RIP #58

The motorcycling world lost an extremely talented and charismatic racer today when 24-year-old Marco Simoncelli died following a tragic accident at the Sepang round of the MotoGP championship.
Simoncelli 4490

Having watched Senna recently, I wrote about the weird feeling of seeing the events again after watching them live so many years ago. But in that situation, it was the culmination of a documentary which followed the career of one of the greatest drivers in history.

Whereas most media channels have pulled any replays of the events today, as you’d expect, Youtube is full of clips of the frankly horrific accident, which involved two other riders colliding with Simoncelli. And there’s the occasional website which has decided to post the footage, such as Jalopnik, who claim they are doing it to show the risks of motorsport – despite the fact they’re a car website which has written about MotoGP racing roughly twice this year.

I’m torn between valuing the benefits of self-publishing, and the despairing at the people who abuse that opportunity for the sake of page views and noteriety.

And I’m torn within myself – when writing about Senna, I did look at footage on Youtube of the Ratzenberger crash earlier the same weekend, and also the footage of the accidents which claimed the lives of Shoya Tomizawa in Moto2 in 2010, and Daijiro Kato in MotpGP in 2003.

So should I be decrying the actions of others? Or accepting that a televised sport in which risk plays a large part of the attraction for both competitors and audiences will be instantly reproduced?

Perhaps my distaste comes from the fact that Simoncelli was easily my favourite rider from the current season, showing the same kind of talent and attitude that people like Kevin Schwantz displayed – winning or crashing with barely anything in between, and providing some interest in a year utterly dominated by the Repsol Honda team. It’s compounded by the fact that I was a huge fan of Kato, who had looked likely to become the first Japanese MotoGP champion prior to his death.

About the only certainties are that what appears to have been a freak accident has claimed a very talented individual. And that racers will still be competing against each other, and themselves next weekend and on into the future.

Breaking Google Reader on the wheel of Google +?

Google has announced it will make a number of changes to Google Reader ‘in the next week’, and by the looks of it, they’re going to break a great existing product and tool which is used by a lot of professionals to be able to shoehorn some extra interaction into Google+.

Normally, I’d advise waiting and seeing what the changes are to a product before complaining, but the post on the official Google blog gives enough information to be really, really worrying.

‘in a week’s time we’ll be retiring things like friending, following and shared link blogs inside of Reader.’

That scares me for a number of reasons.

  • A week? Seriously? That makes Yahoo look kind in the way they’ve ended or sold services. Presumably if they do it quick there won’t be enough time for people to organise a concerted campaign of complaints or realise exactly what the changes mean.
  • No following? There’s a reason why I use both Reader and Google+ throughout the day, but spending almost all day, every day in Reader – I use it professionally, and have a very small number of people I follow. Those are people who consistently find things which are important to know about, and I enjoy being able to find out when they’ve just read them – not see a jumble of items which might be new, old, or social items like holiday images etc which are being put on Google+ weeks or months after they’ve happened.
  • Most importantly – No Shared Link Blogs!!!! (Mine is here and has been sharing items for several years now). As a part of curating and sharing information, I’ve used the RSS feed from that page to power various other services, and now it won’t exist? I’ve shared 16991 articles since starting to use Google Reader, and all of the value that has created is going.

I know that people have been requesting a better SendTo integration for Google+, although there is a workaround already in place which does the job, but I can’t believe that people have ‘highly requested ‘ the end of following or shared link blogs? Anyone that doesn’t want to follow or publicly share has the option to never do it already, so turning those features off makes no sense.

Unless you’re trying to artificially inflate the amount being shared on Google+.

Our only hope…

Now aside from reinforcing the fact that if you use a free service, you should expect that they won’t care about you – ‘If you’re not paying for the product, you’re not the customer, you’re the product’, it does beg the question what will happen to those services for people who might be paying for Google Apps? I don’t know how Apps revenue stacks up against the hopes for Google+, but I suspect it won’t make a big enough difference, sadly.

Which leaves Louis Gray as the only hope that this won’t be an enormously painful and damaging moveboth for Google and for everyone that used Google Reader as a business tool. Not only is he smart, but he’s specialised in working with, and making his name blogging about, information services, so if there’s one person at Google who may understand the difference between professional use and social use, you would hope as a Google+ Product Marketing Manager he might have had a chance to speak with the Google Reader team?

The final pain is the comment from Alen Green suggesting that if we decide Google Reader is no longer for us, we can move to another service. Which is technically true, but given that Google Reader has roughly 70% or more of the RSS Reader market, there’s not exactly a huge number of viable alternatives – two of the other services I’ve used in the past both closed after Google effectively crushed them by weight of numbers. It’s not quite like social bookmarking, where I’ve used Diigo and Delicious in tandem for a long time now to ensure that I always have a backup – it means exporting all my data, finding a service which is directly comparable in terms of features, and hoping that everything can be uploaded and work without disrupting my business too much.

Google hording data inside Google+?

Whilst Google does have a data export project, there’s a difference between exporting data and being able to syndicate it. And until I see a handy RSS link for items I +1, ideally with some kind of category filter which means I can take a feed of the information I’m sharing, rather than everything I’ve ever liked, including static content, photos etc, then it appears that Google is intent on following the walled garden approach of Facebook in bringing in as much as possible behind a walled garden. Which isn’t a selling point when Facebook already exists.

I don’t know what will happen in the next week, or how much my business and workflow will be disrupted, but if you know any good, comparable and compatible RSS Readers – paid or free, then let me know. And if there’s an open source option, all the better. Meanwhile when I categorise this post under ‘Tools’ you can assume both meanings of the word are inferred.

 

Content, Marketing and SEO

I generally stay away from posting infographics, but this one on the value of content and SEO is useful and relevant enough to share, and it reinforces a lot of the messages I’ve given to clients about the increasing need to integrate all elements of digital marketing, beginning with great content which is optimised for conversions/actions, and then building on that with social elements, search engine optimisation, and federated distribution.

It’s also why I’m doing an increasing amount of work to identify the brand story and narrative with a client before doing any other marketing work. If you get the brand story and a handful of pieces of content working well, then you can boost the people who are visiting it in a number of ways. If you do it the other way around, you get lots of traffic costing you in terms of bandwith, and nothing in terms of the desired outcome, whether that’s revenue, interaction, sign-ups etc.
Brafton's Infographic: Why Content for SEO?

Click for the large version.

It’ll be interesting to see what effects a rise in content marketing has on the market for content creation. After years of watching rates fall for both freelance and full-time writers, journalists and bloggers, perhaps for those who are able to display quality in terms of optimising for businesses in addition to tone, style and substance, this will see a marked rise.

Feeling poorly and clearing house

One of the biggest differences between being employed by someone and being self-employed happens when you end up suffering from an illness. This week I’ve either been almost dying from the flu, or complaining about a minor case of the sniffles, depending on who you ask.

I think the last time I was actually poorly was when I was still employed by someone else, and essentially I’d manage to complete anything urgent from home before collapsing in bed or in front of the Xbox each day until I was well again.

Now I know there’s noone else covering, and noone else to delegate to, so I’m trying to carry on as normal, as far as possible between sneezing and grabbing more flu tablets.

Sometimes an enforced break can be good:

And some good things have come out of it – the fact that I can concentrate for shorter periods has meant that after completing the required client tasks, I’m left feling like I should still be working, but on something a bit less mentally taxing – and so far that’s resulted in about 800 emails deleted from a period stretching back almost 4 years! I’ve become increasingly ruthless about what stays in my inbox and what gets filed and archived, but I’m finally either removing or archiving all the things I always planned to get around to. And in the process, I’m rediscovering a list of people I need to get back in contact with.

In addition, I’m also going through my task management list and simplifying and re-organising it. There’s no point in having anything beyond a notepad and pencil if it doesn’t actually work more effectively.

Maybe the flu isn’t such a bad thing after all…