Thursday, January 30, 2014

Nobody will read this anyway

In my first year at university I studied journalism. One of the few lectures I care to remember was on writing for newspapers. The lecturer told us to throw out everything we knew about writing, nobody wanted to read it. I liked the sound of that. We needed to tell the entire story in the first 25 words. Interesting. It definitely works, but right now I'm ignoring this rule.

I’ve been working on internet projects for 15 years, and over that time I’m built a fairly lengthy list of lessons learnt. From this experience, I’ve identified three key areas which consistently create a greater than planned share of effort. I’m not going to give away all of these lessons in one article, but I will give you my number three; Content.

Content is always seen as the easy piece of a technology project, but more often than not I see projects struggling to deliver appropriate content to schedule. Why? Most digital projects do not adequately consider the new content features and content areas that they have now created. It's a bit like moving your old furniture into a new house... it doesn't always fit.
I’ve been lucky enough to be involved in our industry from the dot com days and witnessed the first digital forays by many companies and brands. To me, there have been three key generations of digital content creation:

1.       Content for web – at the very start of the internet, companies were simply taking content from their print brochures and collateral and moving it online. As this generation matured, we identified the different consumption patterns of digital users and the need to tailor content specifically for web.

2.       User generated content – this was a complete disruption to the existing content model where information was pushed from organisations to end users. The internet gave users the ability to quickly and easy provide commentary, imagery and video. This was the dawn of social media

3.       Content for mobile devices – with now more mobile phones than toothbrushes in the world, the current challenge for content owners are is how to tailor content for small mobile screens, tablets, televisions and the continued growth of user generated content. Welcome to the beginning of the responsive web.

I believe we are now entering the next generation of content, artificial intelligence. Content needs to be dynamic, personalised based on a consumer’s preference, devices, behaviour, physical location, time of day, attitude and myriad of other personalisation possibilities. There are far too many permutations for any content author to effectively deliver this mass personalised experience. Perhaps you would like to provide a special offer to all returning customers located in Australia, accessing your site at 5pm on a Wednesday after reading your email newsletter and who previously made a purchase from your  site?. This sort of complexity has historically been different for non-technical people to achieve, but thanks to a growing breed of artificial intelligence inspired customer experience platforms, it’s actually very easy to target content to the most specific of audiences.
We are handing control to software tools and platforms that learn from past visits, and optimise the site to be more effective. Is it any wonder Google is buying companies such as DeepMind. They get it.

So to appease my university lecturer here’s my “25 words or less” summary I should have put at the start of this blog.
“One of the top project risks to technology projects is content. Not simply writing, but considering how consumers context changes the information they really want.”