Gartner on Blogging

January 16th, 2007

There’s been some bold predictions by Gartner on blogging and how the trend might see saturation around next year. (via BBC)

Here are some insightful excerpts.

“Everyone thinks they have something to say, until they’re put on stage and asked to say it.”

The analysts said that during the middle of next year the number of blogs will level out at about 100 million.

The firm has said that 200 million people have already stopped writing their blogs.

“A lot of people have been in and out of this thing,”

I like the first one. A number of people I know have started and then have stopped blogging. Despite wanting to blog, most don’t. Many say they don’t find the time, but I guess that’s one of those simplest excuses you could come up with.
Even if it saturates at 100 million, that’s a lot of blogs. That requires every 1 soul of 70 in the world to blog. A tall order, one can say.

Minglebox - Web 2.0 company in Bangalore

January 11th, 2007

Minglebox Communications Private Ltd. is a start up in the internet and mobile space, founded by ex IIT/IIM alumni. The founders are marketing and technology professionals with varied experience in consumer goods, internet, telecom, financial services and IT industries across India and the US. The company aims to build internet and mobile consumer products for the next generation of Indian users. This is located in Bangalore. Minglebox is in the process of setting up a world class technology team to build a set of highly scaleable web 2.0 based applications/platforms. They are looking to getting a couple or more high caliber techies from the Java world with an interest in building web2.0 technology.>>

Are blogs overhyped?

January 9th, 2007

Yes, this is the truth and I just hate it, Blogs are overhyped….recently I came across some Indian guys starting a blog network which will have blogs on 50 different channels…so now the hype starts…people gets excited about the thing “Woha..50 channels…new blog…amazing…will love to read” haah but they don’t know that it is another attempt for SEO and generate some hefty ad revenue…I am saying this after going through the list of blog topics they are going to cover…topics varied a lot… Diabetes, Depression, VOIP, Health, Night Clubs, Gardening, Kitchens etc….. to me it looks like typical example of attempt to generate many pages and generate revenue through ads…(I will love if they can prove me wrong :-) )Many biggies blogged about the much hyped blog (though most of them had commented negative things)

I do not understand why people hype such small things? In the end it is going to burst like bubble and that’s for sure….

I am not naming the site since I do not want to get into name games but if you are in search engine and blogs circuit you will probably know about what I am talking about…

Anyways, let’s see how they come up with…today they are going to launch their site…

Web 3.0 is about creating Semantic Web

January 8th, 2007

The Semantic Web is a web of data. There is lots of data we all use every day, and its not part of the web. I can see my bank statements on the web, and my photographs, and I can see my appointments in a calendar. But can I see my photos in a calendar to see what I was doing when I took them? Can I see bank statement lines in a calendar?

Why not? Because we don’t have a web of data. Because data is controlled by applications, and each application keeps it to itself.

The Semantic Web is about two things. It is about common formats for interchange of data, where on the original Web we only had interchange of documents. Also it is about language for recording how the data relates to real world objects. That allows a person, or a machine, to start off in one database, and then move through an unending set of databases which are connected not by wires but by being about the same thing more

Internet Marketing in India & SEO

January 4th, 2007

India, the traditional hub for business process outsourcing, offshore call centre operations, software development etc. is being knocked off the top spot by countris like Vietnam, Philipppines, South Africa etc.

In a recent study, while India received a smaller share of the vote — under 50 per cent in each category, South African call centers received a score of 51.1 per cent for attributes such as high-quality call handling standards, a strong technological infrastructure and linguistic capabilities. Though the Indian contact centre market has been praised for its graduate labour pool, it has now reached a point of relative maturity with escalating salaries and staff attrition rates.

South Africa has recently emerged as a highly attractive option for UK and European companies that are keen to operate in a similar time-zone, with agents that share a similar cultural outlook. \”Increased competition has seen emerging locations such as South Africa not only able to meet these demands, but offer the advantage of having a similar time zone and culture to the UK.\” There is also the clear advantage of English mother tongue, complemented by a range of European languages. South Africa benefits from lower political risk compared to many of the other popular offshore locations.

Difficulties with accents and cultural differences were some of the shortcomings in India. Also with National Rail Enquiries relocating its contact centre to India, the complexities of foreign agents getting to grip with the geography of Britain have been brought to the fore. The fact that Indian service providers have to invest in costly private networks and that the use of cost-effective Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP) technology is not permitted, may well be reducing the competitive cost advantage the country has traditionally enjoyed as new entrants into the offshore outsourcing market make their mark.

The governments of many Eastern European countries have for some time been working to attract investment in the outsourced contact centre market, using tax breaks and incentives as a carrot for private enterprise. Despite this, and the obvious advantage of proximity to Western Europe and relative economic stability, our research indicates that Eastern European and former USSR nations are not yet perceived to have attained a sufficiently high standard of call handling necessary to rival their more far-flung - and cost-effective - competitors. The wide range of languages spoken and the affinity with Western European culture may partially bridge this cost difference in the immediate, but EU enlargement will almost certainly push prices up in the long-term.

Vis-a-via Philipppines, which is giving tough competition to India, labour costs in the Philippines tend to be higher than in India but high unemployment and a large pool of graduate level labour have been instrumental in suppressing attrition rates. Latterly, however, there have been reports that the nation is adopting a sweatshop ethic, which is inevitably beginning to trickle down to the standards of its call handling, with a knock-on effect on general perceptions.

Justin’s Rules For Success

January 3rd, 2007

I’m going through an interesting change in my life. A change that will bring more focus to my family, and business… Hope this helps…

#1: Be Narrow
Focus on the smallest possible problem you could solve that would potentially be useful. Most companies start out trying to do too many things, which makes life difficult and turns you into a me-too. Focusing on a small niche has so many advantages: With much less work, you can be the best at what you do. Small things, like a microscopic world, almost always turn out to be bigger than you think when you zoom in. You can much more easily position and market yourself when more focused. And when it comes to partnering, or being acquired, there’s less chance for conflict. This is all so logical and, yet, there’s a resistance to focusing. I think it comes from a fear of being trivial. Just remember: If you get to be #1 in your category, but your category is too small, then you can broaden your scope-and you can do so with leverage.

#2: Be Different
Ideas are in the air. There are lots of people thinking about-and probably working on-the same thing you are. And one of them is Google. Deal with it.
How? First of all, realize that no sufficiently interesting space will be limited to one player. In a sense, competition actually is good-especially to legitimize new markets. Second, see #1-the specialist will almost always kick the generalist’s ass. Third, consider doing something that’s not so cutting edge. Many highly successful companies-the aforementioned big G being one-have thrived by taking on areas that everyone thought were done and redoing them right. Also? Get a good, non-generic name. Easier said than done, granted. But the most common mistake in naming is trying to be too descriptive, which leads to lots of hard-to-distinguish names. How many blogging companies have “blog” in their name, RSS companies “feed,” or podcasting companies “pod” or “cast”? Rarely are they the ones that stand out.

#3: Be Casual
We’re moving into what I call the era of the “Casual Web” (and casual content creation). This is much bigger than the hobbyist web or the professional web. Why? Because people have lives. And now, people with lives also have broadband. If you want to hit the really big home runs, create services that fit in with-and, indeed, help-people’s everyday lives without requiring lots of commitment or identity change. Flickr enables personal publishing among millions of folks who would never consider themselves personal publishers-they’re just sharing pictures with friends and family, a casual activity. Casual games are huge. Skype enables casual conversations.

#4: Be Picky
Another perennial business rule, and it applies to everything you do:
features, employees, investors, partners, press opportunities. Startups are often too eager to accept people or ideas into their world. You can almost always afford to wait if something doesn’t feel just right, and false negatives are usually better than false positives. One of Google’s biggest strengths-and sources of frustration for outsiders-was their willingness to say no to opportunities, easy money, potential employees, and deals.

#5: Be User-Centric
User experience is everything. It always has been, but it’s still undervalued and under-invested in. If you don’t know user-centered design, study it. Hire people who know it. Obsess over it. Live and breathe it. Get your whole company on board. Better to iterate a hundred times to get the right feature right than to add a hundred more. The point of Ajax is that it can make a site more responsive, not that it’s sexy. Tags can make things easier to find and classify, but maybe not in your application. The point of an API is so developers can add value for users, not to impress the geeks.
Don’t get sidetracked by technologies or the blog-worthiness of your next feature. Always focus on the user and all will be well.

#6: Be Self-Centered
Great products almost always come from someone scratching their own itch.
Create something you want to exist in the world. Be a user of your own product. Hire people who are users of your product. Make it better based on your own desires. (But don’t trick yourself into thinking you are your user, when it comes to usability.) Another aspect of this is to not get seduced into doing deals with big companies at the expense or your users or at the expense of making your product better. When you’re small and they’re big, it’s hard to say no, but see #4.

#7: Be Greedy
It’s always good to have options. One of the best ways to do that is to have income. While it’s true that traffic is now again actually worth something, the give-everything-away-and-make-it-up-on-volume strategy stamps an expiration date on your company’s ass. In other words, design something to charge for into your product and start taking money within 6 months (and do it with PayPal). Done right, charging money can actually accelerate growth, not impede it, because then you have something to fuel marketing costs with.
More importantly, having money coming in the door puts you in a much more powerful position when it comes to your next round of funding or acquisition talks. In fact, consider whether you need to have a free version at all. The TypePad approach-taking the high-end position in the market-makes for a great business model in the right market. Less support. Less scalability concerns. Less abuse. And much higher margins.

#8: Be Tiny
It’s standard web startup wisdom by now that with the substantially lower costs to starting something on the web, the difficulty of IPOs, and the willingness of the big guys to shell out for small teams doing innovative stuff, the most likely end game if you’re successful is acquisition.
Acquisitions are much easier if they’re small. And small acquisitions are possible if valuations are kept low from the get go. And keeping valuations low is possible because it doesn’t cost much to start something anymore (especially if you keep the scope narrow). Besides the obvious techniques, one way to do this is to use turnkey services to lower your overhead-Administaff, ServerBeach, web apps, maybe even Elance.

#9: Be Agile
You know that old saw about a plane flying from California to Hawaii being off course 99% of the time-but constantly correcting? The same is true of successful startups-except they may start out heading toward Alaska. Many dot-com bubble companies that died could have eventually been successful had they been able to adjust and change their plans instead of running as fast as they could until they burned out, based on their initial assumptions.
Pyra was started to build a project-management app, not Blogger. Flickr’s company was building a game. Ebay was going to sell auction software.
Initial assumptions are almost always wrong. That’s why the waterfall approach to building software is obsolete in favor agile techniques. The same philosophy should be applied to building a company.

#10: Be Balanced
What is a startup without bleary-eyed, junk-food-fueled, balls-to-the-wall days and sleepless, caffeine-fueled, relationship-stressing nights? Answer?:
A lot more enjoyable place to work. Yes, high levels of commitment are crucial. And yes, crunch times come and sometimes require an inordinate, painful, apologies-to-the-SO amount of work. But it can’t be all the time.
Nature requires balance for health-as do the bodies and minds who work for you and, without which, your company will be worthless. There is no better way to maintain balance and lower your stress that I’ve found than David Allen’s GTD process. Learn it. Live it. Make it a part of your company, and you’ll have a secret weapon.

#11 (bonus!): Be Wary
Overgeneralized lists of business “rules” are not to be taken too literally.
There are exceptions to everything.

Insights into leadership

December 29th, 2006

Leadership at individual, firm and even country level can be learnt by looking at some key events; I will use the “story metaphor” to drive home my point.

1. One of my friend re-told the way Microsoft “caught up” with Internet (and the browser Internet Explorer). It was like a traveler standing in the Indian Railway platform when a train was about to leave. There were announcements that the train was about to leave. There was one passenger who refused to board the train declaring it is NOT for him. The train started, even picked up speed; suddenly the same passenger realized the train will take him to his destination ran all the way and managed to get into the train; interestingly this strange passenger did not stop after entering the train. He ran all the way till he reached the engine. In fact he went up to the engine cabin, kicked off the driver and started driving the train muttering that he can take it to whatever destination he wanted! (the lesson is simple; if you are clear you can take the organization to where you want to!!)

2. Creative is an interesting Singapore-based IT company, that has occupied a leadership position. But when they started in early nineties, Microsoft tried to make a “sound Card” (once in a while Microsoft does enter hardware arena, the latest being xBox video game console). The sound card from Creative Technology (branded as SoundBlaster) was far superior. After a couple of quarters Microsoft withdrew its hardware from the market and started endorsing Creative solution. Here is the classic case of a small company taking headlong with a giant and winning. (If you have a compelling product you will win even against heavy odds)

3. Intel had an unpleasant task of facing the “Pentium Bug”. As it happens to many of us, the initial reaction of Intel was to deny; any number of reporters were told that it is “inconsequential”; but soon it was clear that it was a BUG, thanks to an Internet posting by an Israeli Professor. Then Intel senior management veered around and executed a strategy that involved “recalls” for those who wanted (Unlike Automobiles recalls are difficult for microprocessors as they are made in hundreds of millions); simulated results about all possible damages; frank acceptance of the error (a simple data entry error involving some coefficients to a complex equation used to “speed up” calculation) and blessings through a Harvard Professor in the form of a Case Study (Leaders need to know that once in a while they have to face unpleasant situation; honesty is often the best policy!)

4. There are any number of other stories (Two Microsoft developers writing much of the ODBC specifications and in the process getting a foothold (and later dominance) in the database area where Microsoft was a late entrant; Toshiba remaining singularly focused on Laptops (except for a brief stint in 2002 when they entered Desktop and quickly withdrew); Microsoft taking along any number of printer and software vendors by relieving them of the drudgery of writing individual device drivers for every possible printer and software product (it was sufficient for them to write to Windows) (you can sometimes win by taking a different route and joining ahead of your competitor; laser sharp focus is a must, even if it gets blurred get it back quickly; larger benefits to much larger partners will win you wars)

5. On the applications side the Indian Railway Reservation system and Sudarshan system at Balaji Temple in Tirupati were examples of leadership that saw the tangible benefits to a significant size of the people and using that to face any number of attempts to stall (George Fernandes as Railway Minister or the employees of Balaji temple) (be clear of “your” constituency and have tangible benefits)

6. Some bold decisions at IIIT-B include speed of execution (between June 3, 1999 to Sep 15, 1999 everything was done, get the place ready (Class rooms, Labs, Hostel, Offices, Library, Computing), have faculty, design curriculum, get thousands of students to apply, select them and have them on Board!); betting on Laptops, Wi-Fi; incubate companies; use the power of media (BusinessWeek, Fortune, Stern) and global partnerships (US, Europe, Asia and Africa) (size and age are NOT limitations, lack of imagination is)

Search Engines Crawler

December 28th, 2006

Search engine crawler (spider also called as robot) is a software program that crawl your website pages, records the changes in your web pages and stores them in its database, which is useful for giving you results against your search queries.

Visits of a spider to any website is depends upon relevancy of the website i.e. content of the page, linking structure, link popularity, link saturation, updates in page etc. Each search engine has its own spiders (software programs). And they are having their own individual technology of crawling websites. For example Google’s spider name is Googlebot, Yahoo! Slurp, MSN’s MSNBot etc.

Google crawls every website as per the relevancy given. And this relevancy depends upon link popularity, age of the domain and page rank assigned by google from 01 to 10. Google crawl some websites daily and some website weekly. It may crawl some website pages monthly also. It is totally depends upon your website contents and linking structure.

I advice you all that design your website visitor friendly as well as crawler friendly by writing unique contents and sophisticated linking structure. This will help your website to achieve boost in search engine ranking and promote your company’s products on internet.

Video : Gen Next Medium of Expression

December 27th, 2006

After watching the fascinating video produced by children below, I want to repost an article originally written by me in Feb 2003. I was taught history to reproduce dates of various events like day India got independence, mutiny of 1857, when was Gandhi born? when did nehru die ? This generation has a whole new way to express their thoughts.

In December 2002 spent time in Pune, where I grew up for 22 years before leaving to U.S. for higher studies. One evening I decided to visit the bookshop that we grew up, buying books for school and personal needs. The bookshop also ran a library which allowed you to rent a book or magazine per day for a monthly rental fee, a practice very common in India 25 years ago and a bigger hit during summer vacations. When I visited the shop, was shocked to see it being converted into a garment shop, with the library designated to a small and irrlevant corner. Why this change ?, I asked. Today’s children want to only see cable TV, surf the internet and are not interested in reading books, said the owner. The only ones who subscribe to the library service anymore are the ones above 50. Whether our generation likes this or not we have to accept it. In a historic joint discussion between Andy Grove and Steve Jobs at the Intel Sales Conference in January, Jobs brilliantly explained a similar situation, the big problem today is children consume a lot of video and rich media but are not able to express using the same media, a phenomena pretty much one way. We may disagree but cannot ignore, this will be the media of communication for the next generation, he added. The computer industry needs to build authoring tools, that are easy to use and allows the next generation to author and communicate using video. Steve showed us a number of video demos, making it very clear that Apple is a leader to make this a reality. I was extremely excited to note the significant role the PC has in making the next generation author and communicate using video, a industry designated mature and boring. Around the same time, Lee Gomes from The Wall Street Journal quoted ” Who does Steve Jobs think he is ? Trying to make the PC industry interesting “

interview on CNBC with Warren Buffet

December 12th, 2006

There was a one hour interview on CNBC with Warren Buffet, the second richest man who has donated $31 billion to charity. Here are some very interesting aspects of his life:

 

1) He bought his first share at age 11 and he now regrets that he started too late!

 

2) He bought a small farm at age 14 with savings from delivering newspapers.

 

3) He still lives in the same small 3 bedroom house in mid-town Omaha that he bought after he got married 50 years ago. He says that he has everything he needs in that house. His house does not have a wall or a fence.

 

4) He drives his own car everywhere and does not have a driver or security people around him.

 

5) He never travels by private jet, although he owns the world’s largest private jet company.

 

6) His company, Berkshire Hathaway, owns 63 companies. He writes only one letter each year to the CEOs of these companies, giving them goals for the year. He never holds meetings or calls them on a regular basis.

 

7) He has given his CEO’s only two rules. *Rule number 1: do not lose any of your share holder’s money.  Rule number 2: Do not forget rule number 1.*

 

8) He does not socialize with the high society crowd. His past time after he gets home is to make himself some pop corn and watch television.

 

9) Bill Gates, the world’s richest man met him for the first time only 5 years ago. Bill Gates did not think he had anything in common with Warren Buffet. So he had scheduled his meeting only for half hour. But when Gates met him, the meeting lasted for ten hours and Bill Gates became a devotee of Warren Buffet.

 

10) Warren Buffet does not carry a cell phone, nor has a computer on his desk.

 

11) His advice to young people: *Stay away from credit cards* and invest in yourself.