R55: Location, all you ever wanted

Posted: March 26th, 2010 | Author: Ty | Filed under: Release, UX, Uncategorized | View Comments

A principal feature of FanFeedr is to provide a localized subset of news, photos and scores to unregistered users, based on our best guess at their present location (sometimes this involves a cork bobbing in a bowl of water with a magnetized needle through it, but not always). But what if you want news about local teams in Boston or Seattle while you’re vacationing in Detroit?* This week’s release allows you do to just that — we’re introducing local pages for metro areas around the country. Here’s the deets (and some info on other goodies):

  • New pages for metro areas
    • Get content on local colleges, teams and players
    • Also available as widgets or via the API
    • At-a-glance navigation for local teams
  • Improved navigation for F1 and NASCAR. Now you can find your favorite F1 and NASCAR teams more quickly and easily.
  • Improved support for IE8. The neverending story continues.

Also, as noted previously, we’ve recently released version 1.4 of our iPhone app, and our crack Mobile Platforms Development team is hard at work on the upcoming iPad version. And, as always, we eagerly solicit your feedback using the red Feedback button on the left hand side of every page.

Until next time, then, we remain

Your friends at FanFeedr.

*Work with us here, people. Don’t hate on the Motor City.


Version 1.4 of our iPhone App is here

Posted: March 23rd, 2010 | Author: Sangraal | Filed under: Uncategorized | View Comments


Get v.1.4 here

The latest FanFeedr iPhone app is live on the iTunes App Store and available now as a free download.

What’s New

  1. You can now play the FanFeedr “You Pick’em” game from your phone. Correctly pick the winning team for upcoming games and earn points and badges.
  2. Added hot stories for IRL.
  3. Hot stories are now limited to the hottest stories in the last hour under ‘All’ and the last day under each league.
  4. Bug fixes.

Thank you for your interest in the FanFeedr iPhone and iPod Touch application.

Thanks, FanFeedr.


R54, for even the wackiest brackets

Posted: March 19th, 2010 | Author: Ty | Filed under: Facebook integration, Game, New Leagues, RSS, Release, Uncategorized | View Comments
I know we all love our annual office bracket pools, but they do suffer from a rather obvious flaw: namely, after the inevitable first-round upsets, a lot of people are effectively shut out of the competition. You know the feeling — you follow the standings, ratings and games all year, only to have your meticulously researched bracket trumped by Maureen from Accounting by 6pm the first day.
Well, the FanFeedr NCAA Tournament Pick ’Em game doesn’t allow such gross miscarriages of justice. All you have to do is pick 3 out of 4 games right for each round of the tournament, and you’ll receive a badge proclaiming your all-around prognosticating excellence. Maureen doesn’t stand a chance. What’s more, you can watch the games online as you check your progress in each round.
Here’s the total rundown:
  • NCAA Tournament
    • New badges. We’ve created special badges for Round of 32, Sweet 16, Elite 8, Final Four and Championship game winners.
    • Online video links. We’ve provided integration with CBS March Madness on Demand Internet video on scoreboard and team pages, so it’s even easier to keep track of the action.
  • Pick ’Em refinements
    • Game opportunities on Twitter and Facebook. Subscribers of our Facebook news pages and Twitter feeds now receive game opportunities in their feeds, so they won’t miss a chance to bet on their favorite teams.
    • Picks now appear on all games. Now it’s dead simple to keep track of your Pick ’Em record: just look up the games from last night (or the night before) and witness the fruits of your labor against the game results.
  • Plus: new Facebook pages for F1 and NASCAR racing teams, RSS feeds for local area teams, and more.
  • Last but not least: RSS for the home page. You can now get your personalized FanFeed delivered to your feed-reader of choice.
As always, we’re interested in hearing your thoughts, so hit us up on the Feedback button, and we thank you for your support.
Until next time,
Your friends at FanFeedr.

FanFeedr is looking for a few rockstar Python people (or people who want to learn Python)

Posted: March 12th, 2010 | Author: Ty | Filed under: Uncategorized | View Comments

FanFeedr is hiring, and we would love to hear from folks in your network who have any of the following skill sets. Please have them contact us on jobs@fanfeedr.com.

We are based in New York and San Francisco, and we are looking for smart folks.

Open positions

Lead Engineer

  • Responsible for applying a Bayesian categorizer and organizer to new content verticals.

Engineer

  • Responsible for maintaining our RESTful API, developer evangelism, product development, and web client development.

Front-end developer

  • Responsible for front-end web development across multiple platforms

SysAdmin

  • Responsible for maintaining our AWS web services based backend. This is not necessarily a full-time position.

Company background
FanFeedr is a real-time media aggregation platform that delivers personalized news streams, social gestures, real-time trends and conversations around users’ passions. We are focused on sports, and you can see and use the application here, view our API or download our iPhone application. More company background is here.

Technical background
We’re using a nearly full-Python technology stack on top of the PostgreSQL RDBMS. SQLAlchemy is our database ORM; Pylons is our web application framework, and Mako templates provide our view layer. We also use SOLR for content indexing and retrieval. Our infrastructure is hosted in the cloud using Amazon EC2, Elastic Block and S3.

Again, you can contact us about any of these positions via jobs@fanfeedr.com.

Thanks, Ty


R53: Laying the table for March Tournament Pick’Em

Posted: March 12th, 2010 | Author: Ty | Filed under: Facebook integration, Game, New Teams, RSS, Real-time trends, Release, twitter | View Comments

Straight to the goodies.

More real-time goodness

  • We are publishing in real time to Facebook through the API, so no more of that RSS lateness
  • Facebook team pages also get scores, photos, and videos, so that you don’t have to go elsewhere to get everything about your favorite teams
  • We are now publishing our RSS feeds via Pubsubhubbub, which means you can get them completely in real-time, with no latency
  • Scores and photos are have also been included in the RSS feeds on FanFeedr.com.

Pick’Em enhancements

  • We are now publishing the opportunity to pick your favorite NBA and NHL games directly to our Twitter and Facebook feeds so that you don’t have to come searching to bet.
  • We reduced the number of times that Pick’Em picks publish to your Facebook feed. You will only see them once a day at the very most so that we don’t overwhelm your posts.
  • We also reduced the publishing of picks on FanFeedr to just the first pick you make each day so that you can see everyone in the Public Timeline, and, more importantly, so that your own feed isn’t overwhelmed.
  • On Monday, you can pick the NCAA tournament, and we have special badges for each bracket

Racing improvements

NASCAR

Formula 1

  • We now have individual pages for each of the Formula 1 teams, like Ferrari and BMW Sauber
  • We also have Twitter accounts for Ferrari and Mercedes

Technical stuff

  • Fixed a bug whereby posts to Facebook didn’t work properly

We hope that you enjoy the tournaments this weekend, and look forward to checking out your Picks in a couple of days, FanFeedr


FanFeedr Pick’Em for March Madness

Posted: March 9th, 2010 | Author: Ty | Filed under: Game, Press Release | View Comments

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

MEDIA CONTACT

Amy Bonetti
Big Mouth Communications
415-384-0900
amy@bigmouthpr.com

Throw Away the Traditional Office Pool Bracket—FanFeedr’s March Madness Pick’Em is Here!

The First Sports Social Game Seamlessly Integrated with Facebook and Twitter

NYC — MARCH 9, 2010 – The excitement is building for college basketball fans as March Madness is upon us — many teams are on the bubble as they compete to be included in the field of 65 for the 72nd NCAA Division I Men’s Basketball Championship Tournament. More than any other sporting event, March Madness attracts not only the avid sports fan, but casual sports fans and others who may not be sports fans at all.

And today, FanFeedr personalized sports fix announces March Madness Pick’Em, the first sports social game that is seamlessly integrated with Facebook and Twitter, enabling users to easily share their trash talking and claim bragging rights of their winning team selections and Pick’Em badging status with their friends and co-workers. FanFeedr’s March Madness Pick’Em is a great replacement or complement to the various traditional March Madness bracket office pools.

FanFeedr’s Pick’Em sports social gaming platform builds upon the rapidly growing social gaming economy pioneered by Zynga, Playfish and several others that is predicted to hit $1B in 2010. “FanFeedr’s Pick’Em gaming economy allows sports fans around the world to show their sports-savviness to their friends and all other users,” says FanFeedr’s CEO and founder, Ty Ahmad-Taylor.

FanFeedr users who join in the March Madness Pick’Em gaming action will be challenged to choose the winners of the 63 total games from the opening round of 65 teams through the Final Four and Championship game! And FanFeedr’s real-time sports news feed is also a great tool for users to do their research on each team before making their March Madness picks. March Madness Pick’Em players can go the site or iPhone application to check their updated status and compare it to their friends, co-workers and other users.

The March Madness Pick’Em doesn’t utilize a traditional bracketing system but instead offers users the opportunity to earn badges for each round. There will be five special March Madness badges for the five rounds of tournament games. Users who pick 75% or more of the winning teams in each round earn that round’s special badge, leading to their ability to pick the winner of the national championship game and earn the NCAA Champion badge. “This format creates even more competition to see who can earn more badges throughout the tournament and to see where a player ranks among their friends, as well as other March Madness users,” says Ahmad-Taylor.

In addition to its March Madness game, FanFeedr’s Pick’Em sports social gaming platform offers users the opportunity to compete with their friends for bragging rights and reputation badges in picking the winners of NFL, MLB, NBA, NHL, NASCAR, NCAA and other top sports. With the upcoming NBA Playoffs, NHL Stanley Cup and the World Cup, FanFeedr will also offer special games for users to show their picking prowess for these championship series and special sporting events.

Here’s how Pick’Em works: users earn points and badges based upon their success at picking team winners. “The badges that FanFeedr users obtain for their winning picks show up on Facebook and Twitter (if the user wishes) and dovetails nicely with the competitive nature of sports enthusiasts, while allowing our users to show off who knows more,” says Ahmad-Taylor.

FanFeedr Pick’Em plays to the prestige factor and competitive nature of sports fans everywhere. The ultimate goal for FanFeedr users is to earn the coveted Commissioner badge as the top fan of a particular sport. “There is only one Commissioner badge per sport and the fan at the top of the heap is going to be really competitive about keeping that badge. It is much like the ‘Mayor’ badge in FourSquare, and we’ll have real-world opportunities for the Commissioners that provide them access that other fans will envy,” added Ahmad-Taylor.

Pick’Em is a natural extension of FanFeedr’s real-time sports content aggregation platform that provides users with their personalized sports fix. “It’s all part of FanFeedr’s strategy to give fans what they want,” says Ahmad-Taylor. “The web can be overwhelming, but we narrow it down to serve up only the content a fan wants to see in one place. And now users can enjoy their FanFeedr experience even more by having a lot of fun playing Pick’Em.”

ABOUT FANFEEDR

Based in NYC, FanFeedr is the leader in providing fans with their real-time personalized sports feed for their favorite teams and players, and presents an up-to-date collection of related news, video, Tweets, scores and information. FanFeedr currently aggregates and indexes over 7,000 sources of sports content and matches them against more than 55,000 athletes, 4,000 sports teams, including 1,700 colleges and universities, across 15 sports. FanFeedr uses Facebook and Twitter for user authentication and login so that fans never need to sign up for another social network. The seamless Facebook and Twitter integration also means that fans can talk about sports directly on Facebook and Twitter simply by publishing comments via the ‘Comment’ feature on every page. FanFeedr invites users to offer suggestions via the Feedback tab on the left of every page. In addition, Fanfeedr has recently launched FanFeedr Mobile with a new iPhone application that can be found here: http://bit.ly/iphoneappff. For more information about the company, go to http://www.fanfeedr.com/about.

# # #


R52: One year anniversary edition, now with Twitter Authentication

Posted: March 5th, 2010 | Author: Ty | Filed under: Aggregation, Facebook integration, Game, New Players, New Tweets, Release, UX, twitter | View Comments

Hello and good morning/afternoon/evening.

This week we enabled the ability to sign up using Twitter as well as Facebook, so if you would like to use those credentials as the primary way you login to the site, no problem. You can also post material to and from Facebook, but you will be known on the service primarily by your Twitter handle.

You can try it out by going to the homepage and logging in with Twitter. If you already have an account with us, you can add your twitter credentials whenever you make a comment and post to twitter or if you share via Twitter.

Facebook

You can follow your favorite teams on Facebook now, and that functionality is exposed on the team pages (in the left column, the blue button.)

Some examples of team pages on Facebook:

These feeds publish headlines, scores, boxscores, photos and other updates directly on Facebook.

Pick’Em Game

  • We fixed the badging so that there is only one Commissioner, and so that Newbies show up in the right place

Content

UX

And we are up to 7,000 content sources, including all of the material submitted in the past month.

Thanks for your support, and let us know if we are missing anything, here.

FanFeedr


The value of a television mention for a startup website

Posted: March 3rd, 2010 | Author: Ty | Filed under: Analytics, Marketing | View Comments

Our friend and advisor Scott Rafer has a short post on why startups shouldn’t focus on SEO or SMO (social media optimization on Twitter and Facebook), but should develop their own independent channels to create customer demand so that they aren’t beholden to a big company that could care less.

This is a post about traffic that I paid for, and the results, and traffic that I didn’t pay for, and the results.

The former: Early on at FanFeedr, I had big-company-itis, and I paid $2,000 for 10 radio spots, or $200/per spot. This was for sports talk radio, obstensibly, but my bookers placed me on shows that had little to do with sports, so I cancelled the contract at the halfway point.

When I did appear on a demographically-accurate radio show, I could see the number of users on the site in real-time, as we use a betaworks‘ portfolio company, Chartbeat, to monitor our real-time traffic flows. This was shortly after our alpha launch, last summer, so any customer was a good customer. This is what we did, across five interviews that averaged eight minutes apiece in markets like Los Angeles, New York, Providence, Hartford: 10 extra visitors to the site. The CPA (cost-per-acquisition) was a highly-absurd $200, regardless of the number of shows, as my $2,000 partial deposit was not refundable.

There is one hurdle in mentioning our site name on radio: it is missing the trailing “e” in FanFeeder, as you would say it naturally, and my efforts to stress that missing “e” did nothing to encourage intrepid radio fans across the country from coming to the site. Since they clearly had no previous exposure to the site, as we had launched a week earlier, this entire strategy was a waste of money.

Then, this Monday, 1 March 2010, I got a message from a producer of ESPN2′s SportsNation that we would be mentioned as one of their “Sites We Like,” as you can see below:

Based on the radio experience, I didn’t expect anything traffic-wise based on 10 seconds of exposure before cutting to a commercial, but they actually showed the site name in a fashion that is clear enough to read. And here are the numbers, based on our appearance at the 33m mark, in the middle of a one-hour show:

1 March 2010 | 04.33p ET (initial broadcast)

  • 93 extra site visitors

1 March 2010 | 11.33p ET (repeat)

  • 34 extra site visitors

2 March 2010 | 01.33a ET (repeat)

  • 37 extra site visitors

Simply put: those incremental 164 visitors came from 10 seconds of television exposure on ESPN2 at odd hours. Those visitors, however, have been more highly engaged, surprisingly, on the site, than traffic that we get from social networks, which tends to be flightier (less time spent per visit) than traffic that we acquire through organic search. Specifically, these new visitors spent 27 seconds longer on the site than traffic from social networks.

Additionally, they engaged with our Pick’Em game at a higher rate than social networks or search engines. The latter makes a lot of sense, as the search engine traffic is much more directed and less around general sports topics of interest than the traffic from social networks. The Pick’Em game (“Who do you think will win, Arsenal or Portsmouth?” (Only the dimmest of bulbs would chose Portsmouth, BTW)) reflects picks, results and badges back on Facebook, and thus is one of the most pandemic (a hyper-form of virality that we just made up) channels that we have for acquiring new customers. This channel is based on prestige, which we have discussed before.

Scott is right in his advocacy for finding other channels for audience development outside of Facebook, Twitter and the search engines, but I cannot begin to suggest that happenstance mentions on television networks are a marketing channel.

But when it does happen, it can provide a nice, small bump for a web site that is seeking a much larger audience. Connecting through video with people who are fanatical about sports has potential as a marketing channel, and the good thing for us is that even if we don’t get the direct traffic, we can power other sites with sports-related goals through our API (which has aggregated news and information as well as the Pick’Em game.)


We were mentioned on ESPN2′s SportsNation yesterday

Posted: March 2nd, 2010 | Author: Ty | Filed under: Best of . . . | View Comments

And a warm welcome to all of you who came on board after seeing the insanely short mention.

Your friends at FanFeedr


R51: The little things come together

Posted: March 1st, 2010 | Author: Ty | Filed under: Aggregation, New Teams, Release | View Comments
  • More content: Over 6,700 sources
  • Better team info: we re-organized rosters, schedules and added logos to all of the teams
  • Reorganization in advance of March Madness: logos, moved all of the teams into their proper conferences

That’s it, more racing stuff coming this week.

Thanks for supporting us, FanFeedr