Posts tagged as:

publishing

Notepaper Sized Kindle. Worst Rumor Of The Year

by Jason Wilk on February 27, 2009

Kindle-3-image

  • Just as Hearst released there plans to release a notepaper sized e-reader today, rumors of a competing Kindle 3 have been leaked from inside Amazon says FastCompany. Even though the Kindle 2 has just been released, there are still complaints that the screen is “still relatively tiny, there’s no touch-screen function and stylistically it’s still somewhat of a mess with about 30% of its top surface dedicated not to its primary function as an e-book visualizer, but for a keyboard”
  • Just like the Hearst model, the Kindle 3 is also said to have a notepaper-sized screen, better for viewing magazine and newspaper-style content, plus room for advertisers. As I said in my last post, the only chance a large screen e-reader has is if it finds its way onto every-one’s coffee table and is loaded up with the latest papers from around the country when I turn it on. But will that succeed? The price point will be a major factor, as competing low-priced laptops and netbooks along with the upcoming tablet computers offer more than just reading capabilities. Example: I sleep with my laptop 5 feet away from me when I sleep. As soon as I wake up I can take care of email, blogging and of course, reading the news. It will take something special for me to want to reach over for an e-reader with limited functions as my morning replacement. Also consider the fact that a 6-inch Kindle is ultra-portable and can fit in my laptop bag. A notepaper sized product will have to find it’s own ride as I don’t have room for it, not to mention anything I can do on my e-paper, I can get done and more on my laptop. I think Bezos, Amazon’s CEO is smart enough to consider these major factors, and will steer clear of the large screen devices. Trying to find a new device for the news is just not practical. It is widely known that Amazon is working with schools to find a solution to digital text-books, which is about the only thing a large screen makes sense for.
  • I think a large Kindle for newspapers is a terrible rumor at best.

[Post to Twitter] 

{ 0 comments }

AOL CEO’s Letter To Staff Regarding Layoffs

by Jason Wilk on January 28, 2009

  • AOL CEO Randy Falco’s letter to the staff about laying off 10 percent of its workforce (around 700 people). Falco blames the economy flattening advertising revenue. Looks like pouring money into Platform A, AOL’s advertising network which launched September 2007, wasn’t a good idea. Here is the letter:

Dear AOL colleagues,

I’m writing to tell you about some important decisions we’ve made about AOL’s business and why we’ve made them.

The deepening economic recession has affected every corner of the economy, including our own. Online marketers have tightened their ad buying across the board, reducing their spend by hundreds of millions of dollars.

As a result, we will be reviewing our entire organization to further align resources and expenses against the real revenue opportunities in this difficult market. Part of this will involve consolidating groups to gain efficiencies that will unfortunately lead to head-count reductions. We anticipate this will result in a net reduction of our workforce of up to 10% over the next several quarters–and we will attempt to finalize all domestic actions by the end of March. Reducing our workforce is never easy, particularly in the current climate, but our goal in doing this is to provide our core businesses the resources they need to thrive. Please know that, as always, we’ll be doing everything we can to help and support those affected, including offering severance packages and other services.

To further keep employment costs down, we will also forgo merit pay increases in 2009. This is a painful decision, but one that many companies have prudently taken to help minimize the number of layoffs they have to make.

To provide some perspective on these decisions, right now we’re two years into a three-year turnaround plan. Since day one, our strategy has focused on building and growing mutually dependent publishing, advertising and social media businesses to take advantage of the shifting media landscape. We’ve worked shoulder-to-shoulder to make considerable progress during this time.

We acquired best-in-class companies across the digital advertising space (AdTech, Third Screen Media, Lightningcast, buy.at, TACODA and Quigo, respectively) and integrated them with Advertising.com to build Platform-A, the largest, smartest display advertising platform in the world.

We grew our MediaGlow audience via an efficient content development model that in 2008 enabled us to launch more than 20 new sites that are generating significant page view (up 64% year over year in December), engagement (up 39% year over year) and unduplicated user (70+ million) numbers. This momentum will continue in 2009 with our goal of creating an additional 30+ editorially curated sites focused on consumer passion points.

We combined Bebo with our longtime community assets AIM and ICQ as well as newer acquisitions Goowy, Yedda and SocialThing, to build People Networks, gaining AOL a foothold in the critical social media space, with more announcements to come on the next phase of development in both the social media space and in the integration of social and publishing capabilities.

This progress continues to put AOL in a strong position to capitalize on our new business model when the recession ends.

In addition to focusing our investments, a successful turnaround plan also requires us to realign our cost structure against this three-pronged business model–making difficult decisions to cut costs in areas that aren’t critical to our growth. Splitting out the Access business improved the transparency of what’s working and what’s not, and allowed us to make better decisions about exiting businesses that weren’t performing while investing in growth areas. A successful turnaround plan also mandates we control costs, operate with healthy margins and position the company for sustainable growth. As you know, we’ve moved repeatedly to bring discretionary expenses in line to spare across-the-board job cuts.

But we’ve also had to make many hard decisions along the way. And this moment is no exception. We’re at a pivotal point in AOL’s transformation, and need to be even more strategically focused and operationally efficient as we weather the economic storm.

In addition to the head-count reductions and the 2009 merit pay decision, we are also making changes throughout the organization to improve efficiency and better align it to our three core businesses. This includes a review of our international operations and our global shared-services functions. In addition, we will continue throughout the year to carefully and thoroughly review all our products and services to make sure every one fully supports our strategy and has the potential for growth.

Finally, we are going to realize significant savings by continuing to consolidate our facilities–for example, moving from two buildings to one in Mountain View, from two floors to one in Los Angeles, and leasing unused space on our Dulles campus.

With these and other changes, we will take significant annual run-rate costs out of our business while, importantly, retaining the flexibility to invest in our growth strategy.

I know all this will raise questions, but I wanted to share as much as I could with you now. Senior management will provide more details as appropriate to their teams in the weeks ahead.

As difficult as things look right now, the economy eventually will turn around. Some companies will use this time prudently and make difficult decisions to come out of it in better shape–growing toward areas of opportunity, scaling back in others and maintaining a line on costs all around. Our only choice is to be one of these companies. With your continued hard work and dedication, we will position ourselves to emerge a stronger company ready to lead in a vibrant online market.

Randy

[Post to Twitter] 

{ 0 comments }

HeyZap, The Longtail Competitor To Oberon Media

by Jason Wilk on January 15, 2009

  • If you haven’t heard of Oberon Media, I’m sure you’ve played a casual game or two on one of the many sites that they power. Since their inception, Oberon has become the king of casual games, providing partners like MSN, MySpace, MTV, Walmart.com, NBC and more with their game player.
  • Enter Heyzap, the latest product launch out of the Y Combinator college of startups. Founded by serial entrepreneurs, and my friends, Immad Akhund (recently sold Clickpass) and Jude Gomila, HeyZap is to become the longtail competitor to Oberon by creating an easily embeddable casual games player for use by any website or blog. Webmasters now have the ability to offer their users 4000+ casual games with a simple strip of code.
  • Immad says “Currently, publishers don’t have easy access to highly addictive, online casual games content, but HeyZap intends to change this. Heyzap will shift where users play casual games and bring casual games to a larger audience”. The player aggregates and filters casual games from major game portals, game developers and Mochi Media, recommending users with the most popular games titles in their favorite categories.
  • Some of the benefits to adding HeyZap to a site or blog include increasing user engagement, such as higher on-site time and potentially more page-views.
  • The platform also hopes to help promote new game developers who aren’t getting exposure on the major networks, offering them ad-revenue shares and a home for their games.
  • Casual gaming is now a $2.2bn market, predicted to grow at 25% this year. With the success of Oberon Media, HeyZap stands a real chance in the market for providing game tools for the rest of us. Somebody like DemandMedia, who offers tools for publishers could be setting their eye on this company very soon (Acquisition maybe?) Stay tuned….

Try it out here:

[Post to Twitter] 

{ 2 comments }

Google Takes The LIFE Photo Archive To The Mainsteam

by Jason Wilk on December 13, 2008

picture-7

  • Last monthly Google quietly announced a partnership with LIFE Magazine to bring their entire archive of offline photos to the web. Today they bring it to the masses by advertising it on the Google Images homepage. This is one of Google’s most prominent achievements as they continue to try and organize the offline web online. This last week Google announced that you will now be able to search magazine online, another big step for the grand mission that is Google Book Search.
  • The collection of newly-digitized images includes photos and etchings produced and owned by LIFE dating all the way back to the 1750s. A majority of the images have never been published and most the ones that did have only been seen by few collectors and historians. In the process, Google searched (by hand) the dusty archives which contained negatives, slides, glass plates, etchings, and prints that needed to be converted. As of last month during the testing period, they had about 20 percent of the collection online or around 2 million photos. Now, they are nearing completion of the 10 million total photos.

[Post to Twitter] 

{ 0 comments }

google-dollar-sign

  • As we already know, Google is searching high and far for areas to drive more revenue with their ads. Today they add another industry sector to try and monetize, parked domains. Google AdSense For Domains (for everyone) is the search giant’s latest addition, targeting the millions of domain owners out there that are squatting on their names while they appreciate or decide what to do with them.
  • Google AdSense for Domains has already been around prior for owners of domain names with at or around 1 million monthly pageviews. The new addition will include anyone with a parked domain and will compete heavily with big name brands Parked.com, DomainSponsor.com and many others.
  • This is another questionable territory for Google as the squatter monetizers have recieved harsh criticism from advertisers who question the validity of the clicks which return poor quality traffic. Google may be out to save the industry, which has been accused of serving up fradulent clicks to make money for the domain owners while taking home a nice profit for themselves. Do the math, Parked.com monetizes more than 2.5 million domain names; serving 2 fraudulent clicks a day per domain at around $0.25 is well, a nice profit. I’m not saying they are behind it, but even Google will have a hard time telling whether or not a couple clicks a day coming from mutliple or masked IP addesses are fraudulent ot not. Maybe they don’t care. In either case it’s going to be a nice chunk of extra change for them.
  • Currently the program will only be available for publishers located in North America and will expand to other regions shortly. If you are a currently using AdWords to advertise your company and would prefer to opt-out of having your ads served on parked domains, here is a  step by step guide

[Post to Twitter] 

{ 1 comment }