Archive for the ‘publishflow™’ Category

Newsweek and Amazon Web Services

Thursday, April 29th, 2010

A significant move happened in the online publishing world this week and it is a sign of things to come for any online publishing company that is burning money managing their own hosting operations.

Newsweek.com announced this week that the site is outsourcing its Web site hosting duties to Amazon, joining a small but growing number of companies experimenting with cloud computing.

“Until now, Newsweek.com had been hosted by its parent company, The Washington Post Co. The media company has been trying to cut losses at its magazine division, which recorded $29.3 million in operating losses in 2009. By joining the cloud, Newsweek expects to save close to $500,000 annually.

“It saves Newsweek money,” said Geoff Reiss, vp, general manager, Newsweek Digital.

“Lots of people out there built their own infrastructure and are going to be tortured by this idea of sunk costs.”

Kontexto started using Amazon Web Services in early 2008 and now our whole real time content analytics platform is built on the Amazon cloud. We have always been lobbing the idea around of launching a cloud based news infrastructure that takes care of everything post publishing including storage, search, delivery and analytics. Give the CMS and editing freedom to the content creators, but hand off everything else.

After newsweek.com, it is hard to say who will be the next to transition hosting to the cloud. Some other certainly have without announcing it. But it is good to see a brand name publication make an organizational shift to the cloud.

Full jump to Mediaweek article

Bloomberg and Businessweek Integration Details

Tuesday, April 27th, 2010

Short post, but this is an article worth reading if you are interested in how a legacy print magazine is trying to fit into Bloomberg, a real time data organization.

Bloomberg is in the business of selling data terminals and everything else supports that cause. They are damn successful doing this and pride themselves on being the most influential news organization in the world. True or not is up to you, but they do produce news that moves markets.

I have picked out some points from the article and will share my brief thoughts on them, as they capture some broader themes we are seeing emerge across the online publishing world namely:

Profit - News needs to have a profit motive

AND

Measurement - Everything can be measured in the news creation process

Some other points from the article:

1. News should help people make money. Whether the creator of the news or the consumer of the news, there is a profit motive. If news makes money, then everyone is happy.

This flies right in the face of everything taught in Journalism school and the Businessweek staff that did not buy into this philosophy were shown the door or remain at Bloomberg and are adapting.

2. Bloomberg operates a “speed desk”, with the sole purpose of quantifying how much news they get out first and if that news makes people money.

I think this philosophy can be taken all the way down the chain from global news providers like Bloomberg to hyperlocal news providers. If you get more content out before your competitors (speed), you will build a loyal audience for that.

3. Every Bloomberg writer has a “dashboard” where the metrics determining his compensation — any scoops, hits an article attracts — are tracked.

This is precisely the type of feedback and support that content creators need and can use to their advantage. There is a real resistance to measurement in the newsroom, but it is going mainstream and it should be embraced as a positive not a negative. Staying employed, building an audience and improving the success of your content choices seems to be a reasonable plan, real time metrics can help you do this.

4. This is an angle I had not considered… the psychological impact over time on individuals of creating content that does not make money. As put by a former Businessweek employee about his colleagues… “They really feel like writing for Businessweek is a waste of time — it’s not making money, they get nothing out it,”

People are generally happier when they are making money and if metrics and data can help you to make your content more profitable then you should embrace it.

AOP Organisation Census 2010

Wednesday, March 17th, 2010

The UK Association of Online Publishers (AOP) released its annual Organisation Census today and although you have to be a member of the AOP to read the full report, you can see an in depth overview of the census data in this release at econsultancy.

The census had a 100% response rate and it seems thing are looking up for online publishers in 2010 with hiring, new product development and a general sense of optimism back on deck.

I can certainly attest to the fact it has been a tough 2 years since the general economy and traditional media took a nose dive. Our original business plans had to be put on hold for a while given frozen budgets and a general uncertainty amongst online publishers. But I can support some of the optimism in the census data as we are back in meeting rooms giving presentations and lining up pilot programs for our real time analytics service publishflow™.

So of all the data in the census 2010, what are the three biggest challenges facing online publishers, with which they require help?

1. Mobile services development (51% of respondents)
2. Measurement of ROI (41% of respondents)
3. Database development and utilisation (40% of respondents)

This is a very good time to be a start up either looking to set up as an online publisher (maybe someday for us) OR to supply software and services to online publishers trying to take care of the three concerns above (today for us).

Newspaper economics: online and offline

Friday, March 12th, 2010

Hal Varian, Chief Economist at Google, has put together a solid summary of the current economic challenges facing traditional newspaper organizations.

You may have come across some of the data in bits and chunks over the past few months, but his slides consolidate what you need to know.

Depending on your position in the news space, you will have your own takeaways… my takeaways:

1. Online ad revenue for newspapers is only about 5% of total ad revenue - imo big upside for news publishers to pull ad budgets online. Can they do it? So far it’s not happening.

2. Time spent reading (scanning) online news is about 1 minute per day for the average person - imo most people are reading during the day while at work for a quick hit, but sites are still repackaged newspapers not intended for a quick hit experience.

3. Leisure reading happens weekends and outside of work hours while people are on the move - imo newspapers should double down fast and start creating the next “weekend” reading experiences for tablet and mobile devices.

4. 14% of costs as a percentage of revenue are from editorial activities - imo this is the shining light for the future of media and in particular news. 86% of costs as a percentage of revenue for newspapers are NOT related to content creation, drop that anchor and you have a whole new economic reality for news distribution.

I remember a conversation I had about 5 months ago with a former online editorial director of one of the UK’s big four newspapers…

me: “what does your ideal news organization look like?”

him: “Small office with cheap rent. 6 guys. 3 editors, 2 programmers, 1 sales guy. Outsource all content creation to freelance text, audio and video journo’s. Start with mobile content creation first and work backwards to the desktop browser if we even make it there.

me: “as long as all of you are analytics guys as well and using our publishflow™ analytics service, I am on board”

Enough from me, let’s hand the floor over to Hal Varian from Google…

030910 Hal Varian FTC Preso

Real Time Home Page Analysis is a Job Requirement

Tuesday, March 9th, 2010

I have a bunch of searches set up to track the evolution of online news job postings. In particular I am looking for job postings that mention the words “real time”, “monitor site traffic”, “story placement”, “story trends” and other word combinations that capture the convergence of editor, web producer and stats geek.

Similar to the portadista job role I posted and reviewed last year, this one for a site manager at the TheStreet.com just popped up. I have highlighted the interesting chunk.

It is good to see big media sites starting to realize the value of using data and real time metrics to provide content decision support. We are big believers of this growing trend, which is why we are building a business around delivering real time analysis and insight to online news publishers via our service publishflow™.

‘ROI’ Driven Newsrooms are Here for Good

Friday, February 26th, 2010

Most of the newsrooms we work with are using traditional web analytics services like Omniture, Webtrends and Google Analytics to quantify their traffic and page impression stats on a daily, weekly and monthly basis. Nothing shocking here, pretty much par for the course.

But it is rare that we see newsrooms really studying their analytics data on an hourly or daily basis to uncover new insight about visitor behaviour, story preferences and overall engagement with authors. There is a ton of information trapped in traditional web analytics packages that can help newsrooms become more efficient and make more money.

It has long been our vision at Kontexto, that newsrooms will need to start using traditional ‘return on investment’ business metrics for every story they create. Like every other business that makes decisions based on future returns, newsrooms can be no different if they wish to survive.

Companies like Demand Media, Huff Post and others are onto this, but AOL is the first big media brand embracing this approach and you can get up to speed on it in a brief, but timely article from Businessweek ‘AOL Moves to Build Tech ‘Newsroom of the Future’CEO Tim Armstrong deploys software that helps journalists collaborate on articles readers seem to want, then reports the traffic they generate.

They are using stats, stats and more stats to determine what topics, stories and authors are successful over time. But more importantly, it uncovers what is not working over time so adjustments can be made.

“ROI”, “efficient allocation of resources” and “market driven story creation” may seem cold and dry, but I want as many newsrooms as possible to be around 3, 5, 20 years from now and using stats to help make sure this happens is something we (and AOL and a growing list) believe in.

Watch out for a big transition to data driven reporting in the coming years. Can’t wait.

publishflow™ introduces real time news analytics dashboards for the online news industry

Thursday, October 15th, 2009

publishflow™ is early into its second year as a real time news analytics service for the online news industry. After a year in the trenches meeting with with news brands from around the world and dealing with the global media slowdown, we have learned alot about how to keep things lean while the market for real time news analytics starts to unfold. It is our firm belief that news organizations of all types and sizes can benefit from monitoring and analyzing real time news flow in creative ways. We want to help them do it.

The one thing I have learned in the past 13 months is that “creative” can only be achieved through “flexible”. publishflow™ v1 was outstanding at answering certain questions about news flow on a regular basis, but was a bit handcuffed at times when we wanted to express questions of the public news flow on the fly and in real time. That has all changed now with the latest version of publishflow™.

The newest version of publishflow™ is a complete overhaul of our technology guts that has made everything real time. Our data collection, parsing, categorizing, indexing, storage, search, notification and analysis technology lets everything happen in real time. Whether one is interested in using publishflow™ to track website publishing performance, monitor competitor publishing metrics or trend topic coverage across the web, it’s all happening in real time now.

We are comfortable now that there is a no one size fits all model for real time news analytics and our customers now have the “flexibility” with our service to be as “creative” as they need to be in order to monitor, compare and trend news analytics data.

In line with the new publishflow™ release, the website has been updated at www.publishflow.com with some new information specifically for news executives, section editors and reporters+bloggers. You can take a tour of publishflow™ as well to get some good screencaps, videos and descriptions of what the service can do.

The new publishflow website

A sample publishflow™ real time news analytics dashboard view

I think I know a few developers who are going to be taking a few days off next week, well deserved. Thanks for all the hard work and time put in to let us take a massive jump forward as a company.

WSJ Europe Buys Madoff

Thursday, March 12th, 2009

Well the keyword that is.

Given the recent spike in interest in Madoff and the recent announcement that he is going to jail, it looks like the Wall Street Journal made a move and created a Google AdWords campaign to drive traffic to their Madoff content.

Here are the Google AdWords guesstimates on what it might cost them per click and the expected search volume:

According to the publishflow™ news presence chart for Madoff, the volume of Madoff content has jumped 107% over the past 10 days, a solid indicator that most online newsrooms are covering Madoff in high volumes:

Cranked up news presence usually goes hand and hand with cranked up search volumes, so WSJ Europe is taking a nice gamble to try and win some readers with their Madoff AdWords purchase.

You can check out their Madoff landing page here:

WSJ Madoff Landing Page

publishflow™ has officially launched

Thursday, February 5th, 2009

6 people, 180 days, 5 cities and 1 baby later, publishflow™ has officially launched.

It’s been a whirlwind ride getting publishflow™ out the door. Lots of ups, downs and sideways spin outs along the way, but we got it done and we are already excited about the next version.

One of the big changes we made in the past two months is introducing an online sales model that lets anyone try our services for free for 30 days and then pay directly online with a credit card. This has proven to be the right choice for us as sign ups for publishflow™ are heading upwards very quickly.

Big thanks to the whole team that made alot of things happen behind the scenes. Of course, big praise to our fearless techno leader ‘Uncle Rico’ who made us all realize that assigning tasks and tracking progress online was VERY necessary. It worked.

No beach front vacations at this point. We are onto building out investflow™ and buzzflow™ now.

Is it a tough world out there right now?, sure it is, but we love what we do and that is why it’s gonna work. Be talking to you soon.

It took the Super Bowl to bring down Obama

Monday, February 2nd, 2009

It is no secret that Obama has been dominating news coverage for the past two months and particularly the past few weeks since the inauguration. I thought if there was ever one event that may have a shot at knocking him out of first place in global news coverage it would be the Super Bowl. And it was.

As part of the Kontexto news monitoring and analysis platform, we have just rolled out a breaking news coverage service the monitors over 1000 of the worlds largest online news publishers 24 hours a day and generates a 1, 2 and 3 hour view of news stories as they break.

I am including our breaking news coverage graph with a 1 hour, 2 hour and 3 hour view as of 1pm PST on Februrary 2, 2009.

Kontexto Breaking News Coverage 3 hour view

Kontexto Breaking News Coverage 2 hour view

Kontexto Breaking News Coverage 1 hour view

And just like you I DID notice that Michael Phelps has overtaken Obama as well in the past hour for his dabbles with the Mary Jane. I suspect the only thing that will change that is if Obama gets busted hitting the bong in the oval office in the next couple of hours.