Bradley Howard's Blog

Views of digital media, innovation, loyalty and business in the real world

Website reading list

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At a recent event, I met up with a regular reader of this blog, Andrew, who asked me what websites and news feeds I read regularly to keep track of trends within digital media, social media and the web in general.

I'll start the answer with a disclaimer - this list has been growing over time, and follows specific interests that I've had over the last couple of years.

I find it impossible to keep going to specific websites to keep up to date, so RSS feeds are the answer. I've tried using a number of RSS readers but because my life is ruled by Outlook - when the 2010 version came along with an excellent RSS reader, I was sold, and am now able to stay up to date with RSS feeds.

If you use Outlook 2010 but don't use it for RSS, I recommend you try it because it presents articles just like emails. (Like you need more emails...)

I'm not including news feeds that post less than an article a month. So the list, in alphabetical order is:

  • Google News. I've set up a number of RSS feeds using Google Alerts. I monitor most of the suppliers in our technology stack, and skim read through the list regularly. I have to skim it because there's usually a lot of duplicate content because of press releases. Examples of the feeds include Akamai (one of our Content Delivery Partners), Endava and IMG (my former company and I still find it interesting to follow).
  • This blog. I keep an archive of all the articles because I find it easier to search, and it's a nice offline backup method.
  • Confused of Calcutta. Written by JP Rangaswami, the Chief Scientist at Salesforce.com. His articles are thought provoking and detailed about all aspects of information, and wider architecture thoughts. If you like the book, Cluetrain Manifesto, you'll love his blog (especially as he wrote a chapter in the 10th anniversary edition) because they share the same writing style. I often comment on JP's articles.
  • Google Webmaster Central Blog. Excellent resource for the latest happenings, straight from the preverbial horse's mouth. I'll often spot content in the articles and email it around to the technical teams at work.
  • Hitwise Intelligence - Heather Dougherty. We have a love/hate relationship with Hitwise that I won't go into here. Sometimes Heather posts interesting traffic trends. Very US centric (not necessarily a bad thing), however she's one of my preferred Hitwise bloggers.
  • Information Is Beautiful. I am fascinated by this company. Anyone who can illustrate massive or complex data sets to enable us mortals to understand it in 2 seconds and keep our attention for 15 minutes with the same diagram is a magician. Chances are that if you see me shortly after a new post, I'll tell you about it.
  • IP TV Times. Updated very regularly, Iolo Jones provides a straight-from-the-heart view of pretty much anything connected to digital media, video, commercialisation and online piracy. I aspire to updating this blog as regularly as Iolo updates his. I often comment on Iolo's articles.
  • Matt Groves Digital Donut. One of the nicest guys in the Digital industry, Matt works at Fallon and often updates his blog with the latest campaigns that have either caught his eye (around the World - not just the UK, which is something I like) or that Fallon are working on.
  • The Opposite Direction. Also one of the nicest guys in the industry, Robin heads up the social media practice at McCann who we do a lot of work with. Social Media is packed with jump-on-the-bandwagon consultants who are full of hot air however Robin is the complete opposite - he shares his knowledge and experience in every meeting. His blog is written in a similar way - you typically learn something new in most articles.
  • The Register. Because I am in IT, and the Register provides the latest IT (and some scientific) news, usually with a good sense of humour. I don't read every article (it would take all day) - I generally skim the headlines and read any articles that are relevant.
  • UK news: Office for National Statistics (The Guardian). I like statistics and the ONS has lots of them. The Guardian apply some commentary but I like the fact it's up to the reader to make sense of them.
  • Webcredible. A varied blog from a usability consultancy where an old IMG colleague, Ismail, works. The blog is full of useful digital media best practices (not just usability) and examples of best websites out-there.
  • What's Next: Top Trends. Thoughts from one of my favourite 'futurists', Richard Watson. I often comment on Richard's posts.

If you have any other recommendations or comments on the feeds above, please do let me know.

Photo courtesy of Bytelove.


 

Happy Birthday post

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This blog has now been going for a year, so I thought I'd share some of the readership statistics with you.

Between 18 January 2010 and 17 January 2011, there have been:

  • 133 posts 
  • 2,556 visitors come along
  • 3,723 page views on the site

In terms of geography, it pretty much matches where we have current and former colleagues, clients, suppliers and friends:

Geography
It's interesting to note that colleagues in Romania and Moldova spend the longest reading articles whereas colleagues in the US are either put off straight away, or read very quickly (quicker than the UK)!

The most popular article of the year was a review on Yammer where 300 people read the review - well above the daily average. Talking of the daily average, this has been steadily growing from nothing at the start of the blog to a steady 20-30 visits a day now.

These figures don't include the RSS feed readers or search engines which keep crawling the site.

A huge thank you to everyone who reads the blog (that includes you!).

My aims for 2011/2 are to double the traffic and have more people commenting. If you have any recommendations or articles you'd like to see, please let me know by adding a comment below or contacting me directly.


 

Why are eBooks more expensive than paper?

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If you have any thoughts on this, I'd be happy to hear. Personally I can't understand why Stephen King's latest book is £12.99 on a Kindle, £8.99 as a paperback and hardback is £8.20.

If the Kindle were free, I would understand that the ebooks need to help subsidise the cost of the device. Only the Kindle costs more than £100, and whilst I doubt Amazon make a huge profit from the device, I doubt it makes a loss.

Any suggestions?

 


 

Web content doesn't last forever

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There are many magazines and blog articles which stress the importance of online privacy based on the notion that once content is 'out there' on the Web, it's there forever.

Yesterday, Microsoft announced that users who keep a blog in their Live Spaces account will need to move it to another company, Wordpress. This process is not automatic though.

During the summer, a friend and neighbour passed away after a courageous, hard fought battle against cancer. Jonathan used Live Spaces to write about his battle in great detail, with a key aim that once he'd won the battle, it would serve to help other similar cancer patients. He included photos, personal thoughts, detailed medical information and contact details of financial, medical and psychological) support networks available to cancer victims. 

So what will happen to Jonathan's blog? Unless someone contacts his wife (who wrote the final, agonising entry after he passed away), the blog will be deleted forever, never to return. So digital content doesn't really last forever - in this case it barely lasted a year.

So what can be done? There are a number of options available. Most blog platforms allow the author to automatically post to another blog platform. You can also host the site yourself (although this will only continue while you're paying for it).

Probably the safest option is to write a paperback book.


 

Why Is Old Media Being Perverse?

Why Is Old Media Being Perverse ?

 

I was going to use the term 'lemmings' but the United Order of Lemmings have written to me and asked me to stop giving them a bad name.

How did ITV get Friends Reunited and ITV Local so wrong ? And where did NewsCorp managed to get MySpace from 100m to 5m users - and why are they now seeming to do the same with The Times online sites?

Yet, with video they have leveraged this positions well and become dominant in the provision of online video in the US and the UK. In the US no major TV company has tried to stray beyond what they do, and at the same time they've come up with concepts such as Hulu.

Collaborative ventures like this have critical mass in the US, but seem futile in the UK where only the BBC count.

Traditional media has great sales capabilities, good production discipline, but the content is what counts.

Great video content is much more difficult to produce than a great article. Volume of video content is even more difficult. For example, by my experience, a minute of high quality video takes an hour to edit on average.

Likewise, audiences now form themselves and generate their own 'content'.

So why can't old media monetize this ? This, perhaps, is the most valuable question in media.

 

I just commented on an excellent article by Iolo Jones of VidZapper regarding Old/Traditional Media companies struggling to make New Media ventures successful. The article is above, and my comment was as follows:

Excellent article Iolo - I agree with every single point.

The BBC have successfully implemented Digital Media so, so well - i.e. iPlayer, the BBC News website (including each upgrade), even the BBC Weather site is excellent (albeit the accuracy can be dubious, that's not their fault though). 

There's no close second in the UK except maybe skysports.com - will the mothership demand that it also becomes paid-subscription?


 

Bradley Howard

Head of Digital Media at Endava, although all the views in this blog are purely mine and not necessarily those of Endava.

 

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