Archive for the ‘Business’ Category

Open eGovernment Data

Monday, November 28th, 2011

The Open Source movement is moving into government data.  Governments are finding a new source of untapped economic stimulus with the mountains of data they collect.  The  data is collected for the ultimate good of the public but rarely shared because information access was too people intensive and expensive up until recently.  Things have changed.

GOV opendata1 300x168 Open eGovernment Data

ETALAB (France), data.gov.uk (UK), data.dc.gov (Washington, DC, US), whitehouse.gov/open (US), and countless other local and national governments have open their data coffers.  In the case of DC for instance, the cost of publishing the data was $50K for the city. The DC government expected it to spur the creation of a few new ventures, and a bit of private investments.  Instead, 50 startups were born and $3M invested.  There is a world of open data coming to the private software industry.

Open Government data is also going to be Big Data.  The size of data collected is by definition larger larger than traditional “enterprise data” for instance (especially at the national level).  The tools being developed for big data will solve some of the issues with access and real time analytics that exit with government data.  Exorbyte MatchMaker is one of these tools.  That’s why government agencies have already chosen MatchMaker for their search and data access challenges (2 national European census agencies, German Finance Ministry, and more).

Are you ready for open government data?  Any ideas what would make sense to build with this data?

Steve Jobs Is Dead

Wednesday, October 5th, 2011

Exorbyte waves goodbye to one master of interface and product design!

Apple Flying 1280x800 369407 300x187 Steve Jobs Is Dead

Steve Jobs Flew Away

http://www.apple.com/stevejobs/

Autonomy’s Secrets Revealed

Thursday, September 29th, 2011

Wow, after the Microsoft / Fast $1 Billion debacle , we now have the Autonomy / HP / Oracle $10 Billion version of the same type of debates over company valuation when HP acquired Autonomy last month.  Sitting on the sidelines happily we get splattered with great intelligence on the reality of Autonomy’s claims of shareholder value.  Enjoy and send your comments!

BUSTED: Oracle Publishes Slide Deck To Prove Autonomy CEO Is Lying
Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/oracle-hp-autonomy-2011-9#ixzz1ZNOVjCVb

9/29/2011 – 2:16PM  - I will just add that no matter what Autonomy and HP say to justify that acquisition, I just can’t see it why they ended up above $10B, especially after looking at these slides.  Good luck.

eBay is Magento’s secret investor – Internet Retailer

Thursday, February 17th, 2011

Ebay finally realizes that it needs it’s own full-fledged ecommerce platform to keep merchants happy.  Many Merchants have left the platform in the past years due to rising fees and restrictions on thoese who choose to sell inside the ebay marketplace.  But last March eBay paid $22.5 million investment for a 49% stake in Magento.

“The investment revelation came on the heels of Magento’s own announcement earlier this week that it will release Magento Go, an open-source e-commerce platform aimed at very small e-retailers that are just getting started with e-commerce. Magento Go is the company’s first cloud-based e-commerce platform, meaning it is hosted online, and will be available to e-retailers at the end of this month. Service plan pricing is based on the number of products listed, traffic volume and required bandwidth, and starts at $15 a month.”

This move positions eBay position itself as a resource for e-retailers, whether they conduct business on eBay.com or elsewhere. Furthermore, it proves what Exorbyte has been saying all along:

This is confirmation that there will be an ongoing market of small online retailers who do not want to operate within the restrictive and expensive platforms of eBay.com or Amazon.com ; where fees are high and they have no or little control of the customers relationships. This market of small online retailers using installed or hosted ecommerce platforms is where Exorbyte Commerce operates.

Furthermore, the launch of Magento Go, cloud-based starter ecommerce at $15/mo is the proof of the SaaS model is taking hold more than ever in the ecommerce space.

Read more: Newsmakers – eBay is Magento’s secret investor – Internet Retailer.

All An Autocomplete Can Be and More

Monday, January 31st, 2011
google suggest 300x265 All An Autocomplete Can Be and More

The Google Suggest Autocomplete

Exorbyte continues to see interest from customers in Ecommerce and beyond for its autocomplete capability.  The trend is not surprising as its been endorsed by some of the largest companies online.  For instance Google surprised many analysts when it turned what many saw as a mere widget, its Google Suggest (see pic to the right), into a new core search interface:  Google Instant Search.

I must say we at Exorbyte were not surprised at all.  We have seen first hand that instant search interfaces (also called autocomplete, incremental search, suggest, auto-suggest, search as you type, typeahead, etc.) are capable of changing and enhancing the search process entirely.  They bring a boost of ease of use and finadability to conversions for ecommerce and to just about any other application featuring a search feature.  Our whitepaper on the topic of advanced autocompletes is worth a read if you want to know more.

But just to put this in context here are a few rules to help the business-focused person make sense of the differences.  Ask the following questions:

  • Are the search suggestions returned straight from real live (indexed) content or just popular search query suggestions?
    There is a huge difference here.  Real search suggestions from content can be hard to return every 10 ms after someone types the next character but they are infinitely more valuable to the user because they cut through the search process straight to relevant results.
  • Are the search suggestions returned with a high degree of error-tolerance?  Does it allow for phonetic similarities, aliases and synonyms, complex misspellings (a letter difference or 3 right in the middle or at the start of the word) , multi word queries, can the user erase and re-type, is the system available on search results pages too, etc.
    Error-tolerance, or the ability to find close matching suggestions whatever the source of the error (unknown spelling of someone’s name,  typo, bad spelling in the content itself, is a huge benefit here.  The reason is that autocomplete suggestions happen at the very beginning of the search process as the user has yet no specific idea of what an ideal query for his desired result(s) (disambiguation process).  Therefore error-tolerance is just not a nice-to-have here.  It’s a must have because that’s exactly what the autocomplete is for:  preventing errors that will return too much irrelevant results (noise) or zero results (silence).
  • Does the autocomplete return results in an advanced interface?  Is it configurable to include actual matches from content but also suggested categories, or other facets, images, etc?
    Having a list of items is not enough.  The autocomplete needs to also help the user disambiguate him/herself.  Having a simple list doesn’t help as much as an organized list that also displays associated data (ie. prices of suggested items in an online store).  The addition of images is a big plus but needs to be done only at no cost to the speed of the system (which requires a special image server like that of Exorbyte).

Hopefully, you will find these suggestions useful and you apply them the next time you are choosing a search system or offered a UI with an autocomplete that does or doesn’t meet these criteria.  See Exorbyte’s own autocomplete at work on our Exorbyte Commerce Demo now if you need an illustration and don’t hesitate to leave us comments or questions below.

Usability is the Key to eCommerce Growth

Tuesday, November 9th, 2010

There comes a time in every new industry where the players can’t rely on the hype and land grabbing tactics anymore to ensure easy profits.

I think the online retail industry is definitely well into such a stage now.  It’s becoming virtually impossible to build a business around ecommerce alone if you don’t have exclusivity around a product, a territory, or a unique service angle (Zappos) which really sets you apart.  Everyone else is left to partner and compete at the same time with the top ecommerce destinations (Amazon, eBay, Shopping.com, Google Shopping, etc.).  Some succeed for a while with increasingly convoluted affiliate-type automated marketing schemes.  But building a loyal customer following is difficult.

Just like in the brick-and-mortar world when big box stores arrived decades ago, independent retailers have to catch up constantly with the leaders of the retail industry and they have become strangely dependent on them and threatened by them at the same time.  They feed their products to Google, Shopping, or eBay, get visits in return but sometimes have to pay for them.  Next time the same consumer searches for that product again, where does he go?  Google again.  So is it time to create better, more unique, more unforgettable ecommerce experiences on small online stores or what?  If you don’t believe just ponder the following:

Ok.  You get the idea.  The ecommerce frontier is not a frontier anymore. Everyone or so has staked their claim.  So how do you create opportunity in that kind of an environment?  Precisely by forgetting about new territories and investing in what’s already available to you as a retailer: visitors.  It’s not enough anymore to invest in SEO, adwords and product feeds.  You want visitors in but no visitors out.  Abandonment and bounces are your worst enemy.  You need visitors in and buyers out.  Because buyers come back.  Because buyers are now in your customer database.  What small retailers  need are the same tools used by the largest players: advanced search, merchandising, and analytics to turn more visitors into loyal and satisfied customers, to improve conversion rates and lower customer acquisition costs.

At Exorbyte, we have been helping top retailers with custom solutions for almost 10 years and we now bring the same automated enterprise tools and techniques to small retailers for free or just a small monthly subscription.  Come see more at http://commerce.exorbyte.com.    Every day or so, I talk to small retailers obsessed with product feeds, upset about paying the high fees charged by shopping.com, Shopzilla, or eBay, worried about Amazon’s or Google’s possible competitive threats to their business.   There is only one way forward for them:  use these dominant platforms to attract users but then offer them the best web store you can and make sure they leave satisfied so they can come back and buy again.  Leave them no chance to leave without the product they came to search or the products they didn’t know you carried.  Make product search better, faster, and more intelligent.  Automate suggestions based on categories, trends, etc.  Make sure you know what users are looking for and hat they are not finding.  Learn to know your visitors like you know your neighbors.

To do so, you need much more than what the average ecommerce platform can offer alone.   Whether you are using a hosted platform (Yahoo, Volusion, StoresOnline, Nexternal, etc.) or your own installed version of some shopping crt software (Zen Cart, Magento, OS commerce or other), we can help make your search, reporting and merchandising capability state-of-the-art in just under an hour without any complex integration.     Come see more at http://commerce.exorbyte.com.

Travel Sites are Usability Centric or Dead

Tuesday, November 2nd, 2010

It’s well know travel ecommerce is a price game.  You either have the lowest price or you are out.  But there is a another big success factor hiding behind the price obsession of online travel vendors: usability.  For us at Exorbyte, the term “usability” associated with the large structured databases of travel products that the industry builds its online business on, means we can help.

I believe that the sheer complexity of the travel process makes usability a primary focus for travel customers.  If you are buying a book on a poorly designed online store, all you risk is probably 2 or 3 clicks more until you figure our how to find, order and pay for your book.  On a travel site, things can get 10 times uglier: flights, layovers, hotel descriptions, multi-airline trips, car rental insurance, rewards program preferences, dates, times, and countless other parameters factored in a complex trip design.  That probably why Exorbyte is regularly approached by travel companies looking for a solution to complex catalog search problems.  We have designed several solutions for the travel industry that I describe below.

Online Travel Transations Graph1 Travel Sites are Usability Centric or Dead

Online Travel Bounce Graph

In an early 2010 survey of online travel stores (PhoCusWright – see right) high prices were the main driver to visitor bouncing off the sites.   However, a long list of other reasons follow (not wanting to register, slow sites, frustration, information clutter, confusion, site crash, etc.) of which most could be defined by the term “bad usability”.

www1 Travel Sites are Usability Centric or Dead

Gomez online travel loyalty

Loyalty is in short supply on the buyers side.  Travel site operators have learned the hard way that users rarely give them more than a couple of chances to impress with their usability.  36% of users report in another study by Gomez (see above) in January this year that they wouldn’t stick around after a couple of bad usability experiences.  17% would even switch after the first failure.  That’s an impatient bunch of people.  If you travel once-in-a-while you can equate this phenomenon to the low tolerance for bad service and tendency to shout at ground airlines staff which airport travelers demonstrate when a flight is late or overbooked.  At least, online they can just switch to a different vendor.  So they do.

We have dabbled in travel usability at Exorbyte for a while.  Here is an example of a European travel site that uses our intelligent autocomplete to set millions of airport transfer pick-up and drop-off locations:  http://hotelshuttle.com/

See also the video below of one of our nicer travel UIs.  One of the most neglected area is the sales of complex packages.  As a user of sites like LastMinute you could think that the feeling of clutter and lack of context is purposeful because most packages are unsold low quality items for other travel agencies.  However, this is often far from the truth.  If you think advanced flight search is a big barrier to the free flow of traffic towards purchasing the ideal product (not sure about the exact name or ATA code for an airport for example), imagine what it looks like when the form is supposed to include parameters for flights, hotels, rental cars, trains, airport transfers, etc.  All-in-one.  That’s what we have been working with L’Tur (LastMinute’s biggest competitor in Europe) to resolve using a very advanced autocomplete we called FlexSearch.  We must admit to failing to convince L’Tur to keep this up at their site because the conversion rate performance wasn’t proved but if you know anything about usability, you’ll enjoy and dream of the possibilities.  See video below.

“Now we can start building business intelligence.”

Thursday, October 28th, 2010

I just read an excellent article from Avi Rappoport of www.SearchTools.com and it prompted some thoughts I want to share here.   Avi basically explains that BI (Business Intelligence) has grown alongside database technology using fairly traditional data access and storage technologies that are costly in terms of hardware and limited in performance and speed and agility (SQL, OLAP, etc.).  Inverted indices used by web and enterprise search engines like Google and all other web page or documents search engines are a great system for powering BI applications because they are more efficient and don’t require the resources that traditional database access technologies require.

What’s interesting here is that the inverted index is really made for full-text documents (web pages, Word, PDF, etc.) not for highly structured relational database tabular formats.  An inverted index is really a way of structuring full-text in a way that makes it easier to sift through (especially for enormous document repositories like the web).  It’s also designed with a specific purpose: to look for documents by the words they contain (keywords).  The simple inverted index contains essentially a long table with keywords in column 1 and URL of web pages or document network locations in column 2.  Because the search logic of the search engine software doesn’t require taking in account the relationships of these words in the original text  (semantic relationships beyond the words themselves) these relationships don’t need to be represented in the index.  The inverted index is single-purpose.  The search engine software then just needs to scan the tables of keywords to start ranking relevant documents (search results).  Of course there are many more things in modern search engines (phrases not just keywords, word proximity, document text cashed for display, pre-processing and normalization of queries, etc. etc.).  But the essence of their architecture is still that a simpler, more structured, single-purpose inverted version of the content to search will allow the search engine to scan millions or billions of documents in milliseconds.

BI software can indeed use a search engine to look for relevant data points such as “gas pedal problem” on the web if you were with Toyota crisis management team a few months ago.   But in many cases, BI will be sifting through data that is actually already structured (CRM, Accounting Transactions, etc.) and in a database.  In these cases, the indices used are still inverted in their own way but they are not much different than the original data in the database.  They just more compact, easier to access, and contain only the data fields you need to search by and those the search engine needs to display to the end user before the final data is accessed in the database.

The NoSQL movement or the Hasso Plattner Institute are out to prove that new databases will be faster or that database indexers will become the new databases because they are faster.  In the video below, Hasso Platner explains why an in-memory database makes sense and is maybe the future form that large databases will take.

Software like Exorbyte MatchMaker also create an in-memory index which allows our applications and our customers’ applications to run queries which would never be possible with a regular database (too slow, too complex for the database software).  Levenshtein, advanced multi-stage queries with phonetic, algorithmic, geometric or semantic logic like the ones we run for new SaaS-based Exorbyte Commerce require this sort of technology.  This is a small revolution for the software industry and large one for the data access technology industries (Business Intelligence, Search Engines, Databases, Master Data Management, data storage, etc.)  which affects all users of databases who need fast, flexible and frequent access to billions of data records.  As Avi says in her article:  ”Because there will never be less data.”.

As conclusion, I’ll just say that these facts above are probably why Hasso Plattner (Founder of SAP) said recently “Now we can start building business intelligence” (see the short video).

Deloitte Fast 50 Award for Exorbyte

Wednesday, October 27th, 2010
deloitte fast 50 rising star exorbyte 300x128 Deloitte Fast 50 Award for Exorbyte

Exorbyte Gets Fast 50 Rising Star Award by Deloitte

Something that makes us pretty proud:  Exorbyte was recognized as part of the “Rising Star” category at this year’s Deloitte Fast 50 in Germany. Overall, Exorbyte ranked 17 in Germany due to continuous strong growth in sales over the past 5 years (455% growth over that period).

Gero Lueben (our CEO) received the award on Wednesday last week in Berlin and he restated what makes us even more proud because it positions us for growth better than most software companies:  ”The confidence that our customers have placed in us is the great distinction we could receive at this point. We have succeeded thus far on our own, without any outside funding of any kind. Exorbyte is poised today for further growth and free of setting the path it sees for the next stage of its development. We are of course pleased about this award which celebrates our past success and our future progress.”

The Sales That You Will Make

Thursday, October 21st, 2010

Seth Godin (http://www.sethgodin.com) just posted a great little post on his blog today:  The Sales You Don’t Make

There is not much I need to add to Seth’s post because at Exorbyte we know why many online stores see their visitor to buyer ratio remain terribly low.  And also because we agree 150% with the reasons outlined by Seth:  visitors don’t buy what they can’t find.  Our search engine for online stores (http://commerce.exorbyte.com) is getting great interest and just about every store owner or operator we talk to admits to spending most of their marketing dollars in attracting visitors, not in converting them in buyers.

So, thanks Seth for putting in a few words what we have from the back office of our customer’s shops:  Every store deserves the advanced search features which the largest buy at great expense.  It doesn’t need to be expensive.  We’ll prove it.  And it should always pay for itself because if your search is error-tolerant, fast, maintenance-free and if you get great search analytics, you will see your conversion rates and revenues increase.

And by the way, research has proven this already.  See one of our very first posts here: Low hanging fruit for most online stores better search features.