August 22, 2010
24 Customization Companies Teamed Up and Invaded Facebook!

At the Smart Customization Seminar, I had proposed that some of the customization companies should team up to advertise on Facebook together to create some buzz for customization, personalization and design-your-own. And so we did!

On August 6, 24 companies put up ads on Facebook, together achieving more than 14 billion impressions for design your own as well as a few press mentions in the Entrepreneur Magazine blog and Huffington Post.

 

The campaign created some buzz with little money per company - each customizer spent between $50 and $100 on Facebook ads. While we didn’t convert a whole lot with the ads, we achieved a lot of impressions - hopefully starting a conversation, and then later many conversions. 

One of the lessons learned was to pay per impression, not click, which seemed to make more use of the small budgets. Also, a landing page that was either a Facebook page, media (e.g. a video) or a signup for newsletters performed better than just a website. 

It is very hard to measure what matters most though - the long term effects. Are people more aware of customization now? Arwa Jumkawala from Gemkitty nicely summarized it: 

This experiment was innovative display of strength gained in numbers. It was really cool for us all to band together (and in some cases with businesses in the same product category) to get conversations going. If this experiment get a just a few people to pause the next time they’re Googling for x type of product to wonder if there is way to customize x, then I think we succeeded. 

These are the mass customization companies that participated:

Blank Label - co-created dress shirts 

chocri - customized chocolate bars 

Spreadshirt - co-created t-shirts, sweaters and hoodies

LaudiVidni - customized handbags 

Gemvara - customized jewelry

Shoes of Prey - customized women’s shoes 

Wagner Skis - co-created skis and snowboards

Gemkitty - customized necklaces and earrings

Snaptotes - custom totes with your photo

Element Bars - customized nutrition bars

YouBars - customized protein bars, shakes, trail mix, cookies and cereal 

Red Moon Pet Food - co-created pet food for dogs and cats

Rooms By You - custom home decor for babies, kids and teens

Lindgolf - personalized golf clubs and bags 

Artaic - custom mosaics 

Mel Boteri - customized handbags 

IndiDenim - custom jeans for women and men

Kidlandia - custom puzzles and maps for kids

Maguba - customized clogs and women’s sandals

Personalwine - wines with your personalized labels

Proper Cloth - customized dress shirts 

Design A Tea - custom tea blends 

Selve - customized women’s shoes and boots

Open Runway - custom shoes (to be launched soon)

April 22, 2010
Pete Cashmore's Take on the Facebook Thing and Personalization

Ironically, not with a like button. But a recommend button (where the heck did that one come from?)

April 22, 2010
Facebook Taking Over the World? Be My Guest.

Call me a naive young one, but I like what Facebook is doing! As mentioned a day prior to F8 (totally coincidence, I didn’t even know about it) I wrote about how I want my whole online experience personalized. I wasn’t kidding. Facebook’s new open graph and like-button-spreading is just simplifying what I was doing already. I was already trying to find my friends on yelp, just that I had to actually search for them - takes way too long. Now it does the connection for me. The next step is to know what I like to eat and what my favorite food is and to hence make better recommendations on where to go tonight.I want the web to know me and cater to me like a concierge in a fancy hotel, who already knows that I want sparkling water not still water and like to sleep in white sheets, not … you get it (I don’t actually stay in fancy hotels, just like the metaphor). I want a much better experience because Pandora knows what kind of music I like, so they don’t only give me tracks that match the one I named, but in general tracks that I like. Everywhere. Take down the silos between websites, this is a WEB.

You and your privacy concerns

I get it, I grew up in the country with the strictest data protection laws on this planet. But you know what? That’s fine. Not everyone wants to put themselves out there, and that’s what those neat boxes are for that you can check or uncheck. Granted, FB is doing a lousy, lousy job telling you that there’s new boxes you might want to uncheck. Go right now and look at your Privacy Settings > What your friends can share about you > And keep me from posting your relationship status on some random website. Apart from that I’m happy with the options FB provides me, and I’m sure services will arise that give you anonymity when surfing.

Being myself online just as I am offline

I like to be myself online. In fact, whatever I do online (like writing this), I can reflect on for a minute longer. I might in fact be able to create the persona I want to be perceived as online. And yes, I have different roles in my life - that’s why there’s lists and groups. In fact, the personalization that Facebook enables makes it even easier to be unique and not to conform with everyone (e.g. read boring headlines first before getting to the ones that you really care about, just because the majority needs to know the boring stuff). It makes me have a richer time online.

Facebook’s Power. Is Facebook evil?

Facebook has immense power over me. If they were to take Facebook away from me now, I’d pay a lot to keep it. Keep not “it” but my friends all over the world, their contact info, shared memories, jokes, the persona I created by carefully by untagging me in every picture I didn’t like ;) The fact that Facebook might become the aggregator of all my personal info (to personalize the web for me) almost suggests itself (well, maybe in cooperation with Hunch). Facebook is powerful, but as long as they keep those boxes that I can uncheck if I so choose, I’m not afraid. This whole discussion reminds me of Gary Vaynerchuk’s reminder that people are inherently good. Facebook is a company with people in it, and enough of us are watching. The only thing that scares me a little though is that Facebook is creating immense value for me. In 2-3 use, the fact that I’m getting only personalized info online might save me a few hours everyday. If they start asking for just some of that value, I’ll be owing them a lot of money ;)

What do you think? Do you “like” the changes? Hate them?

April 19, 2010
An Utopia: Personalized Internet Everything

Apr 19, 2013

Today I watched a movie - it was fantastic. Netflix just knows what kind of stuff I like to see, especially since they started collaborating with YouTube, Vimeo and Hulu. They know when I fast forward, they know what I watch twice, and all that data feeds into Netflix. Netflix knows I like amazing cinematography and they “borrowed” the idea from that site, whose name I don’t remember, where you could choose your music by picking a color (something like http://musicovery.com/, but that’s not who invented it).

So whenever I turn Netflix on, it asks me “How are you” and from there I can be sure that the three movies it suggests are those I like. It doesn’t take more than three, because I like all of them. At the same time, it feeds the data back if the movie industry just hasn’t made enough movies with great colors or surprising plots, and so they know what’s in demand.

Netflix isn’t the only company that recommends stuff. In fact, everything and everyone is collaboration (like, you know, and interNET), and they know me, if I let them. It all began with Hunch…

I’m on something like 15,793 questions answered with Hunch now. I answered most of those between 2010 and last year, because last year I gave Google permission to use StumbleUpon Data as well as my time spent on sites to analyze what I like and how I am, leveraging the data on Hunch of users like me. Of course Twitter and Facebook data is picked up on it as well, and via Foursquare it also knows what I like in the offline world. Sometimes I still like to answer some questions, it’s entertaining.

Recently, I bought a new trash can. Obviously, trash cans isn’t something I buy a lot, so there’s not much data on me and my trash can buying behavior. But Hunch knows my style, and Google knows I like to buy from sites that look great, unless I can get the same trash can cheaper elsewhere. Thus my Hunchoogle results are dramatically different than those from, say, 2010. I get max 5 results, and I know that I like ‘em. The internet has just become amazingly more simple. When I order on chocri, I only see the toppings that they know I like.

Sometimes I go anonymous on the internet. It’s fun to see what other people like. But there’s so much clutter!

I like new ideas for businesses, and my internet recommendation geniuses have totally picked up on that. Genius - good keyword. iTunes’ Genius is much more than music nowadays (especially after they bought Instinctiv and signed a partnership aggrement with Pandora)… whenever I like something, it conspires with Hunch and StumbleUpon (what do other users like me like) and Google (my past behavior), and analyzes what it probably is that I like about it. Then it analyzes everything (say, websites, books, music, video, product, you name it) to bring up other stuff I probably like. Say I want to go out to eat-  thanks to Foursquare, it knows what I like, thanks to Foodspotting, it knows what to eat. So every time around lunch and dinner time, I get an email with a suggestion either what to make out of the groceries I bought recently (of course the store feeds that info into it), or where to go out to eat. No more yelping needed.

Privacy was everyone’s concern - for about four weeks. If I didn’t want it, I’d just turn it off! And my friends are now in something like ‘castes’ depending on how much I trust them and what I want them to know/ give them access to (think Facebook lists from way back). A positive side effect is that hardly anyone lies anymore- just so tough to keep up with that lie throughout all your systems!

The only thing I haven’t gotten used to is that it’s hard nowadays to meet someone who’s not just like me. Facebook keeps bringing people up who are, well, awesome, but exactly like me! I have to try hard (-> I have to go offline!) to meet someone who disagrees with me and doesn’t have the same trash can as me. Which, come to think of it, there haven’t been many new trash cans developed lately - where did innovation go?

Liked posts on Tumblr: More liked posts »