This link has been bookmarked by 34 people . It was first bookmarked on 18 Aug 2006, by Pankaj.
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Build a Viral Social Architecture
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Open Up Inside Your Site
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Turn Your Application Into a Platform
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should support RSS at least
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Syndicate Your Content
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should have a URL
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Linkify Everything In Your Web 2.0 App. And I mean everything.
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Capturing information from your users and making it available to others (without violating privacy of course) is a key "plank" of Web 2.0.
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Enable Data Sharing and Data Defaults.
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Network Enable Your Application.
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Seven Ways to Explicitly Trigger Network Effects
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09 Sep 06
Stephan RidgwayDion Hinchcliffe's Web 2.0 Blog, 8 August 2006
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06 Sep 06
Adam CroweSeven Ways to Explicitly Trigger Network Effects: Network Enable Your Application, Enable Data Sharing and Data Defaults, Linkify Everything In Your Web 2.0 App, Syndicate Your Content, Turn Your Application Into a Platform, Open Up Inside Your Site, Open
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04 Sep 06
mark vanAnd there are many other ways to trigger network effects, these are just some of them. But as long as it causes your service to have more intrinsic value to be connected to another node on the network (Internet, Intranet, or otherwise), that's enough.
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01 Sep 06
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26 Aug 06
Gary BurgeHere is a rudimentary take on how to harness network effects in Web 2.0 applications.
DionHinchcliffe networkeffect networks web2.0 business businessmodel
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25 Aug 06
Boris MannA good list of seven attributes to add to your webapp/business/platform
web2.0 network webapp for:troyangrignon for:jeff.henshaw for:cbrumelle
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- Turn Your Application Into a Platform: Encouraging unintended uses by others is practically de rigueur now and every good Web 2.0 site seems to have an open Web API these days. But what's important it in this context is that it leverages network effects on an entirely new meta level. Not only is your site using its own traffic to generate more traffic and create more connections on the network/between people, but so are tens or even hundreds of other sites. They can use your API to add your site's content and functionality to theirs (and hence their feedback ecosystem to yours). And they might leverage network effects a whole lot better than you for a variety of reasons (better design, more funding, cooler crowd, what have you.) Warning: Make sure your APIs are designed to leverage your social architecture or you might not get the desired result, just parasitic use.
- Open Up Inside Your Site: Like MySpace allowed for a while with YouTube, let others host content, Javascript badges, widgets, feeds, or what-have-you on your site in the areas that belong to your users. Not only does this have the useful side effect of instilling a sense of creation and ownership in your users, but it allows you to leverage the network effects of other sites. This makes the content on your site aggregate the best content of other sites creating second order effects that can make your site cumulatively more valuable by building synergy, a new-agey but accurate term that means that the sum is greater than the parts.
- Build a Viral Social Architecture. Sounds fancy and difficult but it's mostly not. At its most basic, you just make sure that it's extremely easy for users to invite their friends, family, and colleagues to visit the site. Example: The end of each YouTube video lets you share it with others via e-mail. There's a lot more to this however and I intend to write it about it soon, but just remember that building good social architectures of participation is one of the core techniques for those interested in serious results.
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- Network Enable Your Application. This might seem obvious but it's a critical prerequisite and has more than the surface potential for creating interesting new applications outside of pure Web plays. For example, a Web 2.0 application does NOT have to be Web-based, but should be able to at least connect to the Internet. iTunes is an excellent example of Web 2.0 outside of the browser, but even mobile phones and text messages, made better ala TWTTR, shows the potential to think outside the box when it comes to thinking about a network.
- Enable Data Sharing and Data Defaults. A big part of harnessing collective intelligence via Web 2.0 techniques is by making the experiences of tertiary users in a given situation easier and smarter. By this I mean when a user does something using the Web 2.0 application, that information should contextually improve that situation for the next user that comes along. I often cite del.icio.us/popular as a great example of leveraging the work that the Web users that came immediately before you are making your upcoming experience that much better (less searching for new and relevant content.) More specifically this could mean expert guidance in completing online forms, improving shopping recommendations, collaborative spam filtering, and much more. Capturing information from your users and making it available to others (without violating privacy of course) is a key "plank" of Web 2.0.
- Linkify Everything In Your Web 2.0 App. And I mean everything. The hyperlink is one of the most powerful mechanisms existing for triggering network effects. It's how users show up to your site in the first place and everything else thereafter. A hyperlink structure must be how the information on your site is organized, shared, bookmarked, e-mail, IM'd, etc. Granular URLs are the key here. A site should have a URL structure that has clear axes for its URL segments (the things between the slashes in a link) to navigate through a user's information, the shared folksonomy etc. Something like site/user/tags/xxxx is a classic example but there should be many interesting (and user-defined) paths to get to the same information. Once available via links, the knowledge of the page, data, or minicommunity to which the link navigates can propagate with amazing -- even alarming -- speed. And propagation over the network is the name of the game when it comes to network effects. If that link contains something people want to share, they will e-mail the link to a group of friends, who will IM it to more friends, who will put the links in their blogs, and so on. Pretty soon everyone is involved and you're buying bandwidth upgrades in bulk quantities. The Message: Consistently think in and design in hyperlinks.
- Syndicate Your Content: It's unclear in my mind how powerful this truly is, but the blogosphere is proof that it can be quite potent. Furthermore, it greatly increases the discoverability of whatever content is on your site. You should support RSS at least, but probably Atom as well. Other people have written more authoritatively about this than I do here but it's an important checklist item.
Seven Ways to Explicitly Trigger Network Effects
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23 Aug 06
John LowellIt's interesting to watch the hype around Web 2.0 increasingly crystallize from a general perception of marketing mirage and investor snake oil to the many valuable concepts that are actually represented by the term. One of the best examples of this is Ja
web2.0 network effect tips participation applications platform development for:bluemonday
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18 Aug 06
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11 Aug 06
Kate TrgovacHow to take advantage of the network in your web 2.0 app. Via Sandy Kemsley.
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10 Aug 06
Sandy KemsleyDion Hinchcliffe's always-insightful views on Web 2.0, including how to trigger network effects in your applications
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09 Aug 06
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Tony HirstThis post suggests "Seven Ways to Explicitly Trigger Network Effects" in a web 2.0 app. It would be interesting to apply this critique to OCI/openlearn...
web2.0 oci openlearn 2.0 participation community networkeffect feedthru
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