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<feed xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom"><title>Finale</title><subtitle type="html"><![CDATA[The last word on trends in social media and football. And whatever else comes to mind.]]></subtitle><link href="http://www.oleole.com/blogs/finale"/><entry><title type="html"><![CDATA[Social Media Blog has Moved]]></title><link href="http://www.oleole.com/blogs/finale/posts/social-media-blog-has-moved"/><content type="html"><![CDATA[<p>
      This blog has moved, due to popular demand.&nbsp; The content isn't football-centric enough, so it's now on blogger.
    </p>
    <p>
      You can now find it here:&nbsp;
    </p>
    <h2>
      <a href="http://kuhr-strategies.blogspot.com/">Kuhr Strategies</a> - social media, web 3.0 and the future of the internet from product a marketing perspective.&nbsp;
    </h2>]]></content><updated>2008-11-18 06:34:34</updated></entry><entry><title type="html"><![CDATA[Social Network Commotidization - we&#039;ll look back at Facebook and think it&#039;s cute.]]></title><link href="http://www.oleole.com/blogs/finale/posts/social-network-commotidization-well-look-back-at-facebook-and-things-its-cute"/><content type="html"><![CDATA[<font face="georgia,palatino">Charlene Li from Forrester is really on top of things.&nbsp; She's watching the convergence and</font> <a target="_blank" href="http://blogs.forrester.com/charleneli/2008/03/the-future-of-s.html" title="The Future of Social..."><font face="georgia,palatino">commoditization</font></a> <font face="georgia,palatino">of
    social networks happen in the very near future.&nbsp; All the talk of</font> <a target="_blank" href="http://www.facebook.com"><font face="georgia,palatino">Facebook</font></a> <font face="georgia,palatino">and MySpace and how they're huge and growing and which one is going to "win" is irrelevant.&nbsp; Like cars, there will be many different companies and types, allowing you to
    do different things - each will have its own unique aspect.&nbsp; And like cars, where you can move your cellphone / PDA / address book from one to the other, your profile on social networks will
    be portable.<br /></font>
    <p>
      <font face="georgia,palatino">Her blog point to the fact that social networks are starting to be commoditized.&nbsp; It doesn't matter which you pick, they'll all allow sharing of
      contacts.&nbsp; Its just not that hard now to create a network to keep track of friends.&nbsp; OleOle's position as a social media platform elevates us from that discussion - people are coming
      to OleOle to share a passion - to discuss a</font> <a target="_blank" href="http://www.gapingvoid.com/mt/mt-tb.cgi/3751" title="Social Object"><font face="georgia,palatino">Social
      Object</font></a><font face="georgia,palatino">.&nbsp; Making friends is nice, but it’s the commtment and passion and interest in the sport that brings them together - the same way it does in
      the real world at stadiums, pubs and in front of the TV.&nbsp; OleOle is a publishing platform - publishing the views and opinions of football fans in the way that they see fit.&nbsp; We've got
      the environment and infrastructure to do that in an organized way - and enable discussion instead of just pushing information one way.</font>
    </p>
    <p>
      <font face="georgia,palatino"><span lang="EN-US">What's OleOle's</span> <span lang="EN-US">position on <a target="_blank" href="http://www.opensocial.org/">OpenSocial</a> / Data Availability / <a href="http://www.openid.net/">OpenID</a> / <a target="_blank" href="http://www.dataportability.org">Data
      Portability</a>?&nbsp; YES, we will&nbsp; build for these protocols (maybe when they're standardized a BIT more) so users don't need to create a separate profile on our site - they can login
      with the profiles they've created other places.&nbsp; The purpose of our site is great content, not being the sole location for personal information.&nbsp;</span></font>
    </p>
    <p>
      <span lang="EN-US"><font face="georgia,palatino">That's something the big social networks are starting to grapple with - what unique social objects can they add to
      differentiate themselves? And what social objects will get people clicking on ads? Its tought because of the complete heterogeneity of the user base - there is no commonality other than people
      have friends.<br /></font></span>
    </p>]]></content><updated>2008-05-14 14:41:17</updated></entry><entry><title type="html"><![CDATA[UEFA Euro Football Wallpaper Competition]]></title><link href="http://www.oleole.com/blogs/finale/posts/uefa-euro-football-wallpaper-competition"/><content type="html"><![CDATA[<p>
      <font face="georgia,palatino" size="2">Soccer-Art has announced the beginning of a big <a href="http://soccer-art.co.uk/soccer-art-euro2008-competition/" target="_blank" title="Euro wallpaper competition - Soccer-art">Euro wallpaper contest</a> before the competition this June.</font>
    </p>
    <p>
      <font face="georgia,palatino" size="2">The theme is UEFA Euro 2008, and the prize is more than a shiny trophy. The winner will receive their choice of a football jersey, and an exclusive
      soccer-art t-shirt. These shirts haven’t been printed yet for anyone else, so the winner will have one before anybody else</font><font size="2">.</font>
    </p>
    <p>
      <font face="georgia,palatino" size="2">A great competition for anyone who loves to design football wallpapers.</font>
    </p>
    <p>
      <a href="http://soccer-art.co.uk/" target="_blank" title="Football Wallpapers"><font face="georgia,palatino" size="2">www.soccer-art.co.uk&nbsp;</font></a>
    </p>]]></content><updated>2008-04-08 20:25:12</updated></entry><entry><title type="html"><![CDATA[&quot;You Can Never Underestimate The Passion of the Fans&quot;]]></title><link href="http://www.oleole.com/blogs/finale/posts/you-can-never-underestimate-the-passion-of-the-fans"/><content type="html"><![CDATA[<p>
      <font face="georgia,palatino" size="2">Ever!</font>
    </p>
    <p>
      <font face="georgia,palatino" size="2">That's what Philadelphia found out recently as the city was chosen to support the next MLS franchise in 2010.</font>
    </p>
    <p>
      <font face="georgia,palatino"><font size="2">These "Sons of Ben" were apparently a <a href="http://web.mlsnet.com/news/mls_news.jsp?ymd=20080229&amp;content_id=141210&amp;vkey=news_mls&amp;fext=.jsp" target="_blank" title="Philadelphia secures next MLS franchise">deciding factor in
      choosing the city</a></font> <font size="2"><a href="http://web.mlsnet.com/news/mls_news.jsp?ymd=20080229&amp;content_id=141210&amp;vkey=news_mls&amp;fext=.jsp" target="_blank" title="Philadelphia secures next MLS franchise">for a Major League Soccer</a> (MLS) franchise. The Sons of Ben is a supporters' group with more than 1,600 members.</font></font>
    </p>
    <blockquote>
      <p align="left">
        <font face="georgia,palatino" size="2">"You can never underestimate the passion of the fans," said Pennsylvania Governor Ed Rendell. "You can't measure it. The Sons of Ben have been waiting
        for soccer in this area for so long. Now they have it and they're going to be loud and give this team a true homefield advantage. Believe me, this group's excitement and desire had a lot to
        do with why we're here announcing this franchise."</font>
      </p>
    </blockquote>
    <p align="left">
      <font face="georgia,palatino" size="2">Thinking forward a few months to the <a href="/euro-2008" target="_parent" title="UEFA Euro 2008 News">UEFA Euro 2008</a>. OleOle wants to make this
      competition the pinnacle of online interaction from fans at the matches, and those that can't make it to the matches.</font>
    </p>
    <p align="left">
      <font face="georgia,palatino" size="2">How can OleOle capture this passion, this fervor? How is football - even in the USA (the least football-oriented country in the entire world) - how is it
      that this sport incites such passion?</font>
    </p>
    <p align="left">
      <font face="georgia,palatino" size="2">Can it be bottled? Canned? How can we capture even a a piece of that passion online for the Euro? That's the magic that OleOle needs - we don't have it
      today, we might have it tomorrow as we overhaul the site for the Euro, but what are we missing? What is key to the overhaul? What kind of things can we pull from our readers, fans and from the
      competition itself? Its more UEFA Euro news, than facts and scores...its the drive to get fans to contribute, to interact, to talk to each other.</font>
    </p>
    <p align="left">
      <b><font face="georgia,palatino"><font size="2">OPEN QUESTION: What to do you, a passionate football fan, think?</font> <font size="2">How can your passion for football be captured in a website
      or webpage? Let me know!</font></font></b>
    </p>]]></content><updated>2008-03-04 11:40:39</updated></entry><entry><title type="html"><![CDATA[Media Relations - creating a great Press Room on your website]]></title><link href="http://www.oleole.com/blogs/finale/posts/media-relations-creating-a-great-press-room-on-your-website-1"/><content type="html"><![CDATA[<p>
      <font face="georgia,palatino" size="2">Why can't a B2C press room be a blog?&nbsp; Why not indeed?</font>
    </p>
    <p>
      <font face="georgia,palatino" size="2">A blog would enable comments on press releases, links to important items like logos and fact sheets.&nbsp; It would provide RSS feeds for those so
      Interested to catch the latest. &nbsp; Enabling trackbacks and sharing, posting in multiple languages are all positives.&nbsp; Why aren't more companies doing it?&nbsp; Are they scared that
      their news will invite criticism?&nbsp; Is their news not good enough?</font>
    </p>
    <p>
      <font face="georgia,palatino" size="2">I don't see a drawback - let's do it.&nbsp;</font>
    </p>]]></content><updated>2008-02-07 18:01:32</updated></entry><entry><title type="html"><![CDATA[Poland team going public on Warsaw stock exchange]]></title><link href="http://www.oleole.com/blogs/finale/posts/poland-team-going-public-on-warsaw-stock-exchange"/><content type="html"><![CDATA[<p>
  <font face="georgia,palatino" size="2">Clubs are starting to realize they have a ton of untapped value for their fans.</font>
</p>
<p>
  <font face="georgia,palatino"><font size="2"><strong>Football club Ruch Chorzów plans to enter NewConnect, the alternative floor of the Warsaw Stock Exchange, by the end of Q1.</strong> Going
  public to raise money - one way (pretty cool acutally) to raise some money to sink into the brand.</font></font>
</p>
<p>
  <a href="http://www.wbj.pl/?command=article&amp;id=39532"><font face="georgia,palatino" size="2">http://www.wbj.pl/?command=article&amp;id=39532</font></a>
</p>]]></content><updated>2008-01-09 18:28:19</updated></entry><entry><title type="html"><![CDATA[NYT - taking small steps towards social media]]></title><link href="http://www.oleole.com/blogs/finale/posts/nyt-taking-small-steps-towards-social-media-1"/><content type="html"><![CDATA[<p>
  <font face="georgia,palatino" size="3">My last post pointed at all trditional media and publishers.&nbsp; Apparently, The New York Times is&nbsp;becoming a leader in the industry and taking at
  least a few&nbsp;steps to increase traffic.&nbsp;</font>
</p>
<p>
  <font face="georgia,palatino" size="3">There's a lot of promise in this - the content is there, and if it can be structured for SEO it will kill other papers.</font>
</p>
<p>
  <font face="georgia,palatino" size="3">&nbsp;</font><a href="http://searchengineland.com/070925-095644.php"><font face="georgia,palatino" size="3">http://searchengineland.com/070925-095644.php</font></a>
</p>
<p>
  <font face="georgia,palatino" size="3">&nbsp;This goes for football, too - optimization is key regardless of how the content gets to the site.&nbsp; OleOle's concentration on linking, sharing and
  optimization is a huge advantage for our content contributors and bloggers.&nbsp; More people will read their thoughts here than anywhere else on the web - because they care about football.</font>
</p>]]></content><updated>2007-12-27 14:06:09</updated></entry><entry><title type="html"><![CDATA[Newspapers can&#039;t find the right business model]]></title><link href="http://www.oleole.com/blogs/finale/posts/newspapers-cant-find-the-right-business-model"/><content type="html"><![CDATA[<p>
  <font size="2"><font face="georgia,palatino"><span>Newspapers and traditional media seem to just "not get it".&nbsp; This article by David Lazarus of the LA Times clearly identifies the problem -
  newspapers are treating online like it’s the same publishing medium as a hardcopy paper.</span></font></font>
</p>
<p>
  <span><font size="2"><font face="georgia,palatino">I visited the</font></font> <a href="http://www.latimes.com/business/la-fi-lazarus26dec26,1,2276712,full.column?coll=la-headlines-business&amp;ctrack=3&amp;cset=true"><font face="georgia,palatino" size="2">LA times site</font></a>
  <font size="2"><font face="georgia,palatino">to view David’s article online and see what was going on.<span>&nbsp;</span> Having the print copy delivered to me every day and not reading the paper
  online, I'm very old school.</font></font></span>
</p>
<p>
  <span><a href="http://www.latimes.com/business/la-fi-lazarus26dec26,1,2276712,full.column?coll=la-headlines-business&amp;ctrack=3&amp;cset=true"><span><font face="georgia,palatino" size="2" color="#800080">http://www.latimes.com/business/la-fi-lazarus26dec26,1,2276712,full.column?coll=la-headlines-business&amp;ctrack=3&amp;cset=true</font></span></a></span>
</p>
<p>
  <span><font size="2"><font face="georgia,palatino">I know where he’s coming from – I’d be worried about my job and my future if I saw newspaper revenues continue their decline.
  <span>&nbsp;</span>And, of course nobody is going to pay for the same article online that's in the paper – its just not the model people are used to. <span>&nbsp;</span>I’m positive, however, that
  advertising can support a newspaper – even one as big as the LA times.<span>&nbsp;</span> Rupert Murdoch is betting on it by intending to what I think is the world's most successful (most
  profitable?) online subscription content – the Wall Street Journal –</font></font> <a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2007/11/14/business/media/14murdoch.html?_r=1&amp;oref=slogin"><font face="georgia,palatino" size="2">available for free.</font></a> <font size="2"><font face="georgia,palatino"><span>&nbsp;</span>He surely gets it – why can’t everyone?&nbsp; I bet at $60M a year in
  subscriptions, and with 980k current subscribers, revenue at $10CPM is around $20M/year.&nbsp;&nbsp; That's not the same, of course, but open it up and make it interactive, the audience could grow
  to 2M+ and the # of pageviews would also increase, driving up ad rates.&nbsp;In 2.5 years, the WSJ could be making $100M+ online just through CPM ads.</font></font></span>
</p>
<p>
  <font size="2"><font face="georgia,palatino"><span>For the LA Times specifically, it’s a great paper (top&nbsp;5 in the US) but there's no just value in the online edition.&nbsp; Reading David’s
  this article online contains nothing Web 2.0 at all - it’s merely a paper reprint.&nbsp; This is death-by-smothering from a traditional media company, and I certainly see the cause for
  concern.T</span></font></font>
</p>
<p>
  <font size="2"><font face="georgia,palatino"><span>Traditional</span> <span>Media Death 2.0: On the LA times article in question, there's no ability for readers to comment on the article or have a
  discussion, submit viewpoints or even <span>&nbsp;</span>link to the article.<span>&nbsp;</span> There’s no social bookmarking or sharing the article (except via email), no hyperlinks in the
  article to sources or related stories, and no simple way to get RSS feeds for that&nbsp;column / author.&nbsp; No submitting to Digg or any other site that would lead more readers back to the
  article. <span>&nbsp;</span>For interaction, there's just a link to the author's email address, which will result in the poor&nbsp;guy to get included in every spam list in the Ukraine and
  Romania.&nbsp; The article was clearly written for print – not for the web, and that’s just not what the web generation expects from <em>anything</em> online – there’s no personalization or
  interaction.&nbsp; And that's <em><span>exactly</span></em> how to stop online readership&nbsp;from expanding.</span></font></font>
</p>
<p>
  <font size="2"><font face="georgia,palatino"><span>The old model of write &gt; publish is over.&nbsp; If the LA Times was serious about online, they'd stop treating it as a bastard stepchild of
  print.&nbsp; Yes, there would be a difficult transition period as it would be impossible to support 900+ staffers with online revenues at this stage.&nbsp; But assuming a transition could be worked
  out and an upfront investment in the future was made, the end result would be an interactive site that fuels itself - an accredited reporter posts an article (doesn't have to wait for press time -
  it can go up at the <em>right</em> time) and that article, if deemed valuable, will be passed to others by the international community.&nbsp; It’s not just about servicing Los Angeles, it’s getting
  the news of Los Angeles and the world out to everyone who's interested – faster than any other pub. <span>&nbsp;</span></span></font></font>
</p>
<p>
  <font size="2"><font face="georgia,palatino"><span>But, it takes discipline to see an article get trashed, mocked, or relegated to the heap of articles if not valuable.<span>&nbsp;</span> Comments,
  ratings, and user feedback will do that – it’s a consumer-driven economy now and the good (greater distribution) comes with the bad. <span>&nbsp;</span></span></font></font>
</p>
<p>
  <font size="2"><font face="georgia,palatino"><span>However, exclusivity is really key here - articles that come from the AP are now a commodity – there’s zero value in reposting something that
  everyone else posts as well. <span>&nbsp;</span>News that everyone else is covering – without having a specific angle or a unique feature, source or contributor – are a dime a dozen, and only weigh
  down the cost structure of a paper. <span>&nbsp;</span>Cut the ‘me too’ stuff – use a feed to pull in AP articles with minimum cost and overhead – and focus only on the stuff nobody else has (or
  can have).</span></font></font>
</p>
<p>
  <font size="2"><font face="georgia,palatino"><span>Leverage those news desks around the world - break some news - see it spread and see the credit get linked back directly to the reporter.&nbsp;
  This will drive pageviews and unique users from outside the normal geographic market, which will in turn drive advertising appeal and ad rates.</span></font></font>
</p>
<p>
  <font size="2"><font face="georgia,palatino"><span>And, alongside of that, change the ad model - the advertising team must be stand-alone and not have every deal linked to the print
  side.<span>&nbsp;</span> The current ads on the site seem like freebies thrown in by the print ad department.&nbsp; Create sponsorships for sections, use non-standard ad sizes, and adios the
  low-revenue text Google ads and replace them with higher rev direct ads - the Google stuff is crap and it makes the site look cheap, too.</span></font></font>
</p>
<p>
  <font size="2"><font face="georgia,palatino"><span>One thing David's article mentions is the Little Guy – small newspapers won’t be able to support online because they’re entirely the wrong
  structure. <span>&nbsp;</span>Small papers would need a new low cost back office structure to survive. <span>&nbsp;</span>Most just can’t&nbsp; or won’t make this transition – it would require
  laying off too many people – or they just wouldn’t recognize the skills sets that they need to find or keep. &nbsp;Good reporters, however, can and will survive – even as bloggers.&nbsp; The world
  will continue to need journalists with integrity and the ability to find news – those are not&nbsp;skills any technology can replace. <span>&nbsp;</span>As long as there is exclusive news, people
  will pay for it in one way or another.</span></font></font>
</p>
<p>
  <font size="2"><font face="georgia,palatino"><span>Today’s publishers are right to say that the internet side of their business can’t support the business. <span>&nbsp;</span>But, that doesn't mean
  it can't forever. <span>&nbsp;</span>Publishers must make the commitment, investment and effort to build the right online experience for readers – not dangle it as a loose thread from their
  flagship.&nbsp; Until then, I expect we’ll hear thousands more stories, tragedies and complaints from traditional media who, as many entrenched industries have done in the past, can’t make the
  transition to the future because they're too entrenched in the past.<span>&nbsp;</span> It won’t be easy, but there is a clear path forward, and it is possible.</span></font></font>
</p>
<p>
  <font size="2"><font face="georgia,palatino"><span>[I expected to write a paragraph or two on this but it turned into a diatribe :-p]</span></font></font>
</p>]]></content><updated>2007-12-26 13:10:35</updated></entry><entry><title type="html"><![CDATA[Add to Technorati]]></title><link href="http://www.oleole.com/blogs/finale/posts/add-to-technorati"/><content type="html"><![CDATA[<font face="tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3" color="#FFFFFF">Add to Technorati Favorites - you want to - you know it</font><br />
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