Archive for the 'Cooperation' Category

Rule #5: Get Noticed!

June 28th, 2006

by Doug Smith - Podango President

It is easy to get noticed in an empty football station. But when it is full, getting noticed requires a lot of obnoxious behavior or an inside relationship with the PA announcer. Like with blogs, where there are the “haves” and the “have nots. “ There are those podcaster in the top 50 or fat end of the tail and those in the narrow part of the long tail. A great article in the February 20th issue of the New Yorker Magazine, Blogs to Riches by Clive Thompson does a great job of explaining the intricacies of “linkology” and getting noticed in the “blogosphere”. Some of the same rules apply with podcasts, but the fundamental mechanism of a podcast to podcast link is not available. Podango’s “every podcast gets a transcript” will help with links going in and out of the podcast text pages. But that will only be one approach to Podango helping podcasters get noticed in a growing sea of content providers. There are not nearly as many podcasters (upwards of 60,000) as there are bloggers (23 million blogs), but it is still difficult to get noticed.

Have you ever been to a football game where the audience uses cards to spell out words or create symbols to be seen by the other half of the stadium? They are hard to miss. That is achieved through teamwork. Many people combine efforts to get noticed as a group, directed by a coordinator, for the benefit of the whole. Well, that is the general philosophy of Podango Stations, team together to be seen and noticed. Be big, influential and “remarkable”. As a Station Director recruits multiple podcasters into a station, each bringing a unique audience, they all get exposure to each other’s audiences. And the combined audience gets introduced to additional great content that is “sifted, sorted and prioritized” by the Station Director. There is strength in numbers and volume normally wins.

So, if you are a start-up podcaster with no audience, but great content, or an experience podcaster with a big audience, seek out a Podango Station owner in your niche market and audition to be included on their station, so you can get immediate exposure to their additional 10,000 to 300,000 listener.

Remember Rule #5: Get Noticed! And help others get noticed. Podango stations sign “anchor podcasts” and routinely spotlight rising star podcasts!

Rule #3: Engage Your Community

June 2nd, 2006

by Doug Smith - Podango President

Rule #3 builds on Rule #1: Put the Listener First and Rule #2: Don’t Be Evil by enabling “Service to the Community” or “Engagement with the Community”. Online social networks are springing up everywhere and they are working because of the involvement of the users with user contributed comments, content, opinions, tagging, etc. all which adds value to the community in a sense of service. I love the book “Love is the Killer App” by Tim Sanders. “The books premise is that you will find your success in business through helping others grow by sharing your intangibles—your knowledge, network and compassion.” Learn, grow, and share are the keys to this type of service. The benefits to this “giving attitude” are generally not measurable, but they are real. The appropriate approach in this service is one where the giving has “no strings” attached. Well, at least not too many strings. And those that are attached should generally be WIN/WIN where our contribution to the community improves the community for all, including ourselves. A recent article on Skype’s “Word of Mouth” success claimed that “friends who persistently insist that their friends do something not only do so for their own self-benefit, but also benefit all members of the social network because expansion makes it stronger.”
Podango Stations will work if the community of listeners becomes involved in sharing their desires, thoughts, comments, tags and ratings. We encourage the Station Directors to engage their community and the community members to engage each other. To enable this approach to sharing Podango will provide Web 2.0 community features like “CastBacks” (audio feedback), blogs, full transcripts of podcasts, polls, forums and other tools. We also encourage engaging the larger community outside of a Podango Station which includes station to station engagement and cross-Web engagement. It is all about conversations, relationships of trust, service to each other. The role of the Station Director is to serve their audience by contributing the time to sift, sort and prioritize the best podcasts for specific niches. The audience assists by confirming and assisting in the sifting, sorting and prioritizing through feedback, suggestions, ratings and “word of mouth” audience building, so more can share and be engaged.

Podango Rule #2: Don’t Be Evil!

May 27th, 2006

By Lee Gibbons, Podango CEO

In life there are defining moments when one flashes upon a concept that shapes them fundamentally. These moments of epiphany do not come randomly, although they seem to have their own timing. They do not merely appear out of nothing, and yet they are usually unanticipated. They rarely come all at once with full clarity of meaning or alignment with our experience, and yet they ride into our conscience with sufficient resonance that we experience an alignment between them and our prior framework of understanding such that we embrace them. They feel at once as familiar as a old, best friend, and yet as exciting as a newly found love, motivating us to change and reach to embrace them while we also feeling to push them away out of a sense that with them we are irreversibly changed and accountable to their power within us.

Now what does all that have to do with the Podango Rule #2, “Don’t be evil?” Well, one such moment of clarity came at the end of a college course required for my advertising communications major, “Persuasion 295.”

Throughout the semester, the professor (Douglass Gibb) began the semester by making it very clear that in this class he would grade much differently than we had experienced in other classes, even the ones we might have taken from him. He told us that we were to pick a partner in the class and that we would work with them closely throughout the semester. I chose a friend I had known for years throughout high school. Carrie Bestor and I had been in musicals and performing groups together throughout our high school years. Our senior year, I was Captain Von Trapp and she played Maria in the Sound of Music. She was bright, talented, and like me, recently married. I felt safe.

Then, Professor Gibb told us that we were to compete with that person for our grade. He gave us an assignment to pick a couple of competing categories of products and pitch them to local high school classes. I remember choosing Aqua-Fresh toothpaste while Carrie was stuck with some new twist on Crest. I was stuck with Burger King while Carrie got to pitch Wendy’s which had just opened franchisees in the area with their improved speed and new, juicy square patties. The results came out split!

We were also given an assignment to cooperate and present the winning products to our classmates, and we were to give each other a grade on that project. This, knowing that we were competing with each other for the top grade, brought me feelings of real angst about what to give Carrie. She had pulled her weight and been great to work with, just as I knew she would. Yet I also knew that I really needed an A from the course. I also knew that we were neck and neck in terms of the split result that the competitive products had yielded.

At the end of the semester, Professor Gibb gave a final lecture wherein he reminded us where we had been: First, we were in competition with one another. Then, we cooperated. He had the class us compare and contrast those experiences. We roundly agreed that cooperation was the higher law–the way to live! We concluded that working in a manner that generated a balanced resulting consequence for both parties was far superior both in terms of the reduction in effort as well as the improvement of the end result.

He then told us that there was a higher law; that of contribution, wherein one gives freely, without expectation of balanced reward. He may not have used these words, but he taught us that contribution requires that we have an abundance mentality and give freely, believing that if we help others advance their cause, we would have greater good returned to us.

It felt right, and felt possible, but seemed unpredictable, as some people might take advantage of such selfless giving. Still it rang true. I had experienced my greatest joy as a human when I had given pure service to others in need.

The semester ended and we received our grades. To our utter delight, Doug Gibb had gone against the college’s grading policy of grading classes on a curve and had given every member of the class an A. He explained that it was his contribution to our success. My GPA benefited just as I needed it to, but more importantly, I had one of those key learning moments.

Now, some 20 plus years later, having practiced “The Contribution Principle” again and again and never yet having had it fail me, I am building a new company. Podango, like every other company, has to make money for its investors and stakeholders. However, the power of the new web—called by some the live web, Web 2.0, or the open web–is created by the same abundance mentality and openness taught by Doug Gibb in Persuasion 295. It is structured around win-win relationships and is creating mammoth opportunities for contribution and fantastic benefits to the communities served by those contributive efforts.

I love Digg, Technorati, del.icio.us, TechCrunch, NewsGator Online, PodZinger, Evoca, Flickr, Findory, Wikipedia, BlogLines, MySpace, WordPress etc. (I could go on and on…) They provide us with unprecedented opportunities to contribute to others’ successes. And, true to “The Contribution Principle,” they invariably return to greatly benefit she who contributes through them.

In the post that becoming known as “The Podango Rules Post,” I wrote:”Rule #2: Don’t Be Evil! Podango provides world class podcasting infrastructure and ad connections and Podcasters keep their RSS feeds!”

This rule reflects my desire to contribute to the success of our Station Directors, Podcasters and the Communities they serve. I truly desire that our Station Directors have the tools to become the greatest contributors within community their station serves. I want podcasters affiliated with Podango to profit and benefit from superior infrastructure and more plentiful ad revenues than they can make elsewhere, while enabling important conversations between them and their listeners. Finally, I desire that listeners will be served by amazing community interaction that enables them to contribute openly to the benefit of the communities of interest in which they live and play.

Podango gives away to Station Directors, for free, the right and ability to begin a Podango station so that there are no barriers as they begin to serve their communities. We have built in transcriptions and linking technologies to generate better search engine rankings so that people looking for information can find Podango Stations more easily and then become served by their Podango Communities, led by our Station Directors, and find boat loads of great information within each Podango station. We provide top notch community services to allow the richest possible online conversations to take place between community members.

All this is starting very small, with us contributing what we can with what we have, but I firmly believe that abundance mentality attracts abundance. I believe that allowing podcasters to retain rights to, and control over their RSS feeds will lead to improved podcasts and greater loyalty. I believe that allowing Station Directors to own, grow, profit from, and someday sell their stations will facilitate greater passion and superior quality in stations delivering greater benefits and making greater contributions to the communities they enable and serve.

That is what I meant by “Don’t be evil.”

Some have thought the “Don’t be evil” was pointed at one particular company or another. The truth is, it came out of a conversation we had with Rob Walch of the podCast411 podcast wherein he encouraged us to let podcasters keep control of their feeds. The practice of not doing so seemed to me to be small thinking… not born in an abundance mentality.

Finally, To compete may be viewed as a necessity in a free market society. However, cooperation between ‘competing’ companies has been shown to generate greater opportunity through mutually growing markets and industries. But, as illustrated by open source successes, nothing is as powerful as contribution.

I sincerely invite any who have a relationship with Podango to shout us down if ever we appear to behave in a small or “evil” manner and to help us understand what we can do to truly contribute to your efforts to give to your communities of interest.

Tell us! What do you need in order to succeed?

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