my mouse over that list instead of the river of news. I only notice these tiny details when I paid special attention. Before that I just knew I liked it. Magic.
  • Wordpress: When I am writing a big blog post and run out of room in the edit box, I just drag the window bigger. No thought required. Now I can see my whole post on the screen in one view. Magic.
  • iTunes: I can double click anything to play an intuitive playlist. I can double click an artist and all their stuff starts to play. Same with Album and Genre. Magic.
  • Shozu: Magically appears on my phone when I have taken a picture and asks me if I want to send it to Flickr. If I say Yes, it uploads it invisibly to me, taking care of all failures. If I wander to a roaming data zone, it pauses the upload and sends me an SMS telling me it has done so. Magic.
  • MS Office 2007: When I highlight some text, a mini-toolbar appears right next to my mouse pointer so that I can format it without needing to move to the other side of the screen. Magic.

Bad experiences are equally silent, equally unconscious in the most part to the user. All they know is they don’t feel good.

We need to care about the magic

Barcamp Sydney + Sleepover Next Weekend

March 30th, 2008

barcamp_sydney_v3_logoforwiki.jpg

It’s that time again, and Barcamp is back in Sydney next weekend. This one has the bar + camp. If you long for conversations about the scalability of Ruby on Rails at 3am… here’s your opportunity.

This is a video ad (made by Mick Liubinskas), which is certain to convince you to attend.

Sign up here.

Zuckerberg’s Notebook

March 10th, 2008

Simple is Difficult

Over-engineering the user experience is a common trap to all fall into. Most web applications break Evan Williams’ Universal Law of Simplicity by providing too many features and not hanging those features on a solid framework of use cases.

This is where Facebook has always been awesome. The user experience is un-cluttered and very firmly focussed on the social flow. Everything hangs together. No matter what nook and cranny of the site I find myself in, I can tell that someone knows where they are sending me.

But there’s no doubt about it: simple is difficult.

It takes long, deep thinking to connect all the moving parts, including anticipating and learning from the users to plot a reasonably direct course to simplicity. Oh, and patience.

I enjoyed watching Facebook Founder, Mark Zuckerberg being interviewed at SXSW because we saw another glimpse behind the curtain of Facebook. It turns out Zuckerberg keeps notebooks. These aren’t the scrawled, disposable RAM that I create. These are the paper equivalent of a hard disk where everything is stored and indexed for future retrieval. They are metaculously kept and often referenced and updated some 4 years after an original entry.

This is what it takes to keep it simple.

Enterprise 2.0 Now On

February 18th, 2008

I’m at the Enterprise 2.0 Forum in Sydney. This is my live blog:

HOWTO: Add a Live Forum Roll to Your Wordpress Blog

February 13th, 2008

Over at Tangler we are busy finding ways for live discussions to reside where the users want them to. For example, if you have a  blog post that would benefit from swarming readers into a live discussion, you can now do that using the new ‘Share’ tool to embed the topic in your blog post.

Taking this idea further, we are slowly revealing the Tangler API and this is something of a sneak peak.

Itching to give it a go, I have added a dynamic list of all my live forums to this blog’s sidebar and giving you what you need to try the same.

Instructions 

If you haven’t done so already, get yourself an account on Tangler.

Download WP Tangler Live Discussion Roll and unpack it into the root of your current WP theme.

Edit tangler-sidebar.php at the top to your user-id and to the number of forums you would like to display.

Get your user-id by viewing your profile in Tangler and looking at the URL which will be http://www.tangler.com/people/id/12324. Grab the number off the end.

// Widget settings
$user_id = 1454; // Your id
$top = 20; // The number of forums you wanna display

In your template somewhere (mine is in sidebar template) I have then added the following:

<h5>Live Forum Roll (<a href="http://www.tangler.com">Tangler Power</a>)</h5>
<ul>
<?php include(TEMPLATEPATH."/tangler-sidebar.php");?>
</ul>

That’s all there is to it. It’s a quick and dirty hack but it gets the job done. Next task is to turn this into a WP Plug-in.
API Methods Available Today

If you want to do more, feel free to explore the first three methods released and let me know how you go.

Example: Get a User’s Public Forums

 http://www.tangler.com/services/1.0/user/1454/forums/

Example: Get a Forum’s Topics

 http://www.tangler.com/services/1.0/forum/20801/topics/

Example: Get a Topic’s Messages

 http://www.tangler.com/services/1.0/topic/34074/

Have fun!

Tangler 2 Go (Updated “Nokia at Mobile World Congress”)

February 7th, 2008

Tangler is working on some delicious features so that users can put live discussions where they want them to be. There’s an API coming up (read-only to begin with write in the pipes) and embed is now here. In any Tangler topic, select ‘Share’ in the top right and paste the code into your site, blog or social networking application.

Nokia’s doing it… check out the discussion below for real live blogging of Nokia’s season launch at the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona.