Archive for October, 2009

Recently I came across this blog post while following the #prodmgmt hashtag in Twitter: “Death by a thousand paper cuts…”  The author Gopal Shenoy, talks about how visiting your customers gives you valuable insight into their daily ills and what you can do to fix them.

This article caused me to reflect on similar experiences I’ve had.  With a giant dose of humility and non-defensiveness, you can certainly learn a lot from your customers and see first-hand those things that start out as little frustrations, but over time mount to productivity losses and if you’re not careful, the loss of a loyal customer.

Now I know every Product Manager recognizes the importance of repeat customers, especially in today’s economic environment, but sometimes it’s easy to lose site of what it really takes to keep them.  It’s not always what I call Big Feature X.  I’ve sat next to a customer who’s been trying unsuccessfully to import a massive spreadsheet of data into the application and getting bogged down in the process, and another who’s had to repeat the same step over and over again when a simple “update all users” option would have done the job.

I have also experienced a surprising standing ovation, when I presented a single unattractive slide with a bulleted list of the small enhancements we’d made over the past six months. The customers in the audience stood up and cheered and so did the sales reps. Why?  Because the customers felt we finally heard them.  I mean we really listened to our customers and we made their lives easier.

One of the customers came to me during dinner that evening and told me how she was looking forward to my Big Feature X and she was sure it would be awesome, but she doubted it would come close to the happiness she felt when she clicked that “update all users” option the very first time.  She was able to finish her month-end tasks in minutes instead of the 3-4 days she usually allocated to this task.

I walked away from that Sales Meeting slightly embarrassed, but with a lesson that I will never forget.  Listen to your customers.  Really listen. Whether you’re on site, or whether they’re talking via social media tools like Twitter and Facebook, or through blogs, forums or other web tools, listen to them.  Paper cuts hurt.  And thousands of them?  No way.  Sooner or later that paper’s going in the trash and the next thing you know, they’re reaching for a new sheet of paper from another stack. Ouch!

We’ve been updating the WordPress plugin to work with the newest version of WordPress (currently 2.8.4), and it’s now available for download from the WordPress Plugin Directory.  This new release restores functionality affected by changes in WordPress 2.8, and is still compatible with previous versions down to 2.6.1.  In addition to restoring the plugin’s original functionality, we enhanced the Content Link Suggestions operation.  In the past, this feature used a direct title link to Wikipedia, which could result in a non-existent entry.  Now we use an article search, which returns the best match Wikipedia can find.

A group of us at TextWise created a site, gyzork, which allows a user to find news or blog articles either by category browsing or by finding articles based on entered text. Initially articles are returned based on date with the most recent articles shown first. The user decides whether to view news or blog articles.

Using our API, gyzork requests matches from either the news or blogs index. The API has a news index that contains the past 5 days of news articles aggregated from various sources. The API also has a blogs index that contains the past 30 days of blog articles aggregated from various sources.

Gyzork provides the following:
• The ability to “browse” news or blog articles by category.
• The ability to find news or blog articles by entering text which is then used to find relevant articles. Additional browsing can then be done by category.
• The ability to create a semantic bookmark to continue to find news and blog articles for an area of interest. These bookmarks can be used to “customize” a user’s front page.

Gyzork uses our Semantic Signature® technology to take a user’s bookmarks and then find relevant articles, news or blogs that “match” the Signature of the bookmarked article. A Signature is a semantic representation of text; a bookmark saves the Signature of the “bookmarked” article. Gyzork turns traditional content discovery into a more meaningful, relevant and useful experience!