Selling an audience short?

Or, What Josh Said About Ansearch That Was Irrel­e­vant to Most Users.

Dean Jones responded to my Ansearch Answers post with the following:

All in all I feel [the post is] a fair rep­re­sen­ta­tion of the so called facts, but I stand by my recent email… namely that sim­ply review­ing us on tech­ni­cal issues that most peo­ple either

  1. wouldn’t have dis­cov­ered, or;
  2. would not likely care about,

is sell­ing your audi­ence short.

I’m inclined to dis­agree, and just wanted to quickly post to say that. I like to think I under­stand the ‘audi­ence’ here fairly well. They’re either peo­ple with (web-)geek ten­den­cies, and are hence inter­ested in any analy­sis and crit­i­cism I can deliver on the tech­ni­cal aspects of prod­ucts, etc., or (and this cat­e­gory is com­pletely unre­lated to the for­mer) stu­dents and humanities-focussed peo­ple read­ing var­i­ous con­tent I’ve pub­lished here — rang­ing from stage plots to a short story to an essay on the nature and effects of the dig­i­tal divide.

Most guests in the lat­ter cat­e­gory are just that: guests. They gen­er­ally dis­cover this con­tent via a search engine, read what they want, and leave. Over 80% of my vis­i­tors stick around for one minute or less, pre­sum­ably because they find what they need quickly, or dis­cover that the con­tent isn’t what they were look­ing for.

The “reg­u­lar” audience/participants, how­ever, are not that. I don’t think you’re all geeks, but this blog leans towards that style of con­tent, and you match that accord­ingly. You don’t come here look­ing for prod­uct rec­om­men­da­tions (the one excep­tion to that being some­one who viewed my post on Asterisk/VoIP, and asked me what my expe­ri­ences with it had been some time later: to which I replied, we haven’t both­ered, as we moved into a house with a Com­man­der sys­tem pre­in­stalled!). You come here, I think, for the qual­ity of writ­ing, for rants, for occa­sion­ally insight­ful (I hope) com­ment on var­i­ous facets of things I deem interesting.

This is a blog. This is not a news­pa­per, though it is pos­si­ble that search engines, iron­i­cally, are chang­ing the clout of this medium to some­thing sim­i­lar. The dis­tinc­tion between news­pa­per and blog becomes blurred with posts like the one that inspired this, because of the form it was writ­ten in. It is impor­tant, how­ever, to remem­ber the audience.

Peo­ple don’t come here to shop for search engines. We might be inter­ested in how they work, what they do, what the poten­tial ben­e­fits and fail­ings of each one is, but ulti­mately it doesn’t affect anyone’s choice in the real world. Sim­i­larly, investors are unlikely to come here, scop­ing out Ansearch’s offer­ing before buy­ing into par­ent com­pany Optum. And, if they did, my con­clud­ing remarks were pos­i­tive — I gen­uinely believe the story bal­anced out in their favour more than any­thing else. If I over­played the sig­nif­i­cance of a small flaw that could poten­tially be abused, my apolo­gies. I don’t, how­ever, regret includ­ing it in there at all, because I think it’s some­thing my audi­ence is inter­ested in.

As you stated in an ear­lier email… “I’m not 100% sure as to how one should go about review­ing a search engine.” Here’s a tip. like Google, Yahoo, MSN… we are a busi­ness. For us to stay in busi­ness we need to gen­er­ate revenue.

To do this we need to get more peo­ple to our SE, to get them to come back more often, and to, through their usage (CPM, CPC etc…) gen­er­ate revenue.

To achieve this we need to pro­vide a search ser­vice that the user finds use­ful. Given our rapid growth over the past months in UV’s and rev­enue, I would say we are doing OK.

Unfor­tu­nately for Ansearch and any­one else who wants to use this as an adver­tis­ing space, we don’t par­tic­u­larly care if you’re mak­ing money. It’s good to hear they’ve grown: if their evolv­ing prod­uct is any­thing to go by, they deserve it. But met­rics such as rev­enue and Unique Vis­i­tors mean lit­tle to this audi­ence, even if it’s what investors want to find out all about.

I think this is a fair assess­ment of this site’s ‘audi­ence’ (the impor­tant ‘audi­ence’, for me, being the minor­ity that don’t come through search engines, sub­scribe by RSS, and come back regularly) — though, as always, your role is not restricted to that. You are par­tic­i­pants. In light of this, I’d invite com­ment and dis­cus­sion on this post as to your role as you under­stand it. It’s pos­si­ble I’ve got this all wrong… but I doubt it.

Wonders of working remotely

Last night for about two hours, with under twenty min­utes notice, four peo­ple com­mu­ni­cated aurally and simultaneously(ish) watched and could inter­act with the same screen.

Photos from each location combined

VoIP (using Skype on Linux) wasn’t play­ing nice, so we wound up using a PSTN, with the phone at the remote end (remote to me, any­way) hooked into a sound con­sole with three micro­phones patched in (as well as com­puter audio, but that doesn’t bear men­tion­ing!) for each par­tic­i­pant. Using VNC (I’d have pre­ferred to use MS RDC, but that doesn’t allow mul­ti­ple simul­ta­ne­ous users on one ses­sion), we col­lab­o­ra­tively worked on a web­site design in Pho­to­shop simul­ta­ne­ously from oppo­site ends of Sydney.

Sure, it helps that one end was a sound stu­dio, and that both ends were using real — as opposed to 256 or 512k “broadband” — broadband… but that just goes to prove even more firmly how much tech­nol­ogy rocks!

# by Josh on June 30th, 2005 Tags: , , , , ,
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CeBIT Australia 2005

Attended this one this after­noon — it was rather impres­sive, with over 600 exhibitors. I was sur­prised by the preva­lence of open-source busi­nesses there… that, along with VoIP, were prob­a­bly the two emer­gent tech­nolo­gies this year. There were also the usual busi­ness CRM/“knowledge” drones, but they gen­er­ally stuck to them­selves, so that was okay.

Aside from that, var­i­ous con­tent man­age­ment sys­tems were out in force — includ­ing one or two that appar­ently haven’t caught onto the seman­tic web yet. Most notably, one was demo­ing their CMS on a mas­sive plasma screen with bla­tantly obvi­ous char­ac­ter encod­ing errors every­where (you know, char­ac­ters dis­play­ing as black dia­monds with ques­tion marks). I quizzed one of them about it and he basi­cally said that it was some­thing to do with their not demo­ing it on a live site. Bull.

If you can’t get that sort of stuff right at a trade show, when you’re try­ing to sell prod­ucts, what are the chances of actu­ally being able to deliver?

Another provider, Netcat.biz, seemed to have the right idea in terms of semat­ics at least in their pre­sen­ta­tion at CeBIT, but a quick check of their own web­site reveals a lack of a DOCTYPE, despite their use of CSS for pre­sen­ta­tion and a not-too-horrible (or rel­a­tively easy to patch up) markup situation.

There’s still clearly a mar­ket for truly acces­si­ble con­tent man­age­ment, although I doubt many busi­ness cus­tomers would actu­ally know the dif­fer­ence. Unfor­tu­nately, that’s the real­ity of it, and pos­si­bly why nei­ther of these two com­pa­nies (there were other CMS exhibitors, but those two stood out as most ‘impres­sive’, regard­less as to the qual­ity of their solu­tion) have both­ered to develop such a product.

Sigh.

Whilst I’m on a bit of a rant, the exhi­bi­tion had a bla­tantly sex­ist cul­ture hap­pen­ing. ATI and Sap­phire were prob­a­bly the worst offend­ers, employ­ing lycra body­suits to attract atten­tion, but they were by no means the only ones. Short skirts were the norm for many female sales­peo­ple at the event — one has to won­der when the IT indus­try is going to grow up.

In all, how­ever, the event was impres­sive — sig­nage and event dis­plays were won­der­fully over-the-top, exhibitors, for the most part, knew what they were talk­ing about, and free cof­fee abounded!

A whole new world of TLAs I don’t understand (Or, Josh wants to install VoIP/Asterisk)

Over the past week or two, I’ve heard about VoIP a bit more than usual, first with Adrian of Beat FM doing his thing over VoIP from Lis­more with FireFly/Freshtel, and then a lit­tle later, when Steve asked if I could join a convo with a guy called Dave to pro­vide some gen­eral Linux advice, as Dave had just installed the Aster­isk PBX soft­ware on a box (or, if you’re Steve, “com­puter”) and needed to SSH into it.

So, awareness/interest cat­a­lysts are there. I’d looked/heard about the Aster­isk soft­ware some time ago, but sort of wrote it off as not quite worth the effort. More recently, how­ever, we’ve been try­ing to get gen­eral ICT stuff sorted for the new place of res­i­dence, in a way that’ll let us cut costs a lit­tle. Read the rest of this entry »

Skype

I’ve been play­ing with this VoIP soft­ware, namely Skype, for the bet­ter part of the after­noon. This is dif­fi­cult, as I don’t have any­one to talk to. If you feel like installing it and get­ting it to work, my user­name is joshuas­treet — no guar­an­tees I’ll be online, though.

If you’ve already got Skype installed, you can skype me.

# by Josh on October 6th, 2004 Tags:
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Freetel are evil

As the title of this post says, Free­tel are evil. I’m cur­rently too furi­ous to write a ratio­nal and rea­son­able post about it, with­out swear­ing, but I plan to edit this as soon as pos­si­ble to detail exactly how and why this is the case.

Later: Josh has calmed down, and com­mences writ­ing a rant about the issue. The long turn­around is because I was out last night/this morn­ing, not because I took that long to calm down. Still annoyed, though… Read the rest of this entry »

Wireless wow factor

http://whirlpool.net.au/article.cfm?id=1304&show=replies

Oh. My. Good­ness.  That’s cheaper than my cur­rent plan, and bet­ter geared towards my band­width usage patterns!

And, at only $3 a GB if I go over, it doesn’t mat­ter either way (well, not much).

Ahhh!!  Dilema!!!  iiNet are just on the brink of announc­ing more DSLAM roll­outs, with semi-unlimited upload speeds… I guess I’ll wait for that list to be unveiled before try­ing to make any fur­ther deci­sions on this one.

What exists in Syd­ney in the way of con­sumer (i.e. not busi­ness) VoIP gate­way ser­vices?  And can you use fax over VoIP?  I’m so ready to ditch the phone line and go over this entirely:  cur­rently, we’re pay­ing $25 for line rental, and $60 for ADSL a month.  I don’t know what we’re pay­ing in calls, but it’d be enough.

This would be $0 in line rental, $45 for inter­net access, and some amount of tele­phony costs — if noth­ing else, we’d save mas­sively interstate/long dis­tance and inter­na­tional.  Even if voice usage con­sumed large-ish amounts of band­width, I can’t see it using more than a GB per month (so, add $3 to tele­phony costs) — that’s based on the fact that if I stream a 192kbps stream for 8 and a half hours, it only uses about 900MB — and it’s safe to pre­sume that VoIP won’t be any­where near that sort of quality!

Meh, can’t think about it now… still got this stu­pid assess­ment unfin­ished, must keep work­ing.  More to post, but that actu­ally requires thought, not just techno-babble, so it will come in a while…

EDIT: More has been posted, and back­dated to when it actu­ally SHOULD have appeared.  See arti­cle 106, “A feast for sore eyes” for more!