Archive for May, 2007

Tracking a Hen’s Tooth

Ever since February in Florida, I’ve wanted a Burton Zoom backpack.

It started as Transworld’s fault. They pitched it as the best option to carry photography gear to the snow. They are almost right; there are two options: the Burton Zoom and the Dakine Sequence. Both are much of a muchness, and the only back country packs that will safely carry a snowboard and heap of camera stuff.

Things started going wrong on entry to Canada. Tracked down my favorite Burton store … Out of stock. Had them ring around for me, and it turns out Burton was out. They were very helpful and suggest I check online. All online stores, all of in North America, were Out of stock. My best bet … the start of the Australian season.

For almost two months, Trigger Brothers in St Kilda have tried to track one down for me through their Burton rep. Today, they gave me a list of their competitors that would be most likely to have one. The last name on the list, Mordy Surf, hit pay dirt. There was one left in their Camberwell store. Only one. Put on hold. For me!

A hasty exit from work, and a zoomy drive to Camberwell and the quest has finally reached an end. To the best of my knowledge, it was the last one in Melbourne.

Expect lots of random snow photos on flickr this winter!

Melbourne Blogging Bazaar

Melbourne’s inaugural blogging meet-up came together tonight with a very strong turnout.

I usually avoid social gatherings such as this, but the celebrity draw of Darren as the organizer made it hard to miss. I’m really glad that I went, and I’d encourage attendance at the next one.

The interesting thing for me was to talk to people within areas of the blog world I have nothing to do with. The opportunities are quite varied, and I tend to get caught up in the few niches that I follow (tech, business, photography).

A few example discussions may help:

  • Fashionising - really a social network site for the fashion industry, there is also a blog component to the site. A small team, they are more entrepreneurs than bloggers, and quite a surprise. Expect to hear more from these guys.

  • The Tomato blog - Ed tells the story on his site. Short version is a failed magazine, written by a freelance journalist, about food, sparks a successful blog.

  • SmallOfficeAustralia - just in its infancy, Martin is creating an online destination for local small business. He has lots of ideas on how to serve this market, and it will be interesting to watch over the next year. Especially given that local is the new big.

Well worth the time spent, and a great venue at Horse Bazaar.

Thanks again to Darren for organizing, and thank you to all the wonderful people I met.

N11 - Another BRIC in the wall

This week’s Economist has a special report on international banking. With the rise in new types of financial instruments, and private equity firms, this is a very timely discussion.

With increased competition, the banks are scouring the globe for new markets to shore up their business.

Currently, the expansions have been into so-called BRIC markets (Brazil, Russia, India, China). The next horizon for expansion has been dubbed by Goldman as N11 and includes the following:

  • Bangladesh
  • Egypt
  • Indonesia
  • Iran
  • South Korea
  • Mexico
  • Nigeria
  • Pakistan
  • the Philippines
  • Turkey
  • Vietnam

This is not a set of economies without risk. However, as the global investment banks set up shop, easier access to western style financial controls should improve matters.

Dare to be Great

The ETL series has been consistently good, and the recent lectures have continued the tradition.

A question posed by Jackie Speier, a former senator, really got me thinking:

What would you do if you knew you could not fail?

The thing that struck me was that I have no easy answer for this question.

I don’t know.

Fortunately, it is the kind of question that if you spend time thinking of an answer, you’re getting somewhere. Even without an answer, the path towards an answer is constructive.

So, what would you do if you knew you could not fail?

Changing Tides in the Newspaper Business

Various pundits have been calling newspapers down and out in the media game. The reality, however, is not that simple. Instead, changing consumer interest has resulted in shifting demands for print media. Some companies are adapting to the changes, some will fall.

Steve Rubel points to data on the rise magazine advertising:

According to the Magazine Publishers of America, magazine advertising pages climbed to nearly 250,000 pages last year. While they’re down from their 2000 high of 286,000 pages, the trend line has been going up

And his analysis:

People like to peruse Vogue and GQ for the latest fashions and the ads are part of the experience. Second, I think it’s also because magazines are by their nature vertical and they allow people to dig deeper into the subjects that interest them.

I think the point of segmentation by verticals is the key here. The win is on two levels. On one hand, it engages the reader so boosts circulation. On the other hand, provides a targeted demographic to advertisers, thus boosting revenue and the quality of the product.

Not all magazines are winning:

… the rising tide is not lifting all boats. Time and Newsweek are both suffering as news really moves to the Web.

This gels with the comments of Peter Read Miller, a Sports Illustrated photographer, about the trends of his magazine. During his tenure, SI has gone from breaking the news of the games results, to a focus on the story behind the games. The four day lead time from the game to the publication is too long for SI to be first with the news.

Newspapers have much shorter lead times, typically a day, allowing them to have stayed relevant for longer. By having breaking news move to the web, the lead time expected by media consumers is now measured in hours or minutes, not days.

As with the magazine industry, some papers have failed to adjust to the change in their customer’s consumption of news. However, there are news groups that are bucking the trend.

A local example, is the Fairfax media group. Through some very smart moves their circulation is at a 12 year high.

For example, one of their major publications, the Age, is segmented into a host of magazine style sections. Each section is high in content, color, advertising, and is often in a tabloid paper size. This makes the entire paper, in essence, a collection of magazines.

They are also ahead of the local market in offerings such as blogs, photo slideshows and video content on their website, and have decided to reduce the physical width of the paper by 5cm. (This last one is a big deal for a newspaper).

Perhaps part of their success has been in staying local. There is much speculation on the web that local is the next battle ground.

From Don Dodge:

Local search is a huge opportunity. The local newspapers are in a great position to own it…but they don’t.

And Tom Evslin:

The importance of these statistics is that there is now a critical mass of people who can and will take advantage of and interact with rich LOCAL content.

Newspapers are inherently local. They have relationships with end consumers through their circulation department, and with local advertisers through ad sales. In the next few years, successful media groups will be making better use of these key assets.

My read on the industry? Newspapers are far from dead, but the market is changing around them. This will cause pain for some, while providing much opportunity to those prepared for change.

I expect to see even more consolidation in the coming years, such as Rupert Murdoch’s offer for Dow Jones. This will allow media groups to further diversify their publications, much as Google has diversified their web offerings.

Disclaimer: All opinions (and errors) are my own and do not reflect those of my employer.

Why I’ve Ignored Aperture

One word: Lightroom

I’ve been using a bunch of DAM software over the years, but had settled on a mixture of iView Media Pro and Photoshop to fulfil my digital darkroom needs. As I’ve progressed to outputting substantially more photos recently, I wanted something that would allow me to rapidly process files, handle my DAM needs and also run cross platform.

The two things that killed Aperture for me, rapid and cross platform. My recent investments have gone into lenses and lighting equipment, so am still using my trusty old 12” PowerBook. Not a hope in hell of Aperture running on that, let alone nicely. I travel for work, and am obliged to take my work laptop - a Dell. Again, no dice for Aperture.

My experiences with Lightroom have been largely positive. I’m still shooting mostly Jpgs, and Lightroom will process them using the same controls used for Raw files. It will happily run on all the hardware I own, and is allowing me to stay on Photoshop CS, as I can use Lightroom for Raw processing and then edit DNG files in Photoshop. The main reason I had for upgrading Photoshop was the Adobe Raw plug-in.

Some useful resources:

  1. Lightroom Getting Started Guide - An absolute must read. This is really the manual that should have shipped with Lightroom
  2. Inside Adobe Lightroom (rss) - O’Reilly blog with lots of great writers, including recently switched JDD.
  3. Lightroom Killer Tips - from Matt of the Photoshop Guys, subscribe in iTunes and learn from the experts.
  4. Flickr integration - not great, but until a proper plug-in ships, a reasonable stop gap.
  5. The DAM Book - not Lightroom specific, but great for the concepts of Digital Asset Management (ie. how to store your photos).

The next step for me is to actually sort out my own DAM procedures. My archival process is rather ad-hoc. At least I know what I should be doing and have some of the required tools.