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Archive for December, 2008

One key feature to differentiate your new product

December 28th, 2008
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I think Eric Sinc is right in this video — the best way to compete when you are introducing a new product is to pick up one feature from all the features that your competitors have and do it much much better.

From my experience with software products I can see that this should work. You build your product with the main focus of doing only one thing much better then your competitors, this immediately differentiate you from them. And, of course, you can always then extend your product to do all the same things your competitors do if your users would want that. But one key feature will help you tremendously to position your product correctly when it is only launching.

Thoughts

Fight with information overload the same way we fight with spam

December 28th, 2008
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Information overload is a real problem in our age. I don’t remember how many years ago I stopped adding new blogs and other XML feeds to my feed aggregator because I couldn’t read all of the posts in the blogs to which I was already subscribed.

About a year ago I had this idea, that the same Bayesian statistical theory that is successfully used to fight with spam can also be applied to feeds aggregation. I actually started creating my own feeds aggregator based on this idea, but I didn’t have enough time for it, so it was frozen.

The main idea seems to be pretty simple and I don’t see why any of the existing aggregators don’t use it already. Basically, you allow the users to say if any particular blog post was interesting for them or not. It should be a binary yes or no thing. You then use Bayesian theory and look at the words in the post that was marked as interesting or not and this way you build a statistical profile for each user of what they like and what not.

After some initial training such system can start showing you only the posts you are really interested in and hide the ones you probably won’t like, thus reducing the information overload dramatically. What’s great here is that even if you’ve missed some of the posts that you’d like, there is good chance that due to blogs interlinking you will still see a link to that post in another blog post which would be statistically considered interesting for you.

There is so much that can be done with this — the system can suggest you blogs (or posts in the blogs) which you are not subscribed to, but there is a high probability you will like them based on your statistical profile.

This can even become a social network where you can find people with interests similar to yours based on their and your statistical profiles.

And this is just for starters.

Care to comment?

Ideas ,

Support woes

December 28th, 2008

This is the first post in what would probably be a series of posts about Stuffed Guys, a kind of post-mortem to the second phase of the company’s life, which ended on Nov 10th, 2008 with this farewell post on the company’s forums (and started on Jan 1st, 2005).

Stuffed Guys was created by programmers, we wanted to create our own software, make living out of selling it to individuals and companies and take extra pleasure from the fact that something we’ve created is being used and loved by people around the world.

Almost everything eventually worked out as I personally envisioned back in 2004. “Almost” — because user support over the years had become a major challenge.

The truth is, developers don’t like doing support. I think you need to have a certain mentality to be able to answer and resolve user queries on a permanent basis and find pleasure in doing this.

Two major problems for a developer:

  1. In a small company like Stuffed Guys, with only a few developers, solving user problems everyday takes too much time out from actual programming. And we’ve chosen to be programmers because we.. well.. we wanted to program everyday. User queries, especially tricky cases, which could take a whole working day to resolve, take too much time, leaving too little for programming
  2. Once in a while you encounter “mentally challenged” people, who don’t like you or your product for the reasons that only they know of. Such people won’t listen to the word of reason, they will tell you and sometimes your customers too (via the forums, for example) how they hate you, how bad your product is, and other such things. If you are doing user support and encounter such people, you can’t ignore them as you would probably do in the real life (or kick them in the face for that matter), you need to stay polite regardless of what they say. For a programmer this is a nightmare. When this first happens — it ruins a whole day, then a week, then a month and then you just can’t bare it anymore psychologically, your job becomes a nightmare.

It seems that in order to work in product support you need to have a special state of mind and support should better be your main responsibility in the company.  So, once I realized this, I started searching for a dedicated support person for Stuffed Guys. But it didn’t work out well.

Supporting users of such products as our Stuffed Tracker requires quite a lot of technical knowledge about the internet technologies and even some basic programming skills (to be able to debug problems on the spot with the client).

Turns out most of the people with that kind of knowledge are not searching for a technical support position, they want to be programmers. Probably a position in a support department can be looked at as a starting point in the company, but this doesn’t work in a Russian job market. Until late (maybe with the worldwide economic crisis this will change)  there was such a big demand for programmers, that people who knew how to program at least on the basic level had no desire to search for any job position other then programming (it also pays more).

When I will be preparing Stuffed Guys for the 3rd phase I would like to have a plan for support from the start, without this problem solved it doesn’t make sense to return to our own products at all as this kills all the fun.

I recently thought of one trick. We have support forums where our users can chat with us and with each other — this is a small community that gathered around our products. They actually already do user support for us in some way. They know how our products work, they use them already for some time. If only we could  come up with a way to outsource the support to our own users! Psychologically, these people should have little or no pressure, as they are not really a part of the company officially. So people who can be aggressive towards the company or the products should not be taken by the community supporters personally (as it happens when we do user support ourselves).

But the ideal solution would probably be for someone to create a company to provide outsourced technical support for small companies like Stuffed Guys. We can introduce support charges for our customers (which is a common practice anyway) and would redirect most of these payments to this outsourced support company. I think it is quite possible that this company can also provide their own support software to the companies they work with, so that both we and them can login in the same system and monitor user queries and things like this.  A ready-to-use support system would be an additional advantage of such support company.

That would be a perfect solution, for us at least. I wonder if such company already exists, or if someone would be interested in creating one (we would be the first customers!). The idea from the business perspective looks to be pretty interesting indeed.

PS. From Guy Kawasaki

Hire the right kind of people. To put it mildly, customer service is not a job for everyone. The ideal customer-service person derives great satisfaction by helping people and solving problems. This cannot be said of every job candidate. It’s the company’s responsibility to hire the right kind of people for this job, because it is a bad experience for the employee and the customer when you hire folks without a service orientation.

Ideas, Thoughts , ,

Snow

December 27th, 2008
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Traditional post about snow in Moscow and also a test of posting from iPhone.

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Whatnot ,

Switched

December 27th, 2008
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Late 2008 MacBook Pro

Yes, I finally made the switch to the Mac after 15 years of being a Windows user (a DOS user at first).

This is a late 2008 Macbook Pro 2.53Ghz and it is the best piece of computer hardware I’ve ever owned. I like the whole Mac experience so much that I even decided not to run Windows in parallel all the time for software like Outlook (that was the initial plan). I still have Parallels and Windows installed in a Bootcamp partition, but now I only randomly launch it for Windows-only software (virtual machine running in a dedicated space in OS X is a very very convenient thing).

PS. You got to love the built-in speakers here! I’ve always used my desktop computer with large speakers to listen to music — not any more. The audio quality on this laptop is absolutely great.

Whatnot

So what’s up with the blog title

December 8th, 2008
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The title of the blog is not actually strange if you know that I am a big fan of Ninja Gaiden ps3/xbox360 game and I am also.. well.. Russian. This also is a personal blog as opposed to the corporate Stuffed Guys blog, so I can call it the way I want, even if it sounds weird to someone, right?

Some interesting (hopefully) posts are coming up.

Whatnot