The Whuffie Powered Search Engine

July 1st, 2009 by Guest Author
Posted in Guest Authors | No Comments »

By guest author Carmel Hagen

Original post here.

Do a search for “The Whuffie Factor reviews” on a traditional search engine, and something interesting happens. In the area that SEO experts lust for – those glorified first five results – a blog post pops up. It’s a modest post, just a few flattering paragraphs covering Tara Hunt’s guide to social media for businesspeople, but there it is – smushed right between Amazon’s own review and the book’s official website. A quote from within the post unveils the significance of that blog’s page rank – and quite serendipitously proves the power of the “Whuffie” movement as a whole:

picture-1916“When Tara tweeted offering to send folks an advance copy of her book The Whuffie Factor to review I responded right away, though I didn’t expect to be chosen. Virtually nobody reads this site.”

No one reads this site. Right. As so many of us are exasperatingly aware of, things don’t just hit the front page of a traditional search engine by sheer luck. So how did one “readerless” blog become the go-to place for a review on a popular marketing book? Well, it was Whuffie.

Whuffie,” a term coined by the author Cory Doctorow, is a friendly word for a powerful concept: social capital. Social capital, also known as the return on investment that comes from gathering trustworthiness and approval online, is one of today’s most compelling reasons to be deeply entrenched in social media. But does the investment pay off? If that self-described small beans blogger turned Whuffie pro-evangelist* is any indicator, yes. However, that post didn’t SEO the heck out of itself just because Tara believed in investing in her community – it got there because her community had money of its own.

For a blog post to reach the top of a traditional search engine’s results, a rather huge, combined community investment must be made– one that is very rare to come across. Not only does a blogger need to write about the search topic, but they also must inspire a ton of other bloggers to write about it, linking their posts back to the original one so that it builds page rank. In terms of social capital, blogs are expensive, taking up tons of the time and effort of very nice, willing people. Thankfully, this mass investment is no longer needed in the area of realtime search, where significantly simpler shares are highly influential in the ranking of search results. Shares are effortless compared to blog posts, taking only seconds of user’s time (yet offering plenty of that same good Whuffie) – and everybody loves to share.

picture-2011Michael Arrington recently penned something like this: “Re-tweets are the currency of the web.” At OneRiot, where a realtime result’s PulseRank is influenced by those retweets, we agree – but we venture to take it one further. The currency of the web lies not in a simple re-tweet, but in sharing as a whole. Whether it’s via email, thru Twitter, across Facebook, over IM, or hyper-dispersed thru a tool like Yoono, a share indicates a web user’s assignment of value. When a person shares something of yours, they’re assigning that value to you. How awesome is that.

In business speak, shares are to the web what referrals are to the real world – they are the word of mouth marketing of the internet. Online friends listen to online friends because they have already built up the same complex rapport that forms the online backbone of Whuffie. They trust each other and they respect each other – so they click on each others’ links. A lot. And when people click on links, cool things happen. Articles get read. New products and tools are discovered. Links get re-shared. Sometimes, people even buy stuff. Sounds a bit like the kind of stuff you’d want a marketing campaign to achieve, doesn’t it? To us, it sounds like the building blocks for a new kind of SEO.

In business speak, shares are to the web what referrals are to the real world – they are the word of mouth marketing of the internet.

As the readers savvy to our ranking algorithms know, there is a heavy relationship between sharing and the ranking of our search results. You can read up on the details of that here, but the gist of it is that links tend to wind up as search results on OneRiot when someone (and frequently, lots of someones) shares them online. The way we see it, each new share represents a fresh link to realtime information – the stuff people care about, right now. Obviously, this amplifies our general sentiment that sharing is pretty freakin’ important, because it is the most organic way to determine something’s importance that we know of today.

So how do you encourage sharing, embrace your share-ers, and reap the benefits of Whuffie? You enable it. D’oh, right? You’d think so. But as Tobias noticed the other day, only a small number of Internet companies are actually making sharing as easy for their users as they should be. For instance, only a handful of publishers are offering their readers easy, impulse friendly ways to share their content (like sticking a “Tweet This” button on every post). Only a slightly bigger set are putting a fair effort into sharing their own content through social media channels. The smallest set – those that are engage in a healthy mix of both (Mashable is a great example) – are winning, amassing their own social capital and capitalizing on that which already exists in the hands of their users. That said, all the “Tweet this” buttons in the world won’t amount to anything if the content you’re giving your reader isn’t valuable, sharable stuff – but we’ll save that discussion for another post.

picture-2116The investment seems obvious – the more people share your links, the more valuable those links will become to you. Sharing creates visibility, visibility creates traffic, and traffic creates business. On the flipside, if people aren’t sharing your content, you’re missing out, bigtime, because today’s most effective web marketing is happening via the passing of social capital from computer screen to computer screen.

When Tara shipped her unreleased book off to a nice guy who happened to be very interested, she set off a series of events that led to a big increase in social capital for her – one that’s still paying off. Tara gave her online community the tools they needed to share information, and they essentially took over a chunk of the marketing campaign for her book. The difference between that story and the ones we now get to write is the ease with which we can create ours. Enable people to share your content, and they will. Share your own content, and people will embrace it. Make Whuffie, make it to the top of our search results. Every day.

Now if you don’t mind…Tweet this?

*The author of that great Whuffie Factor review was Chris Patterson, by the way.

You can find him here and here. Killer post, Chris :)

Goodbye Ms. Dewey, Hello Mr. Taggy!

July 1st, 2009 by Charles S. Knight
Posted in Innovations | No Comments »

 mrtaggy

What is MrTaggy?

MrTaggy is an experiment in web search and exploration built on top of a PARC algorithm called TagSearch. Think of MrTaggy as a cross between a search engine and a recommendation engine: it’s a web browsing guide constructed from social tagging data.

Unlike most search engines, MrTaggy doesn’t index the text on a web page. Instead, it leverages the knowledge contained in the tags that people add to web pages when using social bookmarking services. Tags describe both the content and context of a web page, and we use that information to deliver relevant search results.

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The problem with using social tags is that they contain a lot of noise, because people often use different words to mean the same thing or the same words to mean different things. The TagSearch algorithm is part of our ongoing research to reduce the noise while amplifying the information signal from social tags.

We also designed a novel search UI to explore the tag space. The Related Tags sidebar outlines the content landscape to help you understand the space. The relevance feedback capabilities enable you to tell the system both positive and negative cues about directions where you want to go. Try clicking on the Thumbs Up and Down to give feedback to MrTaggy about the tags or results that you liked, and see how your rating changes the result set on-the-fly.

Line Spout searches your topics in Real Time

July 1st, 2009 by Charles S. Knight
Posted in Realtime | No Comments »

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Real Time Search. New content is being added to the web all the time. Line Spout searches this content in real time.

Enter your topic of interest into the Line Spout search bar. You will get a stream of relevant lines. As new information is found, your stream will update automatically. It’s like having your own personal information channel on the web.

To change channels, simply enter your new topic of interest into the search bar. To control your channel, choose your options. You can search and compare multiple terms, change your search time window, use Line Spout’s social ranking to set the relevancy filter, alter your channel’s appearance, and much more — like sending out your own lines! To see what others are following, look at Line Spout’s trends. Or follow some common category of information on Line Spout.

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Music search engine Spotify still in private beta :-(

July 1st, 2009 by Charles S. Knight
Posted in In Beta, Music, Social, Verticals | 3 Comments »

spotifySpotify is a new way to enjoy music. Simply download and install, before you know it you’ll be singing along to the genre, artist or song of your choice. With Spotify you are never far away from the song you want. There are no restrictions in terms of what you can listen to or when. Forget about the hassle of waiting for files to download and fill up your hard drive before you get round to organising them. Spotify is instant, fun and simple.

Because music is social, Spotify allows you to share songs and playlists with friends, and even work together on collaborative playlists, Friday afternoon in the office might never be the same again! We’re music lovers like everyone else. We want to connect millions of people with their favorite songs by creating a product that people love to use. We respect creativity and believe in fairly compensating artists for their work. We’ve cleared the rights to use the music you’ll listen to in Spotify.

Spotify free is currently in an invitation-only beta, which means you need an invitation token to access the service. Leave them your email address to request an invite.

Chinese video search engine Tudou “the potato”

July 1st, 2009 by Charles S. Knight
Posted in Global, Verticals, Video | No Comments »

tudouTudou.com (Chinese: 土豆网) is the largest video sharing platform in China, where users can upload, view and share video clips. Tudou has grown into one of the world’s largest content delivery networks, serving over 100 million videos each day.

2009-06-30_1757This includes more than 40,000 new videos published daily, including amateur content such as videoblogging and user-generated videos, and professional content such as movie clips, TV clips and music videos from our content partners. During the summer of 2007, Nielsen/NetRatings reported that Tudou was one of the world’s fastest growing websites, growing from 131 to 360 million clips viewed per week in just three months. Tudou continues to be the leading video site in the China market.

Tudou was founded by our CEO Gary Wang with co-founder Marc van der Chijs. The name Tudou is Chinese pinyin (romanized Chinese) for “potato.” Tudou’s aspiration is to move couch potatoes from the TV screen to computer screens, a process very much under way in China among the youth audience. Tudou has raised several rounds of funding, the latest being $57 million in spring 2008 for a total of $85 million over four rounds of funding. Tudou investors include IDG China, Granite Global Ventures, JAFCO, General Catalyst Partners and Capital Today.

Note that the company was previously known as Toodou, we changed our domain name to Tudou.com in August 2006 when that name became available.