1 / 56

Arm Yourself for the Future: Opportunities and Threats for Your Web Business

Matt McAlister Sr. Product Manager RSS and Social Media, Yahoo!. Arm Yourself for the Future: Opportunities and Threats for Your Web Business. Agenda. Online media trends Mashup examples How and why to step into the game. What is a Mashup?.

johana
Download Presentation

Arm Yourself for the Future: Opportunities and Threats for Your Web Business

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Matt McAlister Sr. Product Manager RSS and Social Media, Yahoo! Arm Yourself for the Future:Opportunities and Threats for Your Web Business

  2. Agenda • Online media trends • Mashup examples • How and why to step into the game

  3. What is a Mashup? • Mashup (music): a musical genre consisting of the combination of the parts of more than one song • Mashup (web application hybrid): a website or web application that combines content from more than one source -- Wikipedia

  4. WHICH ONES MATTER? RSS Readers Browsers Tagging Wikis Social Networks BECAUSE… Both readers and advertisers are migrating this way These tools could bring me new customers, distribution channels and revenue streams Technologies with impact

  5. Alternatives to my home page

  6. RSS Readers and Browsers

  7. On average, Aware RSS Users spend 4 hours per week reading any of approximately 7 RSS feeds. Awareness and Usage of Tools for Accessing and Reading RSS Feeds Base: Currently use RSS feeds (R6)

  8. You can offer more than just headlines

  9. THE BAD Fewer touch points with customers Lose control of content distribution Unproven ad models Less traffic to my home page THE GOOD RSS is getting my content to people the way they want it Driving traffic directly into site content It’s cheap to produce content for these tools Why worry?

  10. Alternatives to my site navigation

  11. Structure versus Meaning • TAXONOMY • A division of things into ordered groups or categories. • SEMANTICS • The study or science of meaning in language. • -- American Heritage Dictionary

  12. The Semantic Web The Semantic Web is a project that intends to create a universal medium for information exchange by giving meaning, in a manner understandable by machines, to the content of documents on the Web.

  13. Hierarchy Model

  14. Matrix Model

  15. 200 Religion 201 Philosophy of Christianity 202 Miscellany of Christianity 203 Dictionaries of Christianity 204 Special topics 205 Serial publications of Christianity 206 Organizations of Christianity 207 Education, research in Christianity 208 Kinds of persons in Christianity 209 History & geography of Christianity 210 Natural theology 211 Concepts of God 212 Existence, attributes of God 213 Creation 214 Theodicy 215 Science & religion 216 Good & evil 217 Not assigned or no longer used 218 Humankind 219 Not assigned or no longer used 220 Bible 221 Old Testament 222 Historical books of Old Testament 223 Poetic books of Old Testament 224 Prophetic books of Old Testament 225 New Testament 226 Gospels & Acts 227 Epistles 228 Revelation (Apocalypse) 229 Apocrypha & pseudepigrapha 230 Christian theology 231 God 262 Ecclesiology 263 Times, places of religious observance 264 Public worship 265 Sacraments, other rites & acts 266 Missions 267 Associations for religious work 268 Religious education 269 Spiritual renewal 270 Christian church history 271 Religious orders in church history 272 Persecutions in church history 273 Heresies in church history 274 Christian church in Europe 275 Christian church in Asia 276 Christian church in Africa 277 Christian church in North America 278 Christian church in South America 279 Christian church in other areas 280 Christian denominations & sects 281 Early church & Eastern churches 282 Roman Catholic Church 283 Anglican churches 284 Protestants of Continental origin 285 Presbyterian, Reformed, Congregational 286 Baptist, Disciples of Christ, Adventist 287 Methodist & related churches 288 Not assigned or no longer used 289 Other denominations & sects 290 Other & comparative religions 291 Comparative religion 292 Classical (Greek & Roman) religion 293 Germanic religion 294 Religions of Indic origin 295 Zoroastrianism (Mazdaism, Parseeism) 296 Judaism 297 Islam & religions originating in it 298 Not assigned or no longer used 299 Other religions Dewey Decimal System: “Religion” • 231 God 232 Jesus Christ & his family 233 Humankind 234 Salvation (Soteriology) & grace 235 Spiritual beings 236 Eschatology 237 Not assigned or no longer used 238 Creeds & catechisms 239 Apologetics & polemics 240 Christian moral & devotional theology 241 Moral theology 242 Devotional literature 243 Evangelistic writings for individuals 244 Not assigned or no longer used 245 Texts of hymns 246 Use of art in Christianity 247 Church furnishings & articles 248 Christian experience, practice, life 249 Christian observances in family life 250 Christian orders & local church 251 Preaching (Homiletics) 252 Texts of sermons 253 Pastoral office (Pastoral theology) 254 Parish government & administration 255 Religious congregations & orders 256 Not assigned or no longer used 257 Not assigned or no longer used 258 Not assigned or no longer used 259 Activities of the local church 260 Christian social theology 261 Social theology 262 Ecclesiology 296 Judaism 297 Islam & religions originating in it ? Buddhism

  16. Tags bridge the gap between structure and meaning

  17. And they become social fabric

  18. A Simple Content Mashup

  19. A Simple Content Mashup

  20. How did they do this?

  21. Tag data makes mashups easy

  22. THE BAD People are interacting with social media tools instead of your site Your content getting mixed up with other sources THE GOOD People using your content for personal use People distributing your content for you Your content accessible for mashups Why Content Data Matters

  23. Producing targeted content Creating communities Selling advertising Your own readers are starting to look like you

  24. Sharing news with each other

  25. Helping each other buy things

  26. Organizing ways to get together

  27. Sharing opinions with eachother

  28. It’s not just for the fun of it There are lots of ways to make money: • Yahoo! • Google • Amazon • eBay • IndustryBrains • Kanoodle

  29. Why User Participation Matters • They create content for you • Your site becomes a destination for groups to form • There’s no better way to learn what your users want • If you don’t give them a way to communicate, they’ll go elsewhere

  30. Mashup Examples

  31. Why play in the Mashup game? • Create more compelling offerings for your users • Get your stuff in front of more people than your competitors • Distribute your revenue model in addition to your content

  32. Anatomy of a Mashup

  33. Explicit description of content longitude and latitude road condition summary

  34. Make it relevant to your users

  35. Make it relevant to your users

  36. The Mashup Model

  37. How do I get mashed up? • Make your content easy to grab • Markup your content with tags and microformats • If you employ interactivity, expose the programming interface for those tools • Jump start it with your own mashups

  38. Yeah, so what? What’s the ROI? • If you don’t, someone else will take your market opportunity • The costs are minimal • The upside is big time distribution

  39. How do I make the model work?Answer: Incentives all around • Mashup artists who use your content must also carry your ads (or sub offers) • (YPN, AdSense, Amazon Affiliates) • Split revenue with your Mashers • Everyone gets what they want • Mashers make money • More users get your content • You make money • Advertisers reach target customers

  40. The arguments against getting connected out there • I’ve got other priorities Make “winning” a priority… it’s no fun just “maintaining” anyhow

  41. The arguments against getting connected out there • I’ve got other priorities • My engineers are working on a new CMS Again? You really really don’t need a new CMS. They would have more fun doing mashups, I’m sure.

  42. The arguments against getting connected out there • I’ve got other priorities • My engineers are working on a new CMS • I just need traffic and things will change Don’t get caught in that trap. If you connnect with a valuable audience, the money will come.

  43. The arguments against getting connected out there • I’ve got other priorities • My engineers are working on a new CMS • I just need traffic and things will change • My content is valuable. I want control over where it appears and who uses it Learn from the RIAA. Incentivize good behavior because you don’t have the $$$ to sue everyone.

  44. The arguments against getting connected out there • I’ve got other priorities • My engineers are working on a new CMS • I just need traffic and things will change • My content is valuable. I want control over where it appears and who uses it • A competitor might use my content and take my users away Make them a partner and profit together. They’ll steal your customers with or without you.

More Related