Posts Tagged ‘industry’
I love going to conferences and listening. There is always a lot of conversation going on, in sessions and hallways, and I enjoy just shutting up. With so many inspiring bloggers in one place, there is much to be learned. A big part of our culture at Lijit is to listen to what our users have to say and I was honored to do just that in Chicago at BlogHer.
On quite a few occasions at the conference, someone in a group would ask about Lijit and before I was able to answer, a blogger standing nearby would jump in to explain why they were using Lijit. It really is enough to make a girl’s heart flutter. To see the hard work and evangelism that everyone at our company does on a daily basis come to life? Totally awesome.
Here are just some of the Lijit publishers that I ran into, ran alongside, stalked silently, watched on panels, asked for feedback and perhaps even danced with:
A Simple Walk
Deb on the Rocks
Marketing Roadmaps
Surrender, Dorothy
This Mama Cooks!
Inherent Passion
PHAT Mommy
Roni’s Weigh
Crunchy Domestic Goddess
Craftastrophe
OutdoorDogs
Jessica Gottlieb
SecondHand Tryptophan
Queen of Spain
Immoral Matriarch
Average Jane
The Plus Size Mommy
temporarily me dot com
FunnyBusiness
Her Bad Mother
CityMama
Sparkplugging
Mindful Momma
Uncommon Misconception
Scheiss Weekly
Piper of Love
Adria Richards
Jory Des Jardins
Diary of a Crazed Mommy
Assertagirl
Suburban Turmoil
Green and Clean Mom
Blonde’s I-View
Gifted Travel
Cutie Booty Cakes
Velveteen Mind
Kaiser Mommy
califmom
Mommy Needs Coffee
A Mommy Story
Everyday Goddess
Send Chocolate
Big Green Purse
Adventures in Babywearing
motherbumper
the weirdgirl
5 Minutes for Mom
Mommy Bits
No Sense of Time
Twofer Mom
POP! PR Jots
Talk It Up!
Lip-Sticking
The Busy Dad Blog
Adrienne’s House
Whiskey In My Sippy Cup
Miss Britt
The Diaper Diaries
Condo Blues
It’s taken me a while to get to this post, but only because it’s taken me a while to fully process and recover from the conference. I apologize that this post has turned into a long list of links, but it is a long list of links that makes me happy. Some of these publishers are women that I met at BlogHer in 2007 and they’re still using Lijit. When I compare this list with the one I put together after last year’s conference, it’s amazing to see the growth. I can only imagine what next year’s post will look like.
Thanks to everyone at BlogHer and I’ll see you ladies (and gents) in New York next summer!
UPDATE: Just as soon as I hit publish, I remember some lovely publishers I left out. Sorry.
[Mandatory note: If I somehow forgot to link to you, please leave a comment and I'll rectify that situation.]
Tags: events, industry, Lijit publishers | View Comments
This past Saturday, Lijit was proud to help sponsor the first-ever Chicks Who Click, a social media conference geared for women. More than fifty women (and a handful of men) gathered to talk about many different aspects of social media, including how to effectively use different tools to market your small business, how to create a consistent brand online, and how to balance your online activities with your offline life.
I was honored to speak on a panel titled “Your Social Media Toolbox”, with the amazing Wayne Sutton and the talented Lucretia Pruitt, both of whom know way more than I do and both of whom I’m sure will be installing Lijit any day now (wink, wink). Once I got going, I realized that I’ve really learned a lot in my two years at Lijit and with that in mind, there is still so much more to learn. Just over the course of our panel, I learned about some interesting new tools that look promising. I’ll be sure to share more details once I’ve tested them out myself.
It was lovely meeting so many different women, doing so many different things, that were able to come together to discuss something we all had in common. Whether it was a small business or a huge corporation, everyone seems to realize the importance of social media. The main challenges come from proving the value of it to those who don’t understand…ah yes, ROI.
Some of the businesses represented at the conference include:
The Wisdom Coach
Fresh Organic Office Delivery
BirdDog Press
Baby Candy
Little Alouette
Sama Baby
One2One Network
BumperTunes
Park City Mountain Resort
ZoomAlbum
Working Knowledge
Klein Buendel
Crocs
Embarq
Colorado Springs Health Partners
Beneficence
Synapse3Di
Local Matters
If I forgot someone, please let me know and I’ll be sure to add you to the list. (Unfortunately, I didn’t get a chance to talk to everyone!) Many thanks to the other sponsors, Kirtsy, Metzger, and Walmart and to the many women who shared their expertise. Chicks Who Click was a wonderful event and I’m looking forward to doing it again next year!
[Photo credit: Emily Lewin]
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You would think, that with all the good things happening here at Lijit, we couldn’t want for anything more. While basically true (we’re healthy, have funding, and mostly like one another), there’s always room for dreaming. And after asking around the office, it turns out there a few things that Lijit wants for Christmas. File these under “publishers we want to be using our search” and enjoy the list!
Design*Sponge features the absolute best in home and product design, including product reviews, new designer profiles, trend forecasting, student design and global design shows. Lijit could help Design*Sponge by searching everything they’re doing so wonderfully on the web: their press and accolades, their Flickr photos and featured podcasts, each contributor’s content, and their newest video collaboration via YouTube with the New York Public Library. Not to mention, with design in mind, they can use our WordPress plugin and not change their current blog design and layout.
Alex, the author of Blogsessive, is “obsessed with blogging” and covers all the tips, plugins, themes, coding, etc. that goes along with blogging. His site is a mecca for the blogging expert to the first time blogger, however, the one missing tool he hasn’t featured or tried out is Lijit’s search. We see this as a holiday win-win, because his reader base will learn another Lijit blogging tool while he could increase his reader’s engagement, pageviews and searches done on his blog.
If Geeks are Sexy, then those of us working at Lijit have got it going on. However, we would argue that using Lijit makes you even sexier. We couldn’t agree more with the blog’s mission to provide “up to the minute tech news, reviews, and tutorials.” So why not include Lijit’s search and help out your readership of “IT professionals and computer enthusiasts”? Don’t they deserve a good search option as well? Plus, we know that Yan who runs the blog just loves our “Too Lijit to Quit” style.
Ken Rockwell is a go-to source for reviews on photographic equipment and advice. While Ken is currently using Google’s site search, we’d really love to see him using Lijit, if only to see the valuable information contained in his network! In many parts of his blog, Ken says that he supports his family with his site’s revenue, so he might be interested in ways to increase his ad revenue (Lijit can do that!) and since his site winds up as a destination for many Google searches, we also know he’d see the real value keeping searchers on his site longer (Lijit can do that, too!).
The Talking Points Memo is high on the list of favorite political blogs amongst Lijit employees and has organically grown over the past eight years into something of a blog network. It’s also the epicenter for a lot of original reporting that pushes the mainstream news cycle. All that political coverage demands a better way of searching through it, in order to receive trusted and relevant results. Memo for the New Year, Talking Points: Install Lijit.
We wish Political Wire was Lijit because many in the office consider the site’s author to be something of a political guru. Taegan brings current, up-to-date information to readers on the hour and the site’s breaking news aggregator provides quick insight about what’s going on in the world of politics. Also, with a blogroll like the one on Political Wire, doing a Lijit search of their trusted network would bring back a wealth of information. Here in the office, we’re hoping Taegan will vote for a change…in his blog’s search tool.
We enjoy a good laugh around the office and Stuff White People Like delivers the goods every time. Besides being funny, it’s true. Unfortunately, this blog is hosted on a wordpress.com site, which means that they can’t use Lijit.
So, I guess what we really want for Christmas is the ability for bloggers to use our search on wordpress.com sites. (Hear that Automattic, you can make our holiday wishes come true!)
From all of us here, we hope you have a wonderful holiday celebration and that you find all you’re searching for! Also, if you see yourself listed on our wish list, please understand that we mean it as the highest form of flattery and are keeping our fingers crossed that you might be susceptible to a little holiday guilt. Hey, a startup can dream, right?
Tags: industry, publishers | View Comments
Another in our series of employee guest posts, this time around we’re honored to have Ryan Peterson contributing. He is a software engineer here at Lijit (although he prefers pimp), considers himself a tea connoisseur and can be found at his blog.
On January 21st, 2008, Microsoft announced its upcoming version of Internet Explorer (IE8) would not render Web pages in a standards-compliant way by default, and for the browser to do so, Web sites would need to include a special “meta” tag in its header.
Later, after tremendous outcry, they reversed their position and announced IE8 would render in a standards-compliant way by default.
This blog post is not about browsers or IE8–but an interweb phenomena which I have dubbed “blog events”. These announcements by Microsoft are perfect examples.
Defining “Blog Events”
Despite the likely fact that an academic or established Social Media personality has already observed and named this phenomenon something much more eloquent, I call Blog Events
“Events, announcements, or news that motivates large numbers of individuals from various social media demographics, online communities, or groups to blog and/or comment on the event of interest.”
When Microsoft made their announcements, Web developers and designers had various things to say. Blogs, comments, and forums filled with chatter regarding the issue. People were motivated to discuss the event. Even I rushed to write a blog post on the issue on previous employer’s blog, but another developer beat me to the punch by about 2 minutes, posting his blog post first. My blog post was naturally wittier and more fun to read, but that’s beyond the scope of this blog post. ![]()
Other Blog Events
Some other “blog events” I have observed are the recent Motrin advertising debacle, Magpie’s attempt at a Twitter Ad Network, and pretty much any Apple product announcements.
What are some other “blog events” you have noticed or observed, in your online communities or elsewhere?
photo used via Creative Commons courtesy of: davepatten
Tags: blogging, employee guest post, industry | View Comments
Last week, the Defrag conference came to Denver. In its second year, Defrag is unlike the standard conferences Tara and I have attended on behalf of Lijit over the past year or so.
Defrag’s tag line “Accelerating the aha moment,” is rather appropriate. I liken it to a dinner where the participants are all highly educated and someone like Professor William Duggan, Columbia Business School and author of Strategic Intuition speaks on where the origins of innovation are in the brain.
Or, there is a rousing discussion around the aggregation and dissemination of content around the web with T.A. McCann, Gist; Tom Keller, IntenseDebate; Daniel Ha, Disqus; Avinoam Rubenstain, my6sense.
Imagine listening to Charlene Li discuss how to harness the implicit value of the social graph?
But, more importantly, because of the small size, interaction increases. I sat down with Howard Lindzon and was able to talk about Lijit and StockTwits at length, which just is so difficult to do at larger conferences.
It was great to have a conference of the quality of Defrag locally, and I am excited to see what Eric brings to Denver next year!
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Rewind six months. Lijit just moved into its downtown Boulder offices. It’s December 31st, 2007 and I was sitting at home in my subterranean office thinking, wow – how are we going to make our 2008 numbers… Hmmm.
Then, almost like magic, an incredible publisher signed up – that, at the time, was HUGE. I remember thinking, what a blue bird. But how are we going to make the February numbers! Well, we did make the February numbers and every month between then and now.
As a result of our success we decided to pour more gasoline on the fire. Now we have a genuine Burning Man going on here.
Thanks to Foundry Group, who led our investment round. If you’re going to do something in the online publisher space, get these guys onboard. Nuff said. In fact, all our investors are amazingly supportive and at one time or another have been instrumental in building what we are doing.
Lookout, there is no stopping us now.
Tags: financing, industry, press, release announcements | View Comments
The following is a guest post from our Systems Architect, Zach, who loved the fact that he could incorporate his book report into this.
I am about 100 pages into a 512 page book that I highly recommend to anyone interested in history–Guns, Germs, and Steel: The Fates of Human Societies, by Jared Diamond. The author attempts to explain the history of humankind for the last 13,000 years, with a brief synopsis of everything before that, including the spread of pre-human species and the rise of homo sapiens. A major question that Diamond poses is, “Why did the winners in history win?” Diamond concludes that geographic and resource advantages determined the winners. It’s a thought-provoking book, and it has made me think about Lijit’s development i the world of blogging.
Diamond says that in order for humans to advance and create anything approaching a modern society, they must first get beyond the hunter-gatherer stage. In a hunter-gatherer society, all able-bodied members of the tribe must contribute by hunting game or gathering wild plants for food, or discovering new lands to explore. Such societies are too small to support politics, and few people have time to specialize, invent or innovate. Lijit might have had a period like this, when the few founding members each had to contribute, hunting down desks and servers, gathering scraps of code to build up a search engine, and, of course, discovering new bloggers to build a healthy community.
Once a society gets beyond hunting and gathering and into an agricultural lifestyle, the doors swing open for advancement. Food surpluses build up, and political organization emerges. Societies stratify into specialists, such as farmers to generate food, trade people to develop and manufacture new technologies, warriors to protect and expand territory, and priests and chiefs to organize society. One could draw a comparison to Lijit today. Although we’re all wearing many hats, roles are forming within the company. Some of us get to concentrate on cultivating the software, others on taming the hardware. Some of us are the scribes and philosophers who commune with our publishers, and preach their wants and needs to the rest of us.
But some places that are just fine for hunters and gatherers are unable to support agriculture. And some places that might have once supported agriculture were degraded by hunter-gatherers before agriculture could take hold. For instance, hunters got so good at killing mammoths that early humans can probably take most of the credit for their extinction. Could Lijit suffer the same fate?
Australia is a good example of a place that might have supported agriculture, but failed to because of early human influence. Australia once had many large animals including giant versions of wombats, monotremes, tazmanian devils, and, my favorite, a 400 lb. kangaroo. These species disappeared shortly after the arrival of humans, leaving them without any animals to domesticate, and Diamond says this may explain why Australia’s native people never developed agriculture. They didn’t have the option.
[Let's just think about that for a moment. That is, the notion that you could domesticate a 400 lb. kangaroo. Can you imagine? I bet you could churn a lot of butter with one of those. Their legs must have been incredibly powerful. And think of how you could deploy a 400 lb. kangaroo in a conquest scenario. If you could hang on, it would be an awesome elevated platform for throwing stuff at people, and a tricky bouncing target for bows and arrows. Would you want to see your enemy coming at you on one of those things? I sure wouldn't! Better yet, you could hide your troops in their pouches for a classic Trojan Kangaroo attack. "Pay no mind," they'd say as you stealthily approached. "It's just another herd of 400 lb. kangaroos." Then, wham! Out you'd come like some giant kangaroo spawn to take what is rightfully yours.]
Anyway, fast forward about 50,000 years to our current situation at Lijit. Do we have the resources we need to fully develop into a mature and sophisticated engine of culture and innovation? Can we thrive without harming the very land and resources that give us strength? Is my analogy going anywhere, and if so, could I please get to the point?
In a word, yes. Lijit is poised for success because we have developed cooperative advantage for ourselves and our publishers. Our mission is to empower our publishers to expose more relevant content, to understand their audience, and to attract more readers. Publishers are our rich landscape and resources. We know they give us strength only so long as we give them strength in kind. And giving our publishers that advantage is something we are very skilled at.
I am just getting into this book, just as I am very new to Lijit. But I am excited to see how they both turn out.
Photo credits: swisscan and amalthya
Tags: employee guest post, FAQ, industry | View Comments
The following is a guest post by Dave Ferro. He’s a director on our product team, an avid rugby player and blogs about his fly-fishing adventures here.
When I interviewed for the job at Lijit, I was asked if I read any blogs, and if I had my own blog. There were a handful of blogs that I read at the time, a couple centered around fly fishing, a weekly column from a sports writer from the bay area, and a few others from the business community that I would check into periodically. As far as writing a blog was concerned, I didn’t figure I had the time, nor would I have assumed that anyone would ever read it. I was told that writing my own blog was going to be a condition of employment; the logic being that to work for a company that provides utility for blog publishers, I should first walk a mile in their shoes. That made sense. Upon receiving the job offer, I went about creating my own blog.
As with many undertakings where one walks in blind, I learned things that I never would have thought of before. The first thing that I learned is that people who you don’t even know will read your blog from places as far away as India, Hong Kong, and Santiago. Even domestic locations like San Antonio and Topeka, where I have never been, and will likely never go.
The second thing I learned about blogging is that there is a veritable plethora of gadgets, widgets, feeds, and other utilities that a publisher can add to his site…the best of which being the Lijit Search Wijit. There are also about a hundred ad networks who will give you a little snippet of code that will place an ad on your site.
Sifting through these ad networks is somewhat of a daunting task. Each of these networks has more or less the same message, “Put our line of code in your site, and we’ll pay you. Not only that, but our black box is the best black box, so we will pay you more than anyone else will.” It all sounded good, so I applied to a few of the bigger names and even a couple of really obscure ones that sound like they are run out of someone’s garden shed.
My site was accepted immediately by one of the household names, and the ones whose websites would have looked lame in 1997. Strangely, my site was rejected by a few upper and middle tier networks, via an impersonal email. Others said that my site was under consideration, and that they would get back to me when they decided that they wanted to work with my site. I love open ended exchanges like this.
I found that once you are accepted by an ad network, you have entered a one-sided partnership. Good luck getting a real answer to a real question. Good luck figuring out why you made 25 cents per click on Tuesday and then 15 cents per click on Wednesday. Some will allow you to block any domains of advertisers that you don’t want to appear on your site, where others leave you with the option of displaying the ads they send you.
At the end of the day, it is your blog, and you have the opportunity to change anything you want. It seems that there is a lot of trial and error you will go through in order to find out what works best for you.
I’ve been at Lijit a few months now, and everything is starting to make more sense. Every product and messaging conversation we have revolves around what we can do to make it easier for publishers, and what we can do to create a better experience for our publishers and their readers. As a product guy, I get to work on features and products that provide utility and real value for our publisher partners. Walking through the trials and tribulations that publishers everywhere will face has given me a better perspective on how to do that.
Tags: blogging, employee guest post, industry | View Comments
Recently, one of our publishers reached out to us to get our take on third party cookies. They were considering removing our widget due to the fact that we set a cookie when a browser views our widget. This brings up the debate over security and safety when it comes to third party cookies, and cookies in general. We responded to the post in the comments, but I wanted to elaborate on that a bit more.
Why Lijit uses cookies:
We use cookies to not only track whether someone is a Lijit user (allowing them to login etc), but also to allow us to match up a blog/widget visitor to any searches they may perform through our widget. This helps us to provide valuable metrics to our publishers in the form of stats, which in turn allows publishers to give their readers better content.
Generally,cookies allow us to gather better data about our users. Due to the ever rising pattern of “cookie blocking”, either by browsers, firewalls, security software,or explicitly by users, we have had to find other ways to continue gathering statistics. This means we have to use traffic pattern matching techniques, and logging analysis to get all of the data we need.
Historically, advertisers were the primary “pushers” of third-party cookies. This would allow them to track your viewing behaviors across any properties where their ads appeared. Some people disliked this since there was no real value to the web user, and the advertisers got free data. This was perceived as not only a security and privacy issue , but also pushed the perception of third party cookies into a grey area. These conditions, and the rise of spyware and malware pushed OS, and browser companies to institute tighter control.
In the current world of social media , distributed web services, and widespread widget adoption, the value to the user has changed. There are many services, Lijit included, that offer value to the user during their browsing session, versus just “tracking” them. The key, is that the web user is informed about what sites they visit, and the kind of content they allow in their browser. It is important for companies to disclose how they use the information they collect, and Lijit does this in our privacy policy.
Overall, the message should be about awareness and consumer education. The value of enabling third party cookies can actually be additive to the consumer vs. being a security or privacy concern. Modern browsers allow you to whitelist services you trust, and there are many services on the web (such as Lijit) that deserve that trust.
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The Lijit team spent five days in Austin recently at the South by Southwest Interactive Conference. Most people are familiar with the music and film portions of SXSW, but if you’re a tech geek, then the Interactive portion of the conference is like Disneyland. But better because there’s free booze everywhere. Between Todd, Micah and myself, we were able to cover a lot of ground in Austin. After some reflection, I present my favorite moments from South by (which is what all the cool kids call it):
- Seeing Lijit publishers in action
Everywhere I looked at SXSW, I saw familiar names and URLs. Having the chance to thank users and speak with them firsthand about what they want from Lijit was priceless. I went to a session on building community and one of the speakers, Jake McKee, the Community Guy, was proudly wearing a Lijit t-shirt. Bestill my beating evangelistic heart!
- Blog Network Camp
b5media organized this event and Lijit was proud to be one of the sponsors. There was a great turnout and we enjoyed meeting Darren, Aaron, and Christina, among others. Todd gave an impressive demo of Lijit and the response from the bloggers at the event was positive. We’re looking forward to seeing how we can make network search even better!
- How to piss off a blogger
I attended this discussion on blogger relations and was pleased to find out that I don’t do any of the things we listed as ways to piss off bloggers. I’m self-taught and it’s taken me a year, but I feel that I’m in a position to contribute a lot to these panels. As I’ve always said, if you treat a blogger like you’d like to be treated, you’re probably doing the right thing. To read more about what we came up with, check out the post written by the session moderator.
- Hanging in da Bloghaus
This was the place to be to meet anyone who is anyone in the blogging world. Interviews were going on left and right, blog posts were frantically typed, free beer was consumed…and all with the energy and enthusiasm of a frat house. The Bloghaus is where I made the most connections, met the most Twitter friends and rubbed shoulders with the most A-listers. A very dangerous place for someone who freaks out around (very) minor celebrities!
- Startup Metrics for Pirates
Todd spoke on a panel about different ways of measuring the growth of your startup. While the panel spoke with knowledge and experience, it was also a great panel because they spoke like pirates. There were costumes, interactive pirate crowd comments and lots of “Yarrr”ing. Who knew seeing Todd with an eyepatch and earring would be one of the highlights of SXSW?
- The people
Duh. Everywhere you went, there was potential for inspiration and connection. Something about the mellow Austin mood must have rubbed off, because I had no problem walking up to anyone, regardless of their page views, and starting a conversation. It was such an electric energy, matching avatars to faces and meeting new friends. (Micah went as far as getting a permanent souvenir of the time in Austin.) You hear people say it all the time in the online world, but honestly, it really is all about the people.
You can read more about Todd’s SXSW experience here and here. Micah wrote about some lessons he learned and posted a round-up of how Colorado’s startups were represented at the event.
Tags: events, features, industry, press | View Comments

























