I have not seen anything on
your site about any of the
rss autopublisher or rss
publishing.
I have learned a lot about
blogs and have incorporated
a number of the suggestions
and can't thank you enough.
Project DU Reader is a new RSS newsreader, with some innovative ideas and a cross-platform promise: Win, Mac and Linux.
While Project DU Reader is presently available only for PC/Windows, the Mac version will be out in a matter of days (while the Linux one is still under development). It is also comforting to see a company getting the gist of how strategically important is to provide a product that fully works across platforms. Nonetheless every geek and marketing VP keeps repeating that there is not enough of a market out there, I remain of the opinion that having a product that is available on all three major operating systems gives a tremendous boost in popularity, credibility and end-user confidence in it. When people know that they can interoperate using that tool with just about anyone out there, their willingness to try it and share it with their close contacts increases manifold.
So far, there have been a few other RSS tools that worked across operating systems, and their final performance, interface and look and feel left much to be desired.
It is also true that all web-based RSS news aggregators/readers like My Yahoo, Bloglines, Kinja, Gush, and many other ones are ALL accessible from any type of operating system and computer.
(Wonder why there is so much talk about the Web becoming the next operating system?)
Project DU Reader, is a good, free RSS newsreader and it offers me an ideal opportunity to analyze in a little more depth:
a) where developers should look in building the next generation of these tools
b) what are the routes to getting deep, viral traction and
c) some ideas for applying innovative new monetization approaches to this.
Project DU Reader is definitely a tool that is breaking new ground in the right direction.
I like the foundations on which Project DU is built, and would much like to help them stretch it out further.
I must also say, that I have seen other similar tools before. Back when I did, like now, have tried to suggest to the developers to widen their horizons and their way of thinking if they wanted to:
a) ever make RSS widely adopted while
b) creating a tool that was found to be useful and
c) which could also provide profitable business to all parties involved (in intelligent, non-intrusive, ethical and creative ways).
I didn't succeed. So let me try again.
Project DU Reader truly inspired me on the same wavelength that had originally sparked my interest and quest for bulding a custom RSS reader. It also offered me an opportunity to take up again this very relevant topic, which missing for me, a strong development and engineering lab, I have had to leave to rest for a while.
So here I am, recounting first what I saw inside Project DU Reader that inspired me and then suggesting how this type of tool can be taken to the next level to become an infinitely useful, disruptive and possibly very profitable solution for content publishers of all kinds.
Here are the good things I saw when I downloaded Project DU Reader and I tried it out on my Windows PC.
Within Project DU Reader the end user can:
Other things I saw :
The formatting of the content inside the newsreader is left to dubious aesthetics and not to an effective implementation of solid information design principles that would allow content to be easily scannable and immediately legible. Lots of work needed in this direction.
Overall interface: too noisy, clunky, and colorful. Too many ads on top, too much of this coolish 3D shaded buttons and other "chrome" cluttering up the interface. The interface in a tool like this needs to be quiet. Yes, the buttons are cool, but we did not download the tool to contemplate some cooly designed 3D looking funky buttons. We wanted to have a tool that allowed us to get at the news we care about the most before anyone else. We are here for the content. So turn off the visual noise and buy yourself some Edward Tufte's books, access to Kinja and Gush for appetizers and a copy of Groove to get really inspired.
Something slick, minimalist and with the minimum amount of color. Just enough to highlight or note what is of importance. We need the interface to be a complement to our experience. Not to try to be the experience itself. At least in this case.
Content: Project DU Reader contains a pre-set number of "categories" into which news feeds can be placed. Each one of these already contains a number of pre-selected feeds. Mostly, these appear to be authors that I personally don't know and have not heard of before. After a short browse-through such content pre-selection appears pretty mediocre to my personal taste (but who am I to judge. This tool, by definition, should either bring you the best, or, if not, allow you complete choice of what you are going to read.)
Happily you can easily add any new URL for new feeds and place it inside any one of the major categories you have available. As easily, existing feeds can be deleted, renamed or modified in any way you like.
What is rather very interesting is that Project DU Reader states the following on its site about its content and authors:
"It's filled with headlines from some of the best blogs you've never heard of. In fact, we've spent hundreds, maybe thousands of hours scouring the web, trying to find the most intriguing sites the world has to offer.To be fair, we pay the favored blogs a bit each month for the right to use their stuff.
But we don't edit what they say, that would be a very un-fun read."
That is pretty interesting indeed and relevant to the many hot discussion going on in the blogosphere about this very issue: should bloggers be paid?
On the other hand, what I would add to this tool to make it a killer app, is the following:
This specific list of basic additional features would make your average RSS newsreader a disruptive instrument for marketing, news distribution, independent publishing, marketing of other products and sales, vehicle for contextual advertising and sponsorship, and possibly a lot more.
RSS adoption would get an injection of confidence as this would provide a self-explanatory vehicle for offering RSS to the novices.
[The above approach could be well realized by any of the Web-based aggregating services that also operate in this space, with probably much less inconveniences and coding issues.]
The point is: give the end user, and to the many corporate and private mini-publishing outlets the ability to:
a) create valuable content around a topic
b) completely customize the look and feel
c) distribute and market the newly created content in any way they want
d) monetize this mechanism by using several alternative and complementary approaches. Each user selects the one(s) most appropriate to her philosophy, products and goals.
In essence, make the RSS newsreader become a "platform" for filtering, aggregating, and publishing custom content-specific news that empowers the small and large publishers to fuel end-user adoption in an effective and self-sustainable way.
By adopting the above-listed suggestions, content publisher are motivated to create custom and freely distributable DU newsreaders that are targeted to very specific custom audiences. Why having the end users do all of the effort of getting the RSS feed to go into a reader with all of the little nuances and difficulties that may involve?
Give the end user an easy-to-use tool (the RSS reader) with the content she wants embedded in it and you can be sure that this will pose much less adoption issues than expecting people to right-click on orange tags, search for an RSS reader in an ocean of possibilities, and then slapping the two together. (Sure, for me and you it is a no-brainer, but if we want wide and popular adoption, we need to make this much easier. And this is one way to do so.)
The more content publishers can customize and personalize to their liking this tool, the more opportunities they themselves will create. Who wants to ride this RSS Wave needs to give the end users lots of opportunity for becoming authors, and effective marketers distributors.
Content publishers enabled with these tools will do the content authoring, filtering, selection needed to create a high-quality information channels. Given the tools (or the "service") they will personalize and make the tool look sharp and effective to use.
Essentially they will find the solutions for you. Because they want to be doing an effective job of it while becoming financially independent with this.
So, if you provide them with the opportunity to actually do it, by giving them:
a) the content,
b) the publishing tools,
c) the personalization an branding options and
d) the choice of which monetization option to adopt,
they really only have to grab the ball and run with it.
They will market it and spread these topic-related digital content aggregators in a myriad different incarnations all by themselves.
If independent content authors can be given the opportunity to have an extra, reliable, complementary channel for distributing their content to their readers, while reducing their surfing time and bringing to them the cream of what they want to be updated about, they will take that opportunity and use it to their best advantage by creating new content, distributing it and finding the best way to monetize it without selling their credibility and filtering authority.
It is therefore the task of those who are developing these tools to anticipate, explore and analyze emerging new monetization opportunities, while strongly avoiding traditional approaches (such as inserting ad banners inside the reader).
It is in the hands of these geeks, developers and hopefully of some smart and forward looking investors to understand how huge this opportunity is, and how perfect the timing happens to be.
How to monetize it?
Allow diversification and multiple parallel approaches to monetization instead of only one.
Then specifically:
[Again. Is of the essence that it is the content publisher, that given multiple and highly flexible options is to decide where and how to integrate this products/services into the distributable RSS newsreader.]
On many of the above options, the developer of this tool can bank on keeping a small percentage of each and any of the transactions that can take place through those monetization options. On the other hand, the developer should be smart enough to offer also a set of fully licensed versions that allow the independent content publisher to not only do as much as otherwise possible but also to keep in full the income streams from all of the monetization venues integrated in exchange for a bigger one-time payment at the beginning.
Well, these are just initial ideas. I am sure they could be much refined and improved.
But in all cases, the more options the better
Download Project DU Reader now. Free.
What do you think?
**Update**
N.B.: Project DU is owned by SBC Internet Services, which is itself part of the mega ($41bn) US telecom operator SBC, a Fortune 50 company.
I am finding out now
2005-07-11 16:53:20 |
I have not seen anything on
your site about any of the
rss autopublisher or rss
publishing.I have learned a lot about
blogs and have incorporated
a number of the suggestions
and can't thank you enough.