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“Get in, Get it, Get Out”

Just read a great article on BBC by way of Slashdot about Web 2.0 (tip o’ the hat to Brian Fioca, who IM’ed me the link) It liberally quotes usability-zealot Jakob Nielsen who, as you can imagine, is not all that enamored with the Web 2.0 movement.

As usual, someone more famous than me summarizes some of my thoughts better than I’m capable of.

What I find strange about Web 2.0 is that we web geeks are losing sight of the fact that the vast majority of people use the internet as a tool. They want information. They want pictures. They want music. They want to buy stuff. They want to search for jobs.

But do they really want to socialize online, just for the sake of socializing?

Certainly teenagers do. I suppose I would too if I had a job that was 8am-3pm, had virtually no responsibilities, and had 16 weeks of vacation time.

There’s a great new study out that says:

  • 15% of Americans don’t have an internet connection
  • 10% view the Internet as a “hassle” (probably because ever site is trying to get them to join their community)
  • About 50% of the population “doesn’t use the internet very much. I’d presume that when they DO use it, they use it as a utility.

To me, the most exciting startups are those that solve problems. That provide a transactional product or service. That, in the words of Nielsen, allow users to “get in, get it, get out”.

I tend to be suspicious of businesses that are trying to create an online “community”. You can certainly build a successful business by doing so. But I think online communities are extremely challenging to build, and they tend to turn off the much-more-massive audience that Nielsen talks about. Amazon would be a LOT less easy to use if they were constantly bombarding me with community features.

Look at LinkedIn. They’ve been around since 2002. They’ve gotten over 28 million in VC and they have a tremendously viral service (WAY before it was cool to be viral!). They are the poster child for social networking for grownups. Yet they’ve only managed to collect 9 million accounts in 5 years (and I’d wager than only a fraction of those are active given that it’s nigh impossible to delete a LinkedIn account).

To this day, I still hear people ask, “So what can you DO on LinkedIn?” I’m hard-pressed to give an answer.

At the end of the day, there seems to be a pretty finite number of adults for whom social networking is at all relevant. And there’s a huge pile of sites that are vying for the attention of these busy users. I’d wager that the only ones who are going to succeed (on a grand scale) are also going to allow the other 90% of the internet audience to “get in, get it, and get out”.

Blog Widgets

I am, in general, not a huge fan of huge piles of widgets on blogs– I don’t really know why. The only reason that I can think of is that too many widgets offend my delicate design sensibilities. Blogs covered with widgets tend to look like patchwork quilts to me. Even though my blog template is pretty much a slightly-altered version of a free WordPress template, I like the clean look.

Yet here I am, dropping a second widget on my site… Not only does it happen to actually match my current blog template quite a bit better than the first blog widget I added (sorry Mark!), but it also happens to be one that I helped build.

So, without further ado, I introduce you to BlogBuddy (the gray flavored widget on the right). You can get yours here!

Phil Bogle, CTO at Jobster, was the technical genius behind the widget. See his writeup here.

Blog Buddy is decidedly a beta project– many of the features that I think really will make it sizzle are still to come!

Linebuzz Starts Humming

Jobster alumnus Mark Maunder has put his travel blogging startup on hold for a month or two to pursue his muse… Which, in this case is (drumroll please) inline blog comments! It would be irresponsible of me not to mention Mark’s wife and biz partner, Kerry– who is quite likely the only reason that this thing has gotten off the launch pad…. Kerry is a seasoned QA manager and has almost certainly kept this thing from being a bug-ridden pile o’ PERL code.

It’s in “soft-launch” phase and they are working out a few kinks, but I think it’s a pretty exciting idea. So try it out here, head over to Linebuzz.com and bury Mark and Kerry in feedback and bug reports.

Whoa. RescueTime hits TechCrunch!

How many people can say they’ve been involved with 3 different businesses that have been featured on TechCrunch? First Jobby coverage (featured a second time when Jobster bought us), then Jobster coverage, and now RescueTime coverage!

RescueTime is the little side project I’ve been working on with my friends Robby and Joe. It was an idea that Joe and I started chatting about almost a year ago and we’ve been dabbling in on weekends from time to time since then.

Anyhoo, check out the coverage. It’s not quite same for a project like this, but it’s still pretty gratifying!

9 Reasons why Web Software Teams get Too Big

Before I got involved with product development a few years ago, my entire career was spent owning and running a small (10-20) person web app consulting firm. Clients (ranging from mom-and-pop operations to Fortune 100 megacorps) would come to me with a problem and I would assemble a team to solve that problem with some sort of web application. 99% of the time, the size of that team was somewhere between 1 and 4 consultants.

When I started a little Web 2.0 company, it seemed natural to keep the team to 2 people, with me doing some design, PR, marketing, and biz related stuff, and Brian doing the assorted geekery required to make a web app go (server and client side coding and a bit o’ sysadmin work).

When our little company got bought by Jobster and we relocated to Seattle, one of the things that truly blew me away was the SIZE of the product development operation at what most Jobsterites felt was a lean operation. There were literally dozens of developers, a few designers, a mess of program managers, and a small army of offshore QA folks. I don’t have the exact count, but I think that somewhere in the neighborhood of 35 people could honestly say, “My job is to build software” at Jobster.

So why the discrepancy? The little teams that I had worked on for most of my life weren’t solving tiny problems. Sure, we had an occasional brochure-ware client, but a big slice of our time was build applications that were pretty darn complex and sophisticated. There are two very legitimate reasons that software teams get big:

  • First off, some web software is just big/complex/ugly… and it has to be. Enterprise software tends to be bigger, more complex, and have lots of integration points which get pretty complicated. The “two guys in a garage” theory doesn’t really work for such things. The more I play in the world of web development, the more adamant I am about not wanted to play in the world of “big” software. Big projects might have merit, but they are certainly a helluva lot less fun.
  • Some teams are really a bunch of smaller teams working on different things. Jobster was (and is!) definitely engaged in several different initiatives. So the team of 35 people were really (depending on how you slice it) working on two or three very different problems.

Unfortunately, the list of reasons for team bloat goes on and it gets pretty ugly (note: some of these are paraphrased from Parkinson’s Law)

  • People make work for each other. Certain people are REALLY good at creating LOTS of work for other people. Some of this work is valuable and productive, but much of it (excess documentation, “here’s what I’m up to” meetings, etc) is not.
  • The amount of work on a team ebbs and flows. Sometimes there’s a ton of work, and an undisciplined (or over-funded) team will seek to get bigger rather than just suffering through the peaks.
  • People like subordinates. Oftentimes, a manager is measured by the size of their team. Bigger teams mean bigger budgets and more responsibility, and that looks good on a resume.
  • Work, like water, spreads out and seeks to fill the nooks and crannies of an organization. If a 10 hour task for one person spreads around to involve 4 other people, it’s likely that the manpower spent on the task will explode to something well beyond 10 hours.
  • An individual’s tasks will expand to fill the time alloted to accomplish them. This seems like the other side of the “necessity is the motherhood of invention” truism. In the times where people have more time than they need to accomplish a task, they’ll find a way to stretch it out. This includes surfing the web or (much more dangerous) adding complexity/oversight to the processes involved in completing the task (creating a longer term “bloat”).
  • Communication paths grow exponentially with the size of the organization. With two people, there is exactly two possible communication directions. With a team of 10 people I have 9 other people that I have to communicate with (and who have to communicate with me). This dramatically increases the chance of miscommunication, confusion, excessive questions/clarifications, and (everyone’s favorite) office politics.
  • Low quality team members can hide in the herd. If a team member loses their motivation in a two person team, it becomes pretty evident pretty quickly. On large teams, low-productivity members can lurk for months without any problems.

Of course, there is some value in larger teams. And, in my opinion, there is simply HUGE value in growing your team from 1 to 2. Two brains are most certainly more than twice as sharp as one. Beyond a team of two or three, however, I think that the added manpower offers asymptotically diminishing returns. While I truly believe in the Wisdom of Crowds, I think the best way to harness this wisdom in software development is by collecting thoughts and opinions in a one-off kind of way (usability tests, focus groups, consultants and the cheaper alternatives of asking peers, friends and family for their opinions).

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