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Aaron Worsham / Aug 4, 2008

Yahoo delivering on user created potential in search

Back in April we covered the web 2.0 expo announcement of Yahoo’s Search Monkey, a search result modification API.  Now Yahoo is making the bold step of bringing a small group of Search Monkey applications into the default search results space.  My prediction: Yahoo is evolving into a specialty search company.

When announced, Search Monkey was Yahoo’s early days search tool that summed up the company’s commitment to an open application development platform.  Programmers working in the Search Monkey space were able to create specialized results within the Yahoo search application.  If, for example, you run a restaurant and you wanted your chef’s three best entries listed with your name in the results, it could be done in Search Monkey.  The catch was, people using Yahoo needed to install your Search Monkey app into their Yahoo profile in order to see the special results. That was, at least, before now.

Yelp and LinkedIn are the first two companies outside of Yahoo to have their Search Monkey applications added to the default search engine for Yahoo.  The specialized look that Yelp and LinkedIn developed for their searches will now be in every Yahoo search result by default, meaning every Yahoo search page with Yelp or LinkedIn results will be serving up rich, contextualized information.  I have to believe that other companies are seeing this as their best chance to help push their unique content out to one of the big three search engines.

This move begins what I feel is an important journey for Yahoo to distinguish itself from Google and Microsoft.  User generated search results like Search Monkey may give Yahoo a speciality search advantage.  If you know that Yelp (a resturant recommendation site) has more informative results in Yahoo, you’re going to start using Yahoo for your resturant searches.  While it remains to be seen how many Search Monkey apps Yahoo brings into the fold, this is likely only the beginning.  Yahoo’s press release suggested that both the Yelp and LinkedIn app were seeing 15% click-thru rates when tested in an A-B group, which is a very high percentage in search.  It seems logical to me that as long as your app has a high rate, and your content is well structured for semantic markup (a requirement for Search Monkey to work properly.  See Microformats), you too may find your user-created search layout added into Yahoo’s main trunk some day.  Now you just have to contextualize your site’s content and write your custom Search Monkey application.  Need any help?

Aaron Worsham / Jul 28, 2008

Widgets added to Buzzword Bingo

My boss just asked me to look into this Techcrunch interview with Eric Feng, CTO of Hulu announcing embeddable widgets for their online media site.  Must be a slow news day over at TC.  Am I alone in my surprise that Hulu didn’t launch with embeddable widgets?

Here’s the thing, widgets are a fundamental part of modern web communities, information distribution, viral marketing, you name it.   Just about anything we are trying to discuss here at Sazbean can involve a widget of some form.  They are incredibly important components for building better online businesses. And yet, the term ‘widget’ is getting all fuzzy and nondescript.

The word ‘widget’ has a nasty habit of sticking in the minds of almost anyone who casually reads tech articles hoping to glom onto buzz words they can throw at their IT department in the morning.  It sounds just technical enough to be important while retaining the rounded corner friendliness that glosses over all the scary details.   Widgets have become MacGuffins you check off on a list, like shifting paradigms and finding synergies.  In truth, widgets are invaluable.  But to use them correctly, you have to first decide if you are a provider or a consumer.

Widgets themselves are simply small kernels of code.  In the web today they exist to extend some content or function out from a single website to hundreds, thousands or millions of separate sites who want that content or function associated with their page.  Likely the example with the most exposure is the Google AdSense widget, which is a small kernel of code that Google wrote and millions have placed on their website’s pages.  When talking about widgets there are are always two parts to play, like a dance.   One part takes the lead by making the widget which connects to either their site or a publicly available, usually popular site (e.g. Flickr or YouTube).  The other part follows by embedding that widget in their site’s HTML source code.

From my experience, anyone thinking of adding widgets to their site need first decide on the goal.  Do you want to provide your content or service out to the world or are you looking to add content or services onto your business site?  Are you looking to drive traffic to your site, or are you hoping to keep them there longer?  Is there a service or function for which your online customers are pleading or is there something your site does that is better than the competition that you would like to brand?

The first half of the next series will deal with getting widgets for your site.  Useful business widgets that can instantly improve your sites value.  Then, we will look at a few services that can take your content and make it into its own widget, something your customers can load on their site and help spread the word.

Aaron Worsham / Jun 26, 2008

Paper Prototyping

Have you saved your paper sketches from that million-dollar idea you had while drinking at the bar?  You know, the one you wrote on the back of a napkin? It turns out that many web sites have had a paper phase.  Its actually a common theme that connects our humble web efforts with software projects throughout a quarter century.

Deeplinking has posted a short gallery of some early stage drafts of web sites you may be using today.

Included in their selection was this impressive video on how to interactively paper prototype.

This video is paper-based prototype for Daum’s web mail service, Hanmail.net made by Ajax.

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About Sazbean


Sarah Worsham (Sazbean) is a Webgrrl = Solution Architect + Product Management (Computer Engineer * Geek * Digital Strategist)^MBA. All views are her own.

Business + Technical Product Management

My sweet spot is at the intersection between technology and business. I love to manage and develop products, market them, and deep dive into technical issues when needed. Leveraging strategic and creative thinking to problem solving is when I thrive. I have developed and marketed products for a variety of industries and companies, including manufacturing, eCommerce, retail, software, publishing, media, law, accounting, medical, construction, & marketing.

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