Narendra Rocherolle

Alexis Rocherolle


Archive for the '30boxes' Category

Blogging Twitterers — Don’t Give Up Your Day Job

Thursday, April 5th, 2007 at 11:46 AM  |  View Timeline

I have been writing and talking about twitter for some time. 30 Boxes now has some office space with the Obvious/twitter folks and I have been recently coding new features to integrate twitter behaviour within 30B.

My fascination with twitter is primarily around its open ended use cases and the fact that it falls squarely into a new genre of communication apps like 30 Boxes. In fact, we are developing for it because it is very much integral to the notion of “what am I doing / what are my friends doing?” which is really what 30B is all about.

That said, it certainly has required a lot of patience watching prominent bloggers pontificate about the definition and future of twitter! Here’s my version for the record:

1) twitter is not revolutionary but has the potential to be big in a mainstream way and potentially a lucrative business

2) twitter is not inherenty useful but may prove to be with the right application filters

3) twitter can be highly entertaining and therein most likely lies the $

4) twitter is the simplest product that defies easy explanation

5) twitter is instantly attractive to extroverted, info-consuming, highly opinionated bloggers because it is so easy and provides instant feedback. Unfortunately, the brevity that makes twitter alluring ultimately limits the depth of discussion and consequently any a-listers audience. My best guess for the big time bloggers is that they can only hope for 5% of their readers to follow their twitters which behooves them not to forget their original talent!

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Twitter Echo = Bad Idea

Wednesday, March 7th, 2007 at 12:27 PM  |  View Timeline

My latest soap box (no pun intended) is to remind people that you really have to fail a lot if you hope to have one or perhaps a few successes.

I get ideas constantly and being a relentless optimist, I often think that they are excellent. Well, that just isn’t the case.

I am a big fan of twitter because of its simplicity and its potential and this morning I thought, “gee, wouldn’t it be cool to start an echo within twitter” where people were repeating a message. It would be like some unseen wave. I decided to give it a try with an announcement about an event at SXSW being hosted by 30 Boxes, Rocketboom, and Satisfaction.

The experment was greeted with mostly indifference and some mild irritation (akin to being shouted down by your own mob).

It might have been the wrong message for an echo but it may just be the wrong medium especially for those folks who primarily use it on mobile devices.

Lesson learned!

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30 Boxes is Top Calendar

Monday, January 15th, 2007 at 7:24 AM  |  View Timeline

Score one for the little guy. We managed to beat out the giants at least according to PC World Magazine!

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Google, don’t be evil.

Tuesday, January 2nd, 2007 at 3:56 PM  |  View Timeline

This has me irritated.

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Transparency and New Corporate Marketing (aka Building Intimacy)

Monday, December 11th, 2006 at 7:09 AM  |  View Timeline

[cross-posted at 30B]

In the relatively short product life of 30 Boxes we have made plenty of discoveries, had some assumptions validated, and had others completely overturned. Having over a decade of experience in consumer web apps, though, one thing is evident, the Web refuses to stand still and it continues to disrupt. The companies that recognize this and adapt will survive, others will continue to leak users and be relegated to the Legacy Web.

Many years ago, we learned that consumers were responding better to marketing or messaging that was what we termed “non-monolithic” or delivered not from some lofty, large corporate entity but in a more friendly tone and from someone (even if that person was fictional). As end consumers start to reclaim their influence (a trend most evident with the rise of blogging and social media), we are seeing wholesale shifts in the way businesses relate to and communicate with users.

It is one thing to pay lip service to the time honored business principle of “listening to the customer” but quite another to accept the challenge as a business. It is also easier for a small business to be more personable for two reasons: there is a smaller chain of command for acceptable outbound messaging and smaller businesses usually have smaller (more heterogeneous) audiences; you don’t run the risk of confusing users or having issues with scale.

That said, we are seeing a major trend toward transparency and it has an impact. Flickr is a great example of a product that has made exceptional use of one-on-one marketing and maintained it even as it grew out of the trendy confines of the blogosphere and into mainstream. Why? Well, it starts with a blog (duh!) but that is only step one. Stewart and Caterina have been tireless evangelists within the flickr community (as contacts, in groups, and offline at conferences and meet ups). They care about their users, large and small, big and tall.

Many of the succesful Web2.0 startups (YouTube, digg, etc.) employ variations on the theme of: approachability. It is very far removed from the tactics of burying contact information, impersonal responses, and treating customer support as a cost center which is still the norm at the portals (including Google). Start paying attention when you sign up for services. Who is marketing to you? How are they doing it? Who is the email from? Increasingly you will notice that this communication is designed to create intimacy. Instead of coming from “noreply” it will come from a real person and treat you like you matter because you do.

It is the new path toward brand building. Gone are the days of spending millions of dollars to build brand awareness. It turns out that a small company can score much higher on trust and reliability if they build intimacy. What’s the catch? Well, it means that as a small company, you have ready to accept that responsibility. You have to be prepared to be called out when you get it wrong. It requires a lot of humility. It also requires a LOT of effort.

There are and will be lots of folks who try to fake it. The good thing is that sincerity is hard to fake and effort is even harder. In the end, your constomers will decide your fate by either evangelizing your product or business or casting it aside.

Sorry for accidentally writing an essay. I set out to let everyone know that we have updated our anonymous home page, which now has a login form. Along the lines of what I was discussing earlier, that page includes one of the three of us in the greeting (as does our 404 – Page Not Found page!)

404

We have also updated lots of our email templates to include avatars and add a more stylish look and feel. Where appropriate, we have also “taken ownership” by assigning one of the three of us to the email template.

We’re getting bigger but staying small. Enjoy the weekend.

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30 Boxes Blog Timeline

Saturday, December 2nd, 2006 at 2:51 PM  |  View Timeline

All you WordPress users out there. Download the new Blog Timeline plugin from 30 Boxes. It lets you show off your blog (check out the View Timeline link above the post) on an embedded ajax calendar. It even scrolls with the mouse wheel. A brand new way for people to navigate your blog.

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Analog Lessons in Usability: Kramer

Saturday, November 25th, 2006 at 11:33 AM  |  View Timeline

[cross-posted at 30B]

Well, this might be more of a business lesson, but here goes. Entertainment news this week included the unfortunate news of Michael Richards’ (aka Kramer) deplorably racist tirade at a comedy club.

After the shock from watching it settled in, my initial reaction was that I don’t think that I would be able to watch any more episodes of Seinfeld. The next day I heard sports radio show host Jim Rome carve up (gratuitous Thanksgiving reference) Richards and Rome’s conclusion: he isn’t planning on watching Seinfeld either and can’t fathom how anyone else could either.

Extrapolate and your realize that one slip up can have a very substantial impact on a very trusted brand and franchise. Years after the show’s end, Richards’ bit is going to cost millions of dollars.

Brands are difficult to build and easily tainted. One of the refreshing things about the Web2.0 movement is a committment to the customer. It is a reaction to the rampant user abuses of the late nineties from companies desperate to “monetize.” Combine that with a wholesale neglect of the end consumer by large monoliths (think airlines, customer support from portals, and never-ending phone menus) and we are seeing the ability for small companies to build trusted brands in short order.

Is there a lesson here? Yes, respect your customer and think twice before you engage them or make use of their data in any way that you wouldn’t approve if it were your data. One slip up and your company could be the next Gator, errrrr…Claria.

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Analog Lessons in Usability: Car Locks

Sunday, November 19th, 2006 at 1:54 PM  |  View Timeline

[also cross-posted at 30B]

Part two of dispensing unsolicited advice is our new usability column called Analog Lessons. Here’s the skinny, there’s lots of real world examples of design and usability that make for great discussions about how to and how not to implement things online!

Our first example deals with all those new fangled car keys that help you lock and unlock your car (among other things). Who hasn’t remotely popped the trunk of a rental car in a crowded parking lot to help your vehicle identify itself!

One of our big pet peeves is car locks that give audible feedback. Well, specifically those that use the car HORN to acknowledge that yes, “I JUST LOCKED THE CAR FOR YOU!” We imagine that some engineer somewhere had a good reason for the implementation and that there is most likely some arcane combination that prevents it in case you are one of those conscientious people who doesn’t want to irritate the crap out of everyone else in your vicinity or wake a sleeping family member.

So, how do we translate this into sound website design and application development?

It’s a lesson that has been around since the web got graphical and browsers started enabling sound. Simply put: no unwanted or unsolicited noise!

Sure it flies in the face of MySpace, but some surprisingly polished sights like espn.com and MLB team sites are guilty of launching blaring video clips. It is no secret that people use the web at work so respect your user and respect your user’s environment. The only exemption to this rule we are willing to allow is the new crop of video blogs where the focus is 100% video (e.g. Rocketboom).

Have a great weekend.

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Is Time Magazine Still Relevant?

Tuesday, October 17th, 2006 at 5:15 PM  |  View Timeline

The subject is meant to be dramatic and rhetorical. Have a look at the 5 year graph of rank from Alexa (imperfect, of course), but certainly not indicative of the clout one might expect from such an immense brand.

alexa graph of time.com

More shocking is the apparent lack of relevancy of time.com to Google (and other search engines). My evidence is purely anecdotal, but pretty eye-opening. Time publishes a new magazine each week that hits newstands on Mondays. The online version is available around midnight EST. This week Time put out a piece called “The Next YouTubes” which featured several companies including zillow.com, farecast.com, and yelp.com along with a sidebar touting 37signals. The last company listed (three cheers!) was 30 Boxes. Now, in the PR world, a “hit” in Time magazine should be considered a crowning jewel.

We are certainly honored and undoubtedly building some brand awareness among an older demographic, but the impact, however, is relatively contained in scope.
Why? It seems that Google simply doesn’t index Time magazine with any frequency. One would imagine that Time would be quickly included in Google News and then echo out from there, but 48 hours 5 days later, searching Google news for Yelp, Zillow, et. al. won’t lead you to the Time article.

So is this a shortcoming of Google News or does Google not deem Time relevant? I’d love to hear from some new media marketing experts like Jeremey Pepper or Steve Rubel!

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30Boxes and the Social Web

Wednesday, September 6th, 2006 at 6:25 AM  |  View Timeline

I just finished long essay that includes diagrams created with the most excellent OmniGraffle program.  It’s all about how the web is going to make it easier for you to get organized!

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