Posts Categorized as "CNN"

8
Dec 10

Video & Slides from Our Presentation at Mashery’s Business of APIs Conference

This October I gave a presentation at Mashery‘s Business of APIs conference, speaking about how our API provides hyperlocal headlines on CNN.com as a case study for how APIs can power business relationships between tiny startups and multinational corporations.

The video and slides from the conference are up, so you can check them out:

Video

Slides


For those of you who need a summary version, I think @Mashery captured my main point nicely:

L. Sperber from Outside.in says APIs remove friction from a business relationship.

Interested in using our API? Check out our documentation at developers.outside.in—and the sweet sample code posted last week by our lead API developer Brian Moseley.

14
Sep 10

Publishers, the Outside.in API is Here!

As you may have already heard, we just released a brand new Outside.in Hyperlocal News API — the latest addition to Outside.in for Publishers suite of powerful publisher tools to create hyperlocal experiences easily, efficiently, and economically. We built the API for creative and savvy publishers looking to innovate ways to engage their consumers with hyperlocal news and information.

What can the API do? Quite a bit. Publishers can build and design mobile apps to custom web experiences by tapping into our massive database of more than 54,000 sources from local bloggers, journalists and mainstream sources for any neighborhood, city, state, and ZIP in the U.S. API users can filter the results by various parameters such as date, number of stories, source attributes (e.g., vertical/category, format, author type), and keywords. A few ideas:

  • Take local to the next level by bundling the right source of neighborhood news targeted at specific demographics like moms, foodies, or college students
  • Add dimension to existing personalization experiences by empowering readers to find and save news for neighborhoods they care about

What clever ideas do you have?  Get going and introduce the API to your developers: send them to check out the documentation on our API portal where they can get an API key to start playing around.

What are the benefits?

  • User Engagement & Advertising Opportunities: The API opens the door to tons of local content that publishers can slice and dice to fit their editorial and user needs, all of which create robust streams of targeted advertising inventory.
  • Reliability and Speed: Outside.in provides a proven hyperlocal platform that meets the scale and performance needs of some of web’s biggest publishers such as CNN, Tribune, The New York Post, and MediaGeneral (with more to announce in the near future). In fact, we first previewed the API earlier this year to power the local news on CNN.com and the CNN iPhone app.
  • Hyperlocal Expertise and Support: With so many possibilities to explore, our Partner Relations team is available and happy to help publishers vet ideas and provide the necessary guidance and support along the way.

How do I get started?

1.     Check out the details here and introduce your developers to the API. Have them sign up for a dev key to see what the API is capable of and take it for a test spin.

2.     Give us a shout via email to discuss any of the following:

  • Terms for a commercial relationship. (Note that the API is free for non-commercial use up to 5,000 queries per day.)
  • Enable curation on API implementations via the Outside.in Hyperlocal Publisher Dashboard.
  • Transition to an API-powered experience. (If you are an existing Outside.in for Publishers partner, we can generate a separate key for you to ensure that the API inherits your curation settings from the Publisher Dashboard.)

There is a lot to take advantage of, so start building your own unique hyperlocal experience today!  We can’t wait to see what you will create!

*P.S. Follow @outsideinAPI for the latest scoop on the API.

1
Jul 10

Bloggers We Love: Your Stories Are LIVE on CNN.com!

As you may know, on April 20th, Outside.in shipped the first phase of our collaboration with CNN and began providing the local headlines on CNN.com. Then, on June 24, we started powering a local news module on CNN’s U.S. News page, and the results have been solid from there as well. In the first few weeks of looking at our implementations across CNN’s website, I’ve noticed some great visibility of ‘Bloggers We Love’ – blog stories are showing up on CNN.com (and CNN.com/US) from cities and towns all over the country, and it’s pretty awesome.

If you’ve registered with Outside.in and you haven’t yet seen your stories appearing on CNN.com (or Outside.in, for that matter), there are a couple things you can do to help your posts appear (but keep in mind CNN always has the last word on which headlines show up on their site):

  • FULL TEXT RSS: Be sure you are publishing a full-text RSS feed.
  • LOCATION, LOCATION, LOCATION: Be sure to mention plenty of geo information in your posts.
  • FRESH IS BEST: Post often, because the stories on CNN are the most recent stories in our ecosystem, and bloggers share that ecosystem with mainstream media sources, who tend to publish quite often. To make sure your content shows up, you’ve got to make sure it’s current.
  • We’re happy to see so many bloggers getting the spotlight they deserve. Here are a few examples I spotted on CNN.com on a recent morning:

    Here’s an example from CNN’s U.S. News page as well:

    19
    May 10

    Bloggers We Love: Christy Frink and Morgan Levy

    BLOGGERS: Christy Frink and Morgan Levy (we spoke to Frink)

    FEATURED BLOG(S): Nashvillest

    TWITTER:
    @Nashvillest
    @ChristyFrink

    @MorganLevy

    FACEBOOK: Nashvillest on Facebook

    FLICKR: Nashvillest on Flickr

    THE TOP 15 THINGS I LEARNED FROM NASHVILLEST

    I decided to do ‘Bloggers We Love’ in a list format this week! I hope you like it. And GO!

    15. TALK IS CHEAP, BABY

    In spring 2008, newly-minted college grad Christy Frink and her freshly laid-off roommate, Morgan Levy, found themselves simultaneously unemployed and bored in Nashville. Tired of complaining to one another about the lack of a DCist-style blog in Nashville, Frink and Levy decided to take matters into their own hands, right then and there.  And so, Nashvillest was born.

    Morgan Levy & Christy Frink. Photo courtesy of Molly Povolny.

    “We just asked ourselves, ‘why don’t we start it?’ — We did a trial for about two days to make sure we could keep up with it, and then we told a couple of our blogger friends and they put the word out. It took root really quickly, and it’s just grown steadily from there.” – Christy Frink

    We can all complain (and we all do), but it takes a certain kind of person to channel that negative energy into a positive act: creation. That said, if you’re upset about the lack of solid hyperlocal content in your neighborhood, why not do something about it, and start a hyperlocal blog of your own?

    14. TIMING IS EVERYTHING

    Well, perhaps not everything, but timing can be HUGE. Sometimes a blogger is better equipped to respond to a local story, for instance the recent floods in Nashville.

    “When the city started flooding on Saturday, I was sitting at home and just started pushing out information to our Twitter followers. Traditional media outlets are sometimes unprepared for something like that over the weekend [at least in terms of getting information out quickly], because they have a few more hoops to jump through. As a blog we’re limited in the information we’re able to gather, but we also have the advantage of being able to push out the information as we get it, and so the flood story was really big for us. There were just so many levels to the flood situation – there were a lot of rumors going around and we were trying to balance those and keep people calm as well as getting the correct information out. I think a lot of people were looking for information and we were the ones that had it at the time.” – Christy Frink

    Frink says that during the days following the flooding, Nashvillest more than doubled its Twitter followers and traffic went through the roof. Obviously, it’s incredibly unfortunate that the circumstances couldn’t have been more positive– but nevertheless the recent floods were a turning point for Nashvillest.

    13. YOU CAN LOVE YOUR DAY JOB AND BLOG LIKE AN ALL-STAR

    You heard it here, folks: it is possible to love your day job and still blog like an all-star– especially if you have all-star teammates, as Frink and Levy have in one another. Today, Nashvillest keeps the once-unemployed Frink and Levy – who are each gainfully employed now, in positions unrelated to Nashvillest— very busy in their free time.

    “Morgan and I both have day jobs we love, so we work on the blog early in the morning, in the evening, and during our lunch hour. I probably spend 2 hours a day on actual blog content and probably an additional 2-3 hours on other stuff, like Flickr and Twitter. Morgan is the one that deals with the emails coming in and the backend, and she does the more in-depth features. We probably both spend 4-5 hours a day on the blog.” – Christy Frink

    Loving your career while blogging like an all-star takes dedication, but the rewards can be great. Nashvillest is now the city’s go-to hyperlocal blog, boasting a diverse, engaged following.

    12. EVEN IF YOU DON’T PLAN ON MAKING A CAREER OF IT, BLOGGING CAN HELP YOU PROFESSIONALLY

    “It has helped me so much. I handle a lot of the communications/design/writing projects at work now, and that has all grown out of having the experience [from Nashvillest]. I’ve developed an interest in doing communications for nonprofits someday, and hopefully [blogging] will help get me where I want to go.” – Christy Frink

    11. PEOPLE LIKE FREE STUFF (AND BEER, APPARENTLY)

    Shocker, I know, but it’s true!

    “People like to read about free things. We’re really keen on bargains ourselves!” – Christy Frink

    So are we, Christy, so are we– and judging from all the Gilt Groupes and Groupons and Tipprs out there, so is everyone else. In case you needed a reminder, these are tough times, people. Still, it’s worth pointing out: if you have a hyperlocal blog and you’d like to increase readership and community engagement, try telling your readers about local deals and freebies. They’ll love you for it. Oh, and try to write about beer sometimes.

    “One of our most popular post was about a Belgian brewery. I guess people like beer, which is understandable!” – Christy Frink

    Totally understandable. In fact, we wouldn’t mind sipping a tasty Belgian brew right now. We know you agree (at least finish reading the blog post first, OK?).

    10. TWITTER LOVES NASHVILLE

    Exhibit A:

    The tweet says it all: #WeAreNashville, a Twibbon started in response to the Nashville floods, is the most supported Twibbon OF ALL TIME. That’s HUGE, and Nashvillest was one of the hashtag’s early adopters.

    9. NASHVILLE IS FIERCELY LOYAL

    The ‘We Are Nashville‘ campaign’s popularity comes not only from the fact that people love Nashville, but also from the fact that Nashville people love one another.

    “Nashville is very locally focused. We’re a fiercely loyal group of people who like to frequent local business and listen to each others’ music. The ‘We Are Nashville’ campaign really speaks to who we are and the spirit of our city. In fact, FEMA has said that Nashville has had he best local volunteer response to any disaster that they’ve ever seen. Seeing how people have pulled together [after the flood] really embodies the Nashville that I love.” – Christy Frink

    Of course, the community-oriented spirit of Nashville existed even before the recent floods there. Take Nashvillest’s stunning blog design, for example: it was designed especially for Nashvillest as a gift from a local design firm who took note of Nashvillest and decided to offer their services, gratis.

    “We started out with a standard WordPress template for about the first year and then a very talented firm, Centersource, approached us and asked us if we wanted to redesign it. I love it, they did an awesome job.” – Christy Frink

    8. TWITTER & FLICKR WORK WONDERS FOR HYPERLOCAL BLOGS

    While she’s yet to figure out how to best engage Nashvillest’s readers on Facebook, Frink says both Twitter and Flickr have really driven engagement on the blog.

    “Twitter is our main tool – we almost push as much content through Twitter as we do though the blog. We have a pretty active Flickr community, too, which has been really cool, and that’s one thing I absolutely got from DCist. When I was an intern in DC and fell in love with DCist, I was able to get a few of my photos posted on DCist and I remember thinking that was really cool. I [post user-submitted photos] on Nashvillest, too, and people seem to really like it.” – Christy Frink

    7. BE ACCESSIBLE TO YOUR READERSHIP

    “Morgan and I are both out at a lot of city events, and we hang out with our readers, which is really cool— it exposes you to a lot of different kinds of people. We’ve also been able to build a lot of really great relationships with local businesses, and we really like to try to maintain the idea that we’re part of the community: we’re your friends, we’re your neighbors. We don’t have any kind of pretense.” – Christy Frink

    6. NASHVILLE HAS SOME TASTY NACHOS

    Right before I interviewed Frink, I asked our Twitter followers what they’d like me to ask her. @NachosNY, one of my favorite New York City food bloggers, had this question:

    We are very happy to report that the nacho scene is alive and well in Nashville:

    “The nacho scene here is wonderful. I can attest to that! Jim’s Nachos is close to my house, kind of in the Western part of Nashville. It’s a Mexican place, across from a college campus, and they serve really good, cheap nachos.” – Christy Frink

    5. YOU DON’T NEED TO MONETIZE YOUR BLOG IF … [INSERT REASON HERE]

    You don’t need to monetize your blog if you don’t have the time, you don’t know how, you don’t want to or you’re not ready to. In fact, you don’t need to monetize your blog at all, if you love doing it enough. Many bloggers don’t monetize their blogs. Actually, if my unscentific research is any indication, I’d wager that most bloggers don’t monetize their blogs in any significant way. In the case of Nashvillest, monetization is just not something they’ve figured out or gotten around to yet — and that’s perfectly fine!

    “We haven’t monetized it at all, and I’m sure that we could, I think, because we’re always promoting local businesses and we’ve built up a really high level of trust with our readership. It’s a little bit of a gray area if we start taking money from [those businesses]. We realize we have a really large focus group, basically– trendsetters in the community — but it’s something that we’d want to be careful not to exploit. [Monetization] is definitely in the backs of our minds, but we haven’t even had time to do it, honestly. I would say that in two years… sure! Hopefully we will have monetized it in some way, if only because that would give us the resources to host more events and do more within the community. That would be a good goal for the next two years, for sure.” – Christy Frink

    Whatever your reason for blogging, the important thing is that you do it. Don’t let monetization worries keep you from starting or doing what you love.

    4. YOU DON’T NEED AN EDITORIAL CALENDAR

    “I haven’t thought past, like, next week! I’m not sure. I think we’re going to keep doing it as long as people keep reading it.” – Christy Frink

    Can a blogger benefit from an editorial calendar? Sure. Is it necessary? No. Do whatever works for you. There are no hard and fast rules in the blogosphere – we create them as we go, and that’s a beautiful thing.

    3. IT’S GOOD TO HAVE FRIENDS IN THE BLOGOSPHERE

    “We do have some ties with Chattanooga’s Chattarati and Knoxville’s Knoxify. They started shortly after we did, and I think we’ve all kind of benefitted from each other. Chattrati does original reporting and has broken some big stories down there. Those guys are brilliant– they do things differently than we do, but it’s awesome to watch them. We’ve got a Basecamp set up where we’re sharing tips and ideas. They’ve been a great support for us and they’ve been great to us. Tennessee is like three different states: West, Middle and East – three very different regions. I think establishing those ties with other communities has been a real strength. We’re all unique but there have been things going on that tie us all together, like the floods. Both of those blogs are doing fundraisers for Nashville flood relief and they asked us – ‘what can we do?’ – it’s been really cool.” – Christy Frink

    2. LISTEN TO YOUR READERSHIP

    “One good piece of advice in terms of local blogging relates to the fact that you often have a lot of people trying to do the same thing, and blogs kind of fade in and out. It’s not so much about how many people are doing those things, it’s more about how you’re doing it a little bit differently and a little bit better – that makes it interesting. Try to pay attention to your readers – tailor your feature content to the things people will like. We do pay attention to our page statistics and we pay attention to our Twitter feed and we engage people and we listen. We always strive to be a resource that’s listening to our community instead of just being an outlet that pushes out information.” – Christy Frink

    1. OUTSIDE.IN IS COOL (BUT BLOGGERS ARE COOLER)

    Shameless plug! I didn’t need Christy to tell us we’re cool, but I’m sure glad she did. It’s always nice to hear — and it’s even nicer to hear that she’s seeing traffic both from our core site and from our ecosystem.

    “I saw the referrals coming over from CNN and that was really exciting. We like what you do to support the hyperlocal blogging community and we think it’s cool.” – Christy Frink

    Thanks, Christy (and Morgan!). Clearly, we think you’re pretty cool, too. Keep being awesome, and please enjoy some nachos and beer on our behalf as soon as possible.

    P.S.: If you’d like to get in on the action, register your blog here. It’s quick, simple, and will help drive your blog traffic.

    P.P.S.: If you’d like to be featured in our ‘Bloggers We Love’ series (or you’d like to nominate your favorite local blogger(s) for inclusion), we’d love to hear from you! Simply send an email to esther[at]outside[dot]in.

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    8
    Feb 10

    More Big Publishers Pick Outside.in for Hyperlocal

    Today we are announcing that publications from The McClatchy Company, Dow Jones, Lee Enterprises and The Tribune Company have selected the Outside.in for Publishers platform. The full release and details are below.

    It is really awesome to see these titans of local media build their neighborhood pages with our tools for aggregation and curation. It goes a long way to helping fulfill the promise of the new local media ecosystem. Big publishers need to get to a neighborhood level to satisfy their readers and advertisers and local bloggers need more traffic and visibility. Our tools bring them all together to their mutual benefit.

    We’re glad these leading sites think we’re the best choice and we’ll continue to build and improve our services so everyone wins.
    ——-
    MORE PUBLISHERS TEAM WITH OUTSIDE.IN FOR HYPERLOCAL CONTENT

    News Organizations Across the Country are Adding Real-time Neighborhood News to their Sites

    NEW YORK, NY (February 8, 2010) – In the past 7 months, hyperlocal content and advertising platform Outside.in has formed partnerships with some of the country’s most well-known publishers, including The Miami Herald, Dow Jones Local Media Group, New York Post, St. Louis Post-Dispatch, and properties of the Tribune Company, including Chicago Tribune, Chicago Breaking News, ChicagoNow, and the Baltimore Sun.

    Outside.in launched its publisher offering, Outside.in for Publishers (OIP), in June 2009 to create targeted Neighborhood News Pages for every city, town and neighborhood in a publisher’s market. Publishers using the OIP platform can create customized and curated hyperlocal news sections, add tagged news maps, and curate the aggregated news feeds to fit their editorial guidelines.

    As a result, Outside.in has extended its reach to more than 100 publishers, providing consumers, publishers and bloggers the tools needed to make neighborhood news and information easily accessible and widely available.

    “People have a deep interest in the news and events that are happening in their immediate neighborhoods,” said Camilla Cho, Vice President of Business Development of Outside.in. “But the ability to create, find, organize and distribute local content has historically been a struggle for many media companies. As the media landscape continues to change, more and more publishers are seeing the value in hyperlocal content, and Outside.in provides a source of flexibility, transparency and control to get hyperlocal easily and efficiently.”

    In addition to growing its network of publisher partnerships, Outside.in has added 4,000 local bloggers to its roster and has seen traffic increased to more than seven million monthly unique visitors on the Outside.in Network. Outside.in currently services 57,830 neighborhoods, aggregates and organizes over 40,000 unique feeds, and provides neighborhood information to over 100 news websites.

    About Outside.in
    Outside.in is the leading hyperlocal content and advertising platform. Outside.in monitors all the news, blogs and discussions on the web and dynamically maps them to more than 57,000 neighborhoods in the U.S.

    Through the Outside.in for Publishers platform, publishers create customized and curated hyperlocal news sections to offer highly localized content on their sites. Bloggers can distribute their content with the Outside.in Network to build traffic and attract new users to their blogs. Advertisers are able to take advantage of quality local advertising inventory.

    Outside.in is supported by leading investors including Union Square Ventures, Village Ventures, Betaworks, the New York City Investment Fund, Milestone Venture Partners and CNN Worldwide. For more information, visit http://outside.in, the company’s blog or follow us on Twitter.


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