31Mrz

72 hours and counting – und immer noch gut drauf

Kategorie Unternehmen | TAGS , , , ,

Inzwischen finde ich den Durchhaltewillen des sevenload-Teams in Sachen Relaunch ja schon bewundernswert. Ibo bloggt und twittert weiter unverdrossen den Stand der Dinge, es knirscht offensichtlich in einigen Ecken, sodass der große Hebel noch später umgelegt werden kann, als noch gestern gedacht. Aber der Humor in der Truppe stimmt, wie der aktuelle Wartungsscreen zeigt:bild-1.png

Übrigens: Mein Post von gestern nachmittag hat offensichtlich den Nerv der Stunde getroffen und wurde von Olaf Kolbrück bei Off-the-record zitiert. Danke dafür. Auch Wolfgang Lünenbürger und Sebastian Keil sind voll des Lobes für die Kommunikation seitens des sevenload-Teams. Martin Oetting hingegen war es wohl etwas viel der Selbstoffenbarung, die Kommentare ließen da nicht lange auf sich warten.

31Mrz

Why Google is not the end of information management services

Kategorie Werkzeuge | TAGS , , , , , , ,

Kommentare deaktiviert

I just read Steve Rubel‘s comments on the impact of blogs, communities, and technology in general on PR in the book “online marketing heroes” by Michael Miller (excerpt for download here). A lot of what Steve says is true and cannot be said often enough to decision makers on the side of companies considering their role in the digital world.

However, there’s one thing that I don’t quite agree with and that’s the notion of the free and ubiquitious Google search having replaced proprietary information management services such as LexisNexis, Dow Jones Factiva or especially strong in Germany, Genios, for PR practitioners.

While everyone uses Google, I believe it’s does not cater for every information need a PR professional has. It’s great for the quick overview, but it’s crap for very targeted search. Google does not aggregate print coverage, nor does it provide reliable full-text search for online. Ever tried to find background information on a specific company via Google? I mean information that’s stored in authorities’ databases, financial records, executive profiles and biographies beyond what’s being published by them on their websites. Or have you ever tried to find an original news agencies’ report on a hot industry issue immediately via Google?

So issue number one with Google is the type and level of depth of the information they make accessible. We tend to think that everything is on the web, but it’s not. Actually a huge chunk of the world’s information is stored in other repositories.

Issue number two from a PR’s perspective is the way Google structures search results. The secret algorithm’s assumption that what’s linked more is probably more relevant to the audience is good for up-to-the-minute online content. But it makes the non-linked, but still interesting stuff extremely hard to find. I admit, I haven’t used “social search” sites like Mahalo.com much, they might get closer to what I’m after but I doubt they provide the volume and breadth necessary to make them really useful – at least yet. Thirdly, at this point, Google doesn’t provide any type of qualitative analytics on the search results.

These three areas, depth of information, structure of results and built-in analysis is exactly what differentiates professional information management services from supposedly do-all Google. To be honest, I would have been lost more than once, preparing a pitch presentation or reacting to a client issue in a timely way without theses tools my agency pays for to give us some competitive edge.

[Disclosure: Dow Jones Factiva is a client of mine at Hotwire.]

30Mrz

Sevenload relaunches and lets us peek in the coders’ room

Kategorie Fallbeispiele | TAGS , , ,

Hardcore IT people know that migrating a web community with tens of thousands of users to a new technical platform is no fun. It’s very hard work that requires extremely careful planning and meticulous process control to work out as planned. Meaning that the user experience should not be impacted more than absolutely necessary.

sevenload.gifThis is exactly what German video/multimedia sharing community sevenload is trying to accomplish this weekend. Twenty months after its foundation the company based in Köln is getting ready to unleash platform version 3.0 which is meant to provide the technical basis for future expansion as founder Ibrahim “Ibo” Evsan explains in an interview at (German) media news service DWDL.de.

In such a transition situation a Web company has two fundamental options.

  1. Turn the big switch from one minute to the next and see what happens. Even most diligent testing will never prevent something bad to happen and features (or the entire platform) to malfunction. Huge numbers of user complaints would be the result and the helpdesk would have a hard time appeasing people. Not to mention the negative buzz in blogs and forums. Microsoft does the equivalent with every new version of Windows. We know what happens then.
  2. Open the virtual doors to users and let them participate in what happens during such a major technical overhaul phase. As most of us aren’t hardcore IT folks, we can’t really imagine what’s behind “rewriting the entire software and migrating the platform to the next generation of hardware and app servers”. So why not explain as you go?!

So option 2 is what sevenload went for. And as far as I can tell at this point it’s working out nicely from a PR and community relations perspective. Here’s what’s happening since Friday night (the team is 50 hours + into the migration process now):

First sevenload put their site into “read only mode”, meaning that users can only view existing content such as videos, photos, audio, podcasts, entertainment channels, etc. That’s limiting the user experience, yes, but the communications team explains why this needs to happen in the company blog. The corporate blog is the pivotal point for everthing “official” that the user base needs to know and comms manager Mike Schnoor makes sure to post status updates on a regular basis.

Now that the developer team is working night and day to deploy the new platform, it’s a good time to build some anticipation for the new things to come, so posting screenshots of the new website design and UI details is a great idea. Asking for comment helps involve the users and this openness has brought sevenload a good bunch of positive comments, buzzing with anticipation.

Meanwhile, founder Ibrahim Evsan gives some impressions of how the team is doing and how everyone is working hard to make the transition phase as short a possible. His personal blog is the stage for this peek behind the scenes, complete with photos and short video bits (hosted on YouTube for the time being). It makes the process a lot more transparent and shows that it’s humans after all who make the transformation happen, with very human needs such as sleep. In fact key developers were sent to bed by their boss, he tells us, to reload some energy before taking the last turn before the finish line. Ibo uses Twitter to let his 340 follower know what’s happening, too, linking to his latest blog posts. That helped spread the buzz in the German blogosphere beyond editorial media sites like DWDL and Turi2 into blogs like Cem Basman’s and this one.

But what if things don’t go as planned? In fact, the original plan was to go live with the new site on Saturday night. Come Sunday morning, some users started getting impatient in their blog comments. Once again, time to explain on the blog what exactly is happening and why things are much more complicated than just turning a switch somewhere in the server room. Commentators still appreciate that and encourage the sevenload team to hang in until things are all set up. Meanwhile Ibo gives some insight into the new features.

All in all this is a great example of how PR and community relations can and should work these days. Openness and transparency is not just lip service here but actually lived and breathed with every tweet and post. Fingers crossed Ibo, Mike and team that everything goes to plan!

By the way, the business implications of this relaunch are very interesting, too. Ibo mentions in his DWDL interview that sevenload will be able to embed YouTube content and even make it searchable if the user whishes to. Why would an video service do that, embed an obvious competitor’s content? Now that’s something for another post. Maybe later today.

18Mrz

The winner is…

Kategorie Zeugs | TAGS , ,

…The Saviour of the Finns!

No contest, Mathias blew my socks off with his comment on my little giveaway contest here. His reasoning for a La Fonera from FON is so beyond all logic that he’s the one who will get the machine!

Congratulations to Hamburg!