Five good reasons why publishers should care about geolocation 5

screengrab from iPhone of an app asking permission to use location data The third in a series of posts on geolocation. For an introduction to the subject see the first post: Reason 1: Because of the opportunity Reason 2: Because of the threat Reason 3: Because it fulfills the ancient prophecy Reason 4: Because it brings back the social dimension of reading But now we draw things to a close with…

Reason 5: Because the web will die

The Web, according to Wired magazine, is dying, perhaps already dead (The Web Is Dead. Long Live the Internet): ‘Two decades after its birth, the World Wide Web is in decline, as simpler, sleeker services — think apps — are less about the searching and more about the getting’. If, like Stephen Bourne in the second of these posts, you are contemplating a future in which up to three-quarters of your business is in the process of migrating online, then rumours that your soon-to-be primary delivery platform, the open web, is about to go down the toilet, ought to ring a few alarm bells. Too many publishers seem to want to create an online analogue for the library or bookshop. Perhaps it’s time we stopped thinking about sites altogether and started thinking ‘services’. iTunes would be a better role model for publishers in this regard, perhaps; because while there is an iTunes site, iTunes itself could not be remotely be described as a site. Continue reading

Five good reasons why publishers should care about geolocation 4

screengrab from iPhone of an app asking permission to use location data The third in a series of posts on geolocation. For an introduction to the subject see the first post: Reason 1: Because of the opportunity Reason 2: Because of the threat Reason 3: Because it fulfills the ancient prophecy And now we explore…

Reason 4: Because it brings back the social dimension of reading

‘When you move a book into a dynamic electronic medium,’ says publishing consultant Mike Shatzkin, ‘the social aspects of reading and writing come more to the fore’. The truth is that reading and writing have always had a social dimension – but actually I’d rather put it another way. Because it’s all too easy with digital content to make the mistake of thinking of ‘community’ as something you add to an e-book platform or learning programme, as a sort of bolt-on. Books speak of other books, as Umberto Eco said so memorably. However, this speaking requires human agency. What’s unhelpful about Eco’s image is that it gets things the wrong way round (deliberately, and for the purposes of irony, but too many people take it literally): it’s the humans who do the talking, and the books are the means they use to carry out that essentially social interaction. Continue reading

Improving search using controlled vocabularies, taxonomies, thesauri and ontologies

Publishers and information providers are building ever larger silos of content. Unless this growth is matched with improved search and discovery, users will be faced with retrieving ever larger numbers of search results and spending increasingly more time looking for the content they need. Intelligent use of taxonomies can help with this problem by providing better search including faceted navigation and filtering of search results. In this series of posts I’ll be examining the steps publishers and information providers need to take to develop and implement taxonomies. Understanding the differences between controlled vocabularies, taxonomies, thesauri and ontologies is an important first step in the process. Continue reading

Five good reasons why publishers should care about geolocation 3

screengrab from iPhone of an app asking permission to use location data The third in a series of posts on geolocation. For an introduction to the subject see the first post: Reason 1: Because of the opportunity Reason 2: Because of the threat We now move on to…

Reason 3: Because it fulfills the ancient prophecy

The emergence of geolocation as a significant factor in information delivery can be seen as adding further force to the ‘content in context’ mantra that has been prevalent in online publishing circles for so long. Information analyst David Worlock, among others, has long held up the embedding of information in workflow as the holy grail of online publishing, and location-aware applications, even in their current, nascent state, must serve as significant way-markers on that quest. Continue reading

Five good reasons why publishers should care about geolocation 2

screengrab from iPhone of an app asking permission to use location dataThe second in a series of posts on geolocation. For an introduction to the subject see the first post: Reason 1: Because of the opportunity But for now we move on to…

Reason 2: Because of the threat

At a recent dinner event I attended, Stephen Bourne of Cambridge University Press said that he expects the digital portion of his business to rise to around two-thirds by 2020 from its current 22%. It follows that any publisher in a similar situation will be highly sensitive to changes in the internet landscape which, as we can see by looking backwards along a similar timescale, are both rapid and tumultuous (where was Google in the year 2000?). Geolocation is one of the biggest changes currently affecting that landscape, as evidenced by the huge amount of buzz around companies like Foursquare, purveyors of the location-based social networking software that has gone from 50,000 to 2.5 million users in the space of a year. So seriously is this trend being taken that all three of the major players in online media have made moves to counter it. Continue reading