andrewducker (
andrewducker) wrote2011-09-06 03:10 pm
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The death of a thousand cuts
Something that successful startup companies do well is to throw ideas out
at high speed, see what sticks, and then build on that, iterating rapidly
towards a product that people actually want to use.
It's something that large companies do badly, which is why they are
frequently disrupted, eaten alive from the insides by faster moving, more
flexible competitors.
William Gibson came up with the phrase "The street finds its own uses for
things."* and it's a lesson that you'd think any designer of tools would
have learned by now. If you designed what you thought was the perfect egg
de-whiter, and then discovered that it was selling in massive amounts to
motorcycle owners to be used as a rear-view mirror then the _last_ thing
you do is tell them that they're using it wrong - you design some new
boxes, stick some adverts in the motorcycle magazines, and work out a way
to make it an even better rear-view mirror.
Sadly, illustrating how badly large companies do this is the perfect
example of Google Plus. Where a site with potentially awesome
functionality was launched, and then people started using it wrong.
Leading to Google throwing people off the site, and causing endless bad
blood. People who would have happily used their real names are now upset
at Google for removing the option from others, and traffic has
fallen 37% over the last couple of weeks.
There was another case I saw, where a webcam video feed site decided to
throw off their "adult" users, because they were only a small proportion of
the userbase, and the site didn't want to be associated with that kind of
thing. And then discovered that the adult content users were a massive
proportion of the _paying_ user base. Thankfully, they realised this in
time to turn things around.
I suspect I'm being optimistic if I expect Google to be that smart.
*in the same short story that laid the paving stones of his Sprawl trilogy
and coined the word "cyberspace". He was clearly having a good day.
at high speed, see what sticks, and then build on that, iterating rapidly
towards a product that people actually want to use.
It's something that large companies do badly, which is why they are
frequently disrupted, eaten alive from the insides by faster moving, more
flexible competitors.
William Gibson came up with the phrase "The street finds its own uses for
things."* and it's a lesson that you'd think any designer of tools would
have learned by now. If you designed what you thought was the perfect egg
de-whiter, and then discovered that it was selling in massive amounts to
motorcycle owners to be used as a rear-view mirror then the _last_ thing
you do is tell them that they're using it wrong - you design some new
boxes, stick some adverts in the motorcycle magazines, and work out a way
to make it an even better rear-view mirror.
Sadly, illustrating how badly large companies do this is the perfect
example of Google Plus. Where a site with potentially awesome
functionality was launched, and then people started using it wrong.
Leading to Google throwing people off the site, and causing endless bad
blood. People who would have happily used their real names are now upset
at Google for removing the option from others, and traffic has
fallen 37% over the last couple of weeks.
There was another case I saw, where a webcam video feed site decided to
throw off their "adult" users, because they were only a small proportion of
the userbase, and the site didn't want to be associated with that kind of
thing. And then discovered that the adult content users were a massive
proportion of the _paying_ user base. Thankfully, they realised this in
time to turn things around.
I suspect I'm being optimistic if I expect Google to be that smart.
*in the same short story that laid the paving stones of his Sprawl trilogy
and coined the word "cyberspace". He was clearly having a good day.
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in other news, the new Wolves In The Throne Room album is excellent. Yes, you really did need to know that.
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Now, Dead Can Dance on the other hand, dark ambient, less doom. ;)
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also possibly The Wounded Kings