Every Site *will* be a News Publisher

February 12, 2009
" Stump" a ...

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Some time back I posited that every site will be a news publisher. If it’s as easy to add “news” to your site as it is to add AdSense, then every site, being about something, will add relevant news. (And think of news in the broadest sense of the term – fresh content, whether it’s hard news of the day or news about diabetes, archaeology or Sussex spaniels. For example, Purina and its Petcharts site).

Looking at our client list today (including those not yet live/announced) – only a fraction are traditional newspaper or magazine companies. Another fraction are traditional media companies, but not specifically print or news. The majority are services that purely online or non-news. Including sites as varied as financial services companies, e-commerce sites, and NGOs. And this ratio is even more true of the companies in our near-term pipeline.

While Daylife still isn’t as easy (or as free :), as AdSense – it’s getting there. We’ve seen portals of thousands of pages built using Daylife in one day (thanks to Daylife Select).  Stay tuned.

(Cross posted to the Daylife Blog)

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The Kindle and a new Digital Book Divide

February 9, 2009
Amazon.com founder an...

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A lot of excitement over the Kindle 2.  I’m not a Kindle user, but as an avid book reader and book buyer (more buying than reading these days), I find it hard not to be excited about the convenience and superpowers the Kindle bestows. (Not to mention access to Kindle-only books!)

However, what becomes of libraries, research, and the sharing of books? Libraries (and just simple act of being able to lend a book) did more to democratize knowledge than arguably anything in history. (I will not rush to coronate the web, it hasn’t been around for even one generation yet).  Will libraries be permitted to “lend” in an era when books are digital only, and DRM’d or locked in a device? What happens to access to books for the poor and those in less developed countries?  Will economically-distressed book publishers embrace enabling sharing for their electronic books, or will they go the way of the RIAA and the recording and movie industry, and use their new found digital IP powers and fight tooth and nail to keep the dissemination of their books tightly controlled? Will sharing books be “illegal?”

Thoughts? Has there been any comment by Amazon or the book industry on digital books, libraries, and person-to-person sharing?


Bill Gates, markets, doing the right thing

February 5, 2009

Bill Gates at TED:

The market does not drive scientists, thinkers, or governments to do the right things. Only by paying attention and making people care can we make as much progress as we need to.


Roussel: To Prepare for the Future, Skip the Present

February 2, 2009
The Los Angel...

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I’m a bit late to come across this visionary and prescriptive piece by Edward Roussel, editor of the Telegraph online. Among his several insights:

The future of journalism is selling expertise, not content.

News organizations have to radically fix their cost structures, which clearly aren’t sustainable online. And the web is exposing a lot of inefficiencies in the industry that weren’t visible before.

News organizations sometimes get in the habit of asking “how do we get our news to readers” and sometimes forget the question should be “how can we best serve our audience’s news and information needs.” Or rather, how can I help our audience best navigate the world, whether it’s “our” content, or someone else’s.

Part of the solution for both fixing cost structures (technology, content creation, curation, deployment, trafficking) and for offering a better user experience will be in smart aggregation – but done with your own your own voice, your own hand, and your own content as king.

(Examples and shameless plug: see http://davos.wsj.com and http://obama.wsj.com, powered by Daylife)

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On Democracy and Religion

December 31, 2008
Former President J...
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“Of the world’s three largest democracies, the overwhelming majority of their populations have different religious faiths: Hindus in India, Christians in the United States, and Muslims in Indonesia.”  -  Jimmy Carter

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Limited but Potent Brews

December 27, 2008
(CHINA OUT)  A wo...

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Matt Asay of CNET writes, “the answer to media’s woes is to stop pretending to be all things to all people, and instead to significantly up investment in a limited but potent brew of original news reporting, focused in areas in which one’s staff has competitive differentiation, as well as the best commentary for this and everything else.”

As I’ve said in the past, a publisher’s own original content still matters – and needs to be better than ever. As more and more content appears online, its average value may drop – but the value of unique, differentiated content (with higher barriers of entry) become higher (especially as navigation becomes more efficient).

As Jeff Jarvis / Kinsey Wilson says, “do what you do best and outsource the rest.” Focus on your own original content, and use a service like Daylife for the 360 view, all the other pieces and additional depth.

Just as the USA Today launched their Cruise Log using one editor + Daylife.

If indeed its true (it is) that some cities may be without a daily paper in 2010 – the way I’d fill the void is to build a lean, mean local operation by bringing together a 6-10 writers focusing on original material, and use a service like Daylife for everything else. It could be local or any niche – see how bigsoccer.com went from deep to deeper thanks to thousands of daylife-powered pages, complete with photos, videos, twitter feeds, quotes, search, etc.

Exciting times to be a publisher!

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Election Day, In Pictures, State by State

November 4, 2008

Very cool real-time photo galleries of every state, thanks to Sky News (and powered by Daylife).

The latest in a several politics apps partners have created using Daylife.


Let America be America Again

October 31, 2008

Roger Cohen:

What I am sure of is this: an ever more interconnected world, where financial chain reactions spread with the virulence of plagues, thirsts for American renewal and a form of American leadership sensitive to humanity’s tied fate.


Daylife Select

October 28, 2008

I’m pretty lucky. I love the team here at Daylife – such a crazy concentration of talent and creativity (and a few quirks), no-nonsense, super thoughtful, and an endless source of amusement. And for the past few months they’ve been hard at work in the lab busting out our latest service, which launches today. (Hot off the heels of our Enterprise API product which launched a couple weeks ago!)

Introducing the latest addition to the Daylife Platform, one that I think will be a game-changer for online publishing: the mind-bending Daylife Select.

As you know, we have a large and growing client base that uses the Daylife Platform (the Daylife API and Daylife Enterprise API) to build gorgeous new pages of constantly updating content, typically around a vast range of topics. But we kept hearing from publishers that their developer resources are limited or diminishing, and that they needed more of an “instant-on” solution.

Daylife Select lets publishers launch instant content portals containing thousands or millions of pages, with stories, topics, photo galleries, search (much like you see on our showcase, daylife.com), all in their own brand, voice, look, and feel.  And without developer resources.  It all happens through a simple point-and-click interface, not unlike launching a social network on Ning or a blog on WordPress.

Except this is an instant content portal (note: with high-fidelity CONTENT). You can manage the templates, pick the modules you want, change the parameters, change the layout, CSS – and lo, instant site. And through our integration tools, it can blend seamlessly with (or around) your existing property.

Since our intelligent content services platform collects and then deeply analyzes news, information, and graphics from high-quality sources as it is published to the Web, our publishers are able to tap into this vast database (think of it as a content cloud computer, not to abuse the trendy phrase) to build out their smart content portals. The result is that our publishers can add all sorts of content to their sites – again, without the need for developer resources – including:

  • Photo galleries and rich data graphics
  • Hundreds of thousands of topic pages
  • News headlines and associated snippets; and
  • Graphical pull quotes and supporting or related information
  • And of course, search

Wait, there’s more. Daylife Select supports not only Daylife-collected content, but a huge range social media sources to their sites. Working through their smart content portals, they can choose to add videos from YouTube, photos from Flickr, topical streams from Twitter, search results from Yahoo!, comments from Disqus, and entries from Wikipedia.

Oh, and you can also add ANY Google Gadget. Or design your own custom module.

Further – once you’ve customized your portal – not only do you have millions of pages – but every piece of every page is embeddable and shareable – so you now have millions of widgets as well. Bam!

Finally, a capability we’ve had for awhile is now available for our clients using either the Daylife API or Daylife Select: Smart Context. Smart Context automatically inserts hyperlinks into topical keywords inside the text; these link to Daylife-powered topic pages. This capability can be extended to your proprietary content or to any of the third-party content we make available on your sites. Daylife topics pages provide a fulsome, 360-degree view that helps you readers deeply understand the news and information they’re presented with. Our topics pages also enable you to increase your URLs exponentially, which have huge downstream impacts on SEO and, of course, organic traffic acquisition.

As publishers come under increasing pressure to reduce operating costs, focus their enterprise reporting and increase revenues, the full range of services available to them from our Daylife Platform provides a very real solution to these challenges. It let’s you curate the world around your content – do what you do best and outsource the rest. The economics of publishing both on and offline have changed radically over the last five years, and as replacement economics come into play, we’re see Daylife become a central utility within that new reality.

Fun!


A True Internationalist

October 27, 2008
In this handout photo release...

Image by Getty Images via Daylife

Chuck Hagel:

All of us are touched by every event

that unfolds in every corner of the world

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