Month: January 2013

PageLever + Unified

pagelever plus unified PageLever + Unified

We are excited to announce that PageLever has been acquired by Unified, an award-winning enterprise marketing technology company. Over the past year, we’ve been impressed by Unified’s products, vision and ambition. As our founders and teams interacted in the market, we saw an exciting opportunity to join forces and realize our shared vision to push social marketing and advertising forward through easy-to-use, innovative solutions that drive powerful results.

Since its launch in January 2012, Unified has been a market leader in social advertising and measurement. Unified’s Social Operating Platform has been featured in TechCrunchInformationWeekGigaOm, and many more. At Digiday’s recent Sammy Awards, Unified was named Best Social Media Platform Innovation.

The combination of Unified and PageLever creates an end-to-end platform for social marketing insights, social audience engagement, and social advertising. The combined companies will serve over 300 customers, including leading Global 2000 enterprises and agencies. Team PageLever is excited to be immediately joining Unified’s team in its San Francisco and New York offices.

All current PageLever customers will continue to receive the same access to PageLever that they have enjoyed to date. Your experience will only get better as we integrate with Unified in the near future. In addition, PageLever customers may upgrade to the Unified Social Operating platform, which will give them access to a new suite of social advertising and amplification tools that support Twitter, LinkedIn, StumbleUpon, and YouTube, in addition to Facebook.

We couldn’t have gotten where we are today without our customers and partners. Your ideas, challenges and questions are the lifeblood of our business.

You can find more information, including the official press release and FAQ, atwww.unifiedsocial.com/pagelever.

If you have any questions, please contact pagelever@unifiedsocial.com.

- Team PageLever

Working with External Development Teams

Content originally written by Jeremiah Lee Cohick and published on the awe.sm blog

Shortly after awe.sm’s series A funding, we were eager to begin building the larger products we envisioned. There were only 3 of us writing code at the time and we needed to rapidly expand our development bandwidth. So while we looked for talented engineers to join our team full-time, we evaluated several web application development companies to help us get a head-start in parallel.

We asked our investors and other startups for referrals. We also looked on GitHub to find contributors to the open source tools we were planning to use. After narrowing the list to three companies, we reached out and interviewed each company.

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Our selection criteria:

  • Expertise: We had decided to use Backbone.js. The framework has few opinions on The Right Way of doing things, so we wanted a team that had opinions about using it in a large application and could justify them with their experiences.
  • Cost: We expected a rate of $100–$150 / hour and hoped to negotiate down by agreeing to a monthly minimum and a 3–6 month engagement.
  • Similar engineering ideologies: No CoffeeScript. Appreciation of Douglas Crockford‘s opinions. Use of native DOM methods over jQuery when possible. Only performant uses of LESS.
  • Size of team: We wanted a team, not a single developer. This is the “hit by a bus” factor: would we have to start over if the lead developer suddenly became unavailable? We also liked the option to have additional engineers working on self-contained features in parallel with primary development.
  • Pair programming, if any, only when necessary: In our opinion, the primary beneficiaries of pair programming are the apprentice, who’s gaining experience, and the company employing the engineers, which is creating a sustainable workforce. The benefits of pair programming to awe.sm would be minimal. That said, pair programming is useful when beginning large features, as it allows engineers to have a common understanding of integration considerations when working independently on features. We wanted a team that had this pragmatic approach.
  • Direct access to engineers who were fluent English speakers within 3 timezones of San Francisco: We wanted a company that felt like an extension of our team, not a middle manager that proxied information asynchronously. We knew that we were going to build a product with complex data handling and GUI interactions. The ability to communicate by text and video chat throughout the workday would allow us to most effectively discuss features, bugs, and details we hadn’t considered.
  • Previous customers we could interview candidly about their experiences: We were making a big investment and needed to move quickly. We wanted to know the team’s strengths and weaknesses upfront.

After the interviews and contract negotiation, awe.sm chose Quick Left. I traveled to Boulder, CO to kick off the project with them. We discussed the features, interactions, and motivations for every detail in the spec and wireframes. They broke the user stories down in Pivotal Tracker, which awe.sm also used. With the stories agreed upon, I returned to San Francisco.

We used Campfire for text chat and Skype for video chat daily. I was able to review their commits in GitHub. We prioritized stories and bugs in Pivotal Tracker weekly. Six months and 70,000 lines of JavaScript later, the new awe.sm was ready for beta testers.

I learned a few things along the way and I’d do some things differently in the future:

  • Text chat is great, but be quick to take conversations to video chat. We seem to express ourselves better with speech than text. Screen sharing is also useful.
  • Gigantic specs with every minor detail in a single document don’t get used. Break each section of the application into a separate document. Kick off each section with a video chat. The spec should contain wireframes with relevant interactions, features within the context of user flows, and any forgettable specific technical details. If developers understand why features are valuable to the user and how the user will interact with them, many of the details don’t need to be documented. You spend less time writing specs and developers can more easily find the details they need to reference. Help the team understand your goals and they’ll make smart decisions.
  • Expect fluctuations in workload when dealing with multiple parties. awe.sm was responsible for delivering additional server-side capabilities for the front-end application Quick Left was building. We also used another contractor for the visual design. Every interdependency increases the probability of lulls and spikes in workload.
  • Managing external teams takes more time than you think. Coordinating assets, testing, and dealing with unknown unknowns is a full time job.

By the time our application launched, awe.sm had hired a front-end team. Quick Left trained our engineers on Backbone.js and helped us transition to internal development. Quick Left gave us a solid technical foundation for the new product they helped launch that we’re now rapidly iterating upon. Their quality of code matched awe.sm’s own high standard and their expertise helped us make the right engineering decisions for this product.

By working with Quick Left, awe.sm was able to take the time it needed to hire the right people and launch a new product without hampering the development of its existing products. When time-to-market is important and you have the cash available, using an outside development team can be a useful strategy for startups.

 

How the Bones Brigade tweeted their way to 6-figure sales

Content originally written by Jonathan Strauss and published on the awe.sm blog

One of the coolest things about working at awe.sm (in addition to the team, and the view :D ) is seeing all the exciting things our customers are doing with our platform. That’s especially true of our friends at Topspin Media, who have made us a part of projects for some of our team’s favorite artists, like the Beastie BoysYeasayer, and in Tilly‘s case, Kreayshawn ;-). But for several of us, having what we’ve built be an integral part of the amazing and amazingly successful direct-to-fan release of the Bones Brigade documentary made our jobs cool to our 12 year-old selves.

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Personal satisfaction aside, this project and the data that the filmmakers and Topspin will be sharing at Sundance this week are nothing short of a revolution in film distribution. If you’re into the business of content, you should read more about the overall release on Topspin’s blog. The quick summary is that through an innovative combination of viral marketing, well-designed windowing, and creatively tiered pricing the producers were able to build an email list from 0 to more than 46,000 fans in just 2 months and ultimately make nearly 4 times the money they were offered in a conventional distribution deal.

Sharing drove 10% of the total revenue from the release. And thanks to deep awe.sm integration excellently implemented by the experts at The Uprising Creative, we tracked the value generated by each individual Tweet and Facebook post. Measuring the ROI of sharing is what awe.sm was built to do, and we have fascinating data on conversions from sharing across our hundreds of customers. But the unprecedented transparency of the Bones Brigade filmmakers is allowing us for the first time to publicly share some of the incredible insights we deliver our customers everyday.

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Topspin’s strategy was to use the existing fan-bases of the Bones Brigade members, including Tony Hawk’s 4.2m Facebook fans and 3.3m Twitter followers, to get the word out to the core most passionate fans first and then encourage those fans to spread the message to their friends. This approach was extremely successful in driving a significant volume of high-value traffic with an average value of $1.59 per visit ($2.11 per visit from sharing by the cast and $1.21 per visit from sharing by ordinary fans). Being able to track the value of each share and the relationships between shares gives you visibility into the mechanics of how and why sharing is effective and not just the end results. This is essential to understanding the patterns of success and how to replicate them.

Here are some of the most interesting patterns we observed in the Bones Brigade sharing data:

  • Fans were more than 7 times as likely to share to Facebook than to Twitter (87.8% of fans shared to Facebook vs 12.2% to Twitter);
  • The value per visit from a fan’s Facebook share was more than 2 times higher than that from a fan’s Twitter share ($1.29/visit from Facebook vs $0.60 from Twitter);
  • Sharing by the cast (i.e. “Celebrities”) was roughly even to both Facebook and Twitter but drove 82.0% of revenues from shares to Twitter and 18.0% from Facebook;
  • However, the value per visit from the cast’s shares to Facebook and Twitter was roughly equal ($1.93/visit from Facebook vs $2.07/visit from Twitter);
  • Sharing by the cast to Twitter drove more than twice as many visits per share as Facebook and more than 2.5 times the visits per fan/follower (1.10% eCTR for Facebook vs 2.82% eCTR for Twitter).

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This stark contrast between the performance of sharing by celebrities vs ordinary fans across Facebook and Twitter demonstrates several underlying (and somewhat related) phenomena:

  • Normal people primarily use Twitter to discover content and Facebook to share it with friends – The overwhelming volume of fan sharing to Facebook (87.8%) clearly demonstrates that most people do not view Twitter as an important personal sharing channel, but the fact that Twitter was still able to drive 40.3% of the traffic and 47.3% of the revenue (primarily from celebrity sharing) shows that there is still a significant audience discovering and consuming content through Twitter despite their lack of sharing;
  • Twitter is a network of loose ties and Facebook is a network of strong ties – Visits driven by celebrities had roughly equivalent value across Facebook and Twitter while visits driven by regular fans were more than twice as valuable on Facebook than on Twitter, which demonstrates that consumers have tighter connections with and are more swayed by the recommendations of their friends on Facebook than by the non-celebrities they follow on Twitter;
  • Twitter followers are more likely to click than Facebook fans – Whether it’s an impact of NewsFeed Optimization or just a side-effect of the fact that normal people are primarily using Facebook to share with and consume from their friends and family, the numbers show that celebrity sharing to Twitter is driving over 2.5 times more visits per follower than sharing to Facebook is driving visits per fan with a roughly equal value per visit.

We’ll be taking a deeper look at each of these topics in upcoming blog posts. So follow @Unified on Twitter to learn more about this amazing campaign.

 

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