Author: Perry Hewitt

  • Friday 5 — 6.26.2015

    Friday 5 — 6.26.2015

    atlas chart internet traffic

    1. News stories are often well told visually, particularly in an era where more data than ever is available. Business and tech news site Quartz launched Atlas, a slickly-designed command center for all its charts, where you can download, embed, or grab the data. And it’s an open source product, so you can create your own version.
    2. McKinsey looks at ways that large organizations are raising their digital quotient: strategy, scale, culture, and talent. Their connectivity point focuses on brands and their customers, but these behaviors will also have a large impact on operations within the enterprise.
    3. Does your organization have a reverse-mentorship program around digital? Millennials are helping older professionals with tech in the workplace.
    4. LinkedIn has over 360M members worldwide, and is making some savvy changes to continue that growth. Recent shifts include moving toward a ‘follow’ rather than a reciprocal ‘friending’ model, and becoming a viral platform for content publishing.
    5. In the last 90 days on U.S. government websites, mobile and tablet account for about 32% of traffic. Learn more about user behavior and popular content on government websites at the new analytics portal, analytics.usa.gov.

    Weekend fun: Who among us has not sent an email we regret? Gmail undo to the rescue. But when that inappropriate pixel-blurt comes out as a sexist tweet, you may find yourself at the mercy of Amy Poehler.

    Every Friday, find five, highly subjective pointers to compelling technologies, emerging trends, and interesting ideas that affect how we live and work digitally. Try out the Friday 5 archive, or sign up for a weekly email.

     

  • Friday 5 — 6.19.2015

    Friday 5 — 6.19.2015

    buzzfeed news

    1. Buzzfeed released a news app — and it’s a triumph of substance over listicles. The iOS-only app has a clean design and feature set for mobile, streamlined social sharing, and easy customization options. It’s relatively late to the game compared to the pared down and newly-free NYT Now, but will still likely be a contender for your home screen.
    2. It’s sure hard for mobile apps to retain their user base. A recent study shows that the average Android app loses 90% of its daily active users (DAUs) within 30 days. Here’s a post explaining how the best apps remain sticky to avoid that fate.
    3. Most people envision a distant, sinister future when they think about modern workplace automation. Truth is, it’s already here. Ben Brown points out that “creating customized, interactive automation tools for business tasks is possible with a little open source code, some cloud tools that are mostly free, and a bit of self reflection.” The last of these, of course, is the most difficult.
    4. Twitter struggles to acquire and retain new users, and is releasing a series of changes to improve the logged-out experience. Launching in a few months, Project Lightning will highlight one of Twitter’s most compelling use cases: live events. This feature will show a list of events taking place that people are tweeting about, and serve up a human-curated list of the best tweets.
    5. Now that most of us carry a videocamera wherever we go, a great deal more breaking news is captured via video. In partnership with Storyful, Google this week launched YouTube Newswire to provide a curated feed of the relevant, accurate eyewitness videos.

    Weekend fun: What extraneous text appears in your website’s source code? For Jeb Bush’s new site this week, it was the plot of Die Hard. Website source code sometimes has more pleasant surprises, like job postings. I’ve linked this before, but this tumblr dedicated to code in TV and films is full of clever surprises.

    Every Friday, find five, highly subjective pointers to compelling technologies, emerging trends, and interesting ideas that affect how we live and work digitally. Try out the Friday 5 archive, or sign up for a weekly email.

     

  • Friday 5 — 6.12.15

    Friday 5 — 6.12.15

    What is code?

    1. Cancel all your meetings today and read: “What is code?
    2. Finished with item number 1? Then turn your attention to the Nieman Lab’s elegant explanation of Apple’s news initiatives announced this week at WWDC.
    3. Here’s why we should stop designing for millennials as if they were an entirely homogeneous generation, alien to the ones that preceded it. Instead, design for personas that represent attitudinal and behavioral traits, and then combine these with social, market, and emerging technology trends.
    4. Many recent changes affect how we use Twitter and are designed to entice newcomers, including abandoning the 140 character limit for direct messages and making conversations on the tweet age easier to follow. In an effort to cut down on harassment, Twitter enabled sharing of block lists.
    5. VR is here: Microsoft is releasing a real live consumer Oculus Rift headset with Xbox One controller. Gaming may be the first use case for virtual reality, but it’s certain that broader, transformative applications from health/wellness to education will soon follow.

    Weekend fun: We send about 42 texts a day, and receive what feels like a million, some of which are inevitably personal and awkward. Now there’s a way to crowdsource suggestions how to respond.

    Every Friday, find five, highly subjective pointers to compelling technologies, emerging trends, and interesting ideas that affect how we live and work digitally. Try out the Friday 5 archive, or sign up for a weekly email.

     

  • Here’s why Google indexing tweets matters

    Here’s why Google indexing tweets matters

    This week I was looking for an article about the pressures of media coverage on scientific research to send to a few colleagues. All I could remember was that it was in the New York Times recently, and had the words “perils” and “publishing” in the title. So I searched within Google News for “perils publishing science nytimes” and here’s what I got:

    perils publishing new york times search

    No dice. This seemed surprising, since I was certain I had the key details right. Next, I remembered that Jeffrey Flier, dean of Harvard Medical School, had tweeted the article. So I searched again, this time substituting Flier’s Twitter handle for the New York Times domain: “perils publishing science jflier”.

    perils publishing jflier search

    Immediate success. As we get more of our news via our social graph, we’re bound to recall the messenger as well as the the content. It’s a clear win for Google search to help us recreate those experiences.

  • Friday 5 — 6.5.2015

    Friday 5 — 6.5.2015


    new year

    1. Google Photos, a free tool to store and organize your photos, has launched. Having finally shuttered Google+, Google is recognizing photos as the stickiest feature for user retention. The new service raises legitimate concerns about privacy — a photo repository reveals a great deal about our family structure, travel habits,and health. An automated “Assistant” creates animations and stylized photos, and creates new experiences with surprising emotional resonance. See above: Google quickly scanned my photos and created this GIF from blurry New Year’s Eve shots in Hội An.
    2. In highly related news, Pew released a report on Americans attitudes about privacy, security, and surveillance. 69% of adults expressed concern that their social media usage will not remain private, and 40% think that social media sites they use shouldn’t save data about their activity. Should we be paying for Facebook in order to preserve our privacy?
    3. Launching a product is hard, and retaining users still harder. Andrew Chen reveals the most tragic curve in tech, and explains why your faith that the next feature release will rescue your product is misplaced.
    4. I’m a big fan of Evernote as a cross-device productivity tool for wrangling to-dos (and knocking them off the list). But digital notebooks can be more than mere productivity tools. Here are specific, useful tips for using Evernote or another digital notebook to capture your creativity.
    5. Your geography plays a part in determining your web experience. Jillian York explores the myth of a borderless internet through maps and other ways social media companies define boundaries. To understand more about the intersection of physical location and the internet, try this Chrome extension that highlights algorithmic citizenship.

    Weekend fun:  Rant + green screen + internet = magic  Check out the TED talk version of Shia LaBeouf  and you’ll end up smiling like a deranged clown.

    Every Friday, find five, highly subjective pointers to compelling technologies, emerging trends, and interesting ideas that affect how we live and work digitally. Try out the Friday 5 archive, or sign up for a weekly email.

     

  • Friday 5 — 5.29.2015

    Friday 5 — 5.29.2015

    new business communications

    1. It’s worth reading every one of Mary Meeker’s internet trends slides. I’m struck by the relative rapidity and impact of the trends in the American work environment, including what motivates the millennial workforce (hint: not money), the ways connectivity has changed the nature of work, and the rise of online platforms, marketplaces and their impact. The slide above continues her observations on reimagining business communications — with Slack as a well chosen example of a transformative technology.
    2. The new Netflix redesign is visually pleasing, but more importantly, it’s based on a rigorous, data-driven approach. With more unbundled competition for video viewing, it makes sense for Netflix to invest heavily in gathering and driving decisions from their user data.
    3. Journalist/social media editor Sarah Marshall compiled a list of 19 useful tips and tools for social sharing and searching, I particularly liked her ideas for attribution and correction, and a few new tools to check out.
    4. For marketing analytics geeks, check out these 5 deadly myths, debunked. Some fall into the category of taking meaningful data and analytic advances to an illogical extreme, but many will ring familiar with those working at the intersection of marketing and tech in the enterprise.
    5. Expect to see more about virtual reality implementation as competition increases and technology goes mainstream. This week, Oculus announced that a VR-ready PC and headset should run you about $1,500 when it launches in 2016. Based on the wide adoption of GoPro plus drone videos (fun Harvard example), GoPro announced it was working on a VR camera + quadcopter drone combination to launch later next year.

    Weekend fun:  Ever since I read the reviews for the Bic pen for women, I’ve wanted to find the female version of everyday products. Thank goodness for feminizeit! In other news, you can gauge how strong your 404 game is, or improve your web viewing with a Chrome extension that transforms references to millennials into “snake people“.

    Every Friday, find five, highly subjective pointers to compelling technologies, emerging trends, and interesting ideas that affect how we live and work digitally. Try out the Friday 5 archive, or sign up for a weekly email.

  • Friday 5 — 5.22.2015

    Friday 5 — 5.22.2015


    google maps view

    1. For those of you already planning your Memorial Day driving routes, Google Maps has released useful, new features alerting users to delays and detours as you enter your destination. Beyond the time estimate, new cards provide additional context about potential delays. Related trivia: Google Maps also released the top destinations from Memorial Day 2014.
    2. new twitter searchGoogle is once again showing tweets in search results, starting with mobile. Now you can search for topics and hashtags directly within Google. At the same time, Twitter is rolling out its own more robust search, with new features for logged-out users. My guess is that Twitter native search will cater more to live Twitter consumption of breaking news or events.
    3. More than just music — everyone’s favorite social playlist subscription service Spotify is diversifying into podcasts and programming.
    4. Today’s workforce spans multiple generations, new economy and old economy roles, and various degrees of digital capability. Here’s why the expertise gap matters, and why the first step is acknowledging the problem.
    5. The MOOC (Massively Open Online Course) hype cycle peaked in 2012, but educators are still trying to crack the right formula for effective, online learning. Read this explanation of why primacy of location and cost still matters to motivate learners in a world outside the autodidacts of Silicon Valley.

    Weekend fun:  It’s the long weekend — why not let loose with some street dancing to beatboxers. Bad weather where you are? Then pore through these examples of faux code in TV and movies.

    Every Friday, find five, highly subjective pointers to compelling technologies, emerging trends, and interesting ideas that affect how we live and work digitally. Try out the Friday 5 archive, or sign up for a weekly email.

  • The institutional odyssey

    The institutional odyssey

    Exploring best practices — and unanswered questions — as we navigate social conversation in today’s digital organization

    social chatter

    Back in the mid-90s, establishing an institutional web presence began with writing a million dollar check to Oracle. As a next step, you hired a fleet of technical employees, one of whom was called a “Webmaster”—schooled in the dark arts of web servers, ftp, and HTML—and may well have been your first employee to wear a T-shirt to work. A couple of decades, a cloud computing revolution, and an explosion of content publishing software options later, establishing an institutional web presence is less onerous but no less complicated.

    Today, an institution is expected to create and nurture presences on major, relevant social media channels, which raise a new question: What are the expectations for an institutional social media presence, and how can these presences understand and interact with the individual social media users within and beyond them?

    In order to answer that question, an organization establishing a social presence must first consider a few of the decision points:

    • What are our goals, and how will we measure them?
    • Which networks does it make sense participate in? Where is our audience?
    • How much will each account listen, publish, and interact with audiences? How does this integrate with customer support?
    • What’s the associated staffing model and workflow?
    • What does governance look like, in terms of people, policy, process and practice? How much control versus how much free-form proliferation of accounts?
    • How will the different institutional accounts interrelate, for example between central corporate and business unit, or between business unit and HR? How human or hard-coded are these connections?

    Beyond these institutional presence questions, many institutions now have the bulk of their employee base online, which leads to what might be the most difficult question: As social moves beyond the marketing suite, how will the institution interact with the individuals that comprise it—at both the leadership and the staff levels?

    For all institutions, the relationship between the institutional and the individual accounts is still forming. Even among co-workers, the rules are still being written. I caution employees that social media is a bell that can’t be unrung—if my Facebook feed shows me an Instagram photo of you out at a party at 3am, it’s difficult to be sympathetic about that report that wasn’t in by noon.

    Beyond deadlines, more complex HR questions loom. In addition to spelling errors and beer pong photos, a manager and coworkers may now have knowledge of an employee’s out-of-work conduct, sexual orientation, and political leanings. As what was previously unknown becomes knowable, organizations are rapidly enacting policies to evolve with these challenges.

    However, this as much an opportunity as it is a challenge. Recent research shows that employees have on average 10x more social connections than an institution does and content shared by employees receives 8x more engagement than content shared by institutional channels. Employees are clearly an asset, and can act as effective advocates on the institution’s behalf, yet the appropriate balance and process remain uncertain.

    We deal with this same question in higher education—but it comes with a twist. The faculty and the students, who provide the research, teaching, and learning that fuel the institution, are not traditional employees. They’re contributing and sharing content related to their diverse disciplines and experience—along with all the other news items, casual observations, and sporadic conversations people share on social media. The sum of the parts, in higher education, is what makes for a successful whole. Most universities see bringing faculty online as consistent with knowledge-sharing part of their charge of the creation, dissemination of knowledge. Younger faculty, particularly in sciences, are sharing more research and inviting more collaboration via social media.

    So, what’s an institution to do? First of all, be cognizant of the delicate balance and role that institutions must play in a social setting; no one wants to be interrupted, especially by a brand trying to force its way on stage. The institution can focus on and reflect overarching, shared priorities, and perform an aggregating and amplifying role that highlights local achievements and campaigns. But institutions must also be wary of new privacy and cultural norms emerging with social content. A person authoring a tweet or Instagram post may know, intellectually, that this is a public act. But having an institutional account amplify that message to millions of followers may reveal that there was, after all, an expectation of privacy in networked publics. Institutions must consider the impact of sharing public content intended for a small audience with the broader world.

    The one thing that is clear is that institutions cannot ignore this change. Instead, you can take concrete steps to:

    • Discover the individuals within your organization who are highly engaged on social. Many social publishing platforms provide tools that enable you to tag individual accounts with relevant attributes. Use these to understand individuals who may be your thought leaders or champions in different disciplines.
    • Convene groups of relevant individual users around themes and ideas. If your software company has people already engaged in conversations about cloud computing, how might they be invited to participate/lead the online conversation in your next conference?
    • Awaken your marketing and HR departments to the “show, don’t tell” possibilities. If you have engaged employees with active social accounts, think how they fit into current digital campaign and conversation planning.
    • Develop norms about what’s a fair ask. We recently saw hundreds of employees from a services firm dutifully post their CEO’s appearance on a television talk show to social channels. This was clearly a broad mandate that yielded a painful, work-to-rule like result. Just as you wouldn’t expect your employees to recite your mission statement at a cocktail party, don’t expect to script their social channels.
    • Create a strategy for your “influencer” users who thrive on the social graph—regardless of org chart. Have a new product you are eager to get to market? Consider adding these individuals to an early beta release to get their feedback and support.

    Social strategy is nearly a decade old, but it is changing just as quickly as the rest of the business landscape today, and there are still large, blank areas on the ever-changing map. As organizations themselves change, and as the boundaries between organization and public blur, the institutional odyssey will only become more complex—and more exciting.

    Originally published to Medium on behalf of the Digital Initiative at Harvard Business School, studying & shaping the digital transformation of the economy.

  • Friday 5 — 5.15.2015

    Friday 5 — 5.15.2015

    facebook instant

    1. The big news for publishers this week was Facebook Instant Articles. The New York Times and Buzzfeed were among the first publishers on board, reaping the benefits of reach, fast-loading articles, revenue sharing, and data access. While some fear it’s a deal with the devil, Poynter is more measured in its assessment.
    2. What do Facebook Instant Articles and the $4.4B Verizon-AOL deal have in common? This Stratechery post draws the thread of the important shift in digital advertising that underlies each development.
    3. Launched in 2012, Quartz is a business site that’s reshaping digital news — and along the way has prompted its competition to raise its game in data visualization. 10 million monthly readers and a daily email with a 42% open rate are data points in a successful overall strategy described as “Quartz can go anywhere our readers are, in whatever form is appropriate.”
    4. Many of us are obsessed with workplace productivity hacks and smart filtering as our days are besieged by internet distraction. Here’s an alternative take: embrace your digital overload.
    5. I bought the Apple Watch early for fun, and have been pleasantly surprised by its workstream utility. Text messages and Slack notifications pop in usefully and unobtrusively, and can quickly be dismissed. Walt Mossberg offers his cautiously optimistic take on “a fledgling product whose optimal utility lies mostly ahead of it.”


    Weekend fun:
     Self-congratulatory splash pages with tedious descriptions of user benefit are the calling card of website redesigns like this or this. Thankfully, The Onion used its redesign to mock all other redesigns and their self-congratulatory explainers.

    Every Friday, find five, highly subjective pointers to compelling technologies, emerging trends, and interesting ideas that affect how we live and work digitally. Try out the Friday 5 archive, or sign up for a weekly email.

  • Friday 5 — 5.8.2015

    Friday 5 — 5.8.2015

    photo cloud

    1. No matter how much time I spend trying to do a respectable job managing my digital assets, I take a look at the state of my photos online and despair. If you feel the same way, these photo management tips are for you.
    2. The Instagram engineering blog performed a fascinating machine-learning analysis of the rise of a new language: emoji. Fun fact: a mere 38% of posts in the United States contain emoji, while the Finns top out at 60%.
    3. Advertisers believe that teens are abandoning social, and data shows that networks like Facebook are hard hit. But are teens just redefining what social means?
    4. If your colleagues are anything like mine, they’ve been obsessively uploading and comparing disastrous “How old do I look?” shots. Fun aside, this viral tool is a data miner’s dream for Microsoft.
    5. GPS location data has gone far beyond driving directions as the primary use case. Exploring new places and frequenting local haunts are made better by restaurant suggestions, coupons, and weather alerts. But as we trade location data for convenience, it’s worth remembering who’s watching.

    plateWeekend fun:  Smartphone food photographers rejoice: a new line of Instagram-friendly dinnerware is designed for you to take the perfect shot. Watch this completely un-ironic video to see “the Limbo” or “the 360” in all their glory. 

    Every Friday, find five, highly subjective pointers to compelling technologies, emerging trends, and interesting ideas that affect how we live and work digitally. Try out the Friday 5 archive, or sign up for a weekly email.