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Digital Marketer : Statistician : Sociologist

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      10 Nov 2010

      Blog Find: Foursquare’s Crowley Can Feel Foursquare Fatique, Has Plans To Fix It

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      Not only do I have Foursquare fatigue, I feel off the bandwagon so hard that I didn't even bother blogging about why I quit because I think most people understand my reasoning already- It's not clear what is in it for me!

      Also, I wish Search Engine Land would post the full article to Google Reader instead of filling space with ads. It makes it easier to share via e-mail and less annoying to a user who sees content replaced with ads. Have both if you really need the ad. I am done ranting about it, for now. (BTW, I edited this after posting because e-mailing from Google Reader to Posterous carried their Ads by Google through to my blog post- not cool.)

      Foursquare’s Crowley Can Feel Foursquare Fatique, Has Plans To Fix It
      via Search Engine Land: News About Search Engines & Search Marketing by Danny Sullivan on 11/10/10

      Feeling Foursquare fatigue and perhaps wondering what’s the point of checking in at times? Foursquare CEO Dennis Crowley sometimes feels it too — but he’s got plans to keep you interested. More on that as well as turning Foursquare into a “product building machine,” from my interview with him last week.

      Why Check In?

      I’ve had a few long-time Foursquare users I know tell me they’re tired of the service, that they don’t really find it as fun or interesting to check in any more. I’ve felt that way myself, at times.

      Maybe we’re only a tiny slice of Foursquare’s nearly 5 million users that feel this way. But I wondered what Crowley thought and put it to him as we talked at Foursquare’s headquarters in New York last week.

      Crowley surprised me. He’s the head of Foursquare, yet even he wonders at times, “Why bother?”

      “I was at the Orlando airport at 11:30 at night recently. I’m thinking, ‘I’m not going to get the mayorship, there’s nobody nearby to alert that I’m here.’ So why check in?” Crowley said.

      Building The Next Generation

      The answer is coming. Fueled by recent investment, Crowley said that Foursquare is now able develop a next generation of ways for people to find the service useful, interesting and fun.

      “There are things, a road map we have and the vision of what we have to build. That’s the frustrating part. Building a product is easy. But building the company that builds the product is hard,” he said.

      Facebook hadn’t yet announced its latest location services moves when I talked with Crowley last Wednesday. However, Facebook had already launched Facebook Places in the summer, which made some question if Foursquare could survive in the long term. Did Crowley see his internal changes as helping push back competitive concerns? Definitely.

      Product Building Machine

      “When you build a machine that turns out products, the machine is going to get more efficient each month,” he said. “If we get that running the way we want, we’ll be rolling stuff out very quickly, and it will be very hard to compete with us.”

      Foursquare is “getting close,” Crowley said, to being the product producing machine he wants. So what are the next products or changes on the road map? First, getting what’s out there improved.

      “Some things don’t fully work the way we want them too. Part of it is we’ve grown so quickly, hitting nearly 5 million users. We need to go back and fix some of the core things that differentiate Foursquare from others in the space,” Crowley said.

      Getting Past Easter Eggs & Becoming A “What To Do” Guide

      This fits into the “three acts” that Crowley describes Foursquare as moving through, as it has grown.

      “First, everyone checks in and gets positions and badges. Act two is moving Foursquare from check-ins as the only things to do to making lists of things to do. Act three is taking stuff from first two adventures and tightening up in ways that incent people, reward, and offer ways they can discover,” Crowley said.

      For example, it can be unclear to people why exactly they’ll win a badge. To get the “I’m on a boat” badge, you either need to check into a location that’s tagged as being a boat or check in and “shout” something to your friends with the word “boat” in it, depending on which unofficialsource you check.

      Foursquare lacks an official guide on how to earn badges, in part because it wants people to be surprised. But these “Easter Eggs,” computer jargon for hidden things that turn up if you know the secret code, can also be an issue.

      “Some of these are a little Easter-eggy, and we could do a better job. If I’ve landed in New York, Foursquare should be like, “There are three badges you haven’t gotten. Here are three of your friends, and here are four things you should do,” Crowley said.

      Instant Check-Ins, Better Deals

      After our interview, Crowley immediately dashed off to speak at the ad:tech conference in New York. Mashable has nice coverage of that, where he talked further about things like customized recommendations:

      “Based upon these bars that you’ve been to, these are six other bars you may be interested in.”

      Or instant check-ins:

      “We’ve done experiments where when you go into a familiar place, [your phone] should buzz you and say ‘Oh, you’re at that coffee shop again. Do you wanna check in.”

      He also talked about making it easier for people to find brands to follow on Foursquare as well as bringing in better deals and specials for users.

       

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      6 Jun 2010

      Carrabba's Foursquare Special

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      I thought Starbucks was the only ones doing this- I guess not, but they are getting all the press?

      I wonder how many times I would have to eat there to become the mayor, and can I do it before Wednesday?

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      1 Jun 2010

      One of my worst nightmares realized

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      I'm the mayor of the gym! Please understand that I spend a lot of time here, but please don't get the wrong idea.

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      1 Jun 2010

      Update on my foursquare experiment

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      I've been using foursquare for a few weeks now, so I thought I would give a quick update of of foursquare rant.

      First of all, I forget to check-in about 50% of the time.  I usually end up checking out instead of checking in because I remember when I get to the parking lot.  I'm not feeling yet like I am benefiting from mytime.  Still a little confused about what I gain from checking in, other than trying to beat my friends on the Leaderboard- I do like winning.  I already reached my foursquare life goal- my one and only mayorship is the creepy corner market on my block.  I am really sad about the fact that I got the "Crunked" badge for running errands on a Friday night.  Home Depot does not serve alcohol.  Maybe this whole thing is better used if it is only used for bars and restaurants?  Are mayorships time dependent?  Are people who sign up later simply penalized for life by not being early adapters?  If the current mayor has checked in 50 times, how does someone new compete with that?

      My foursquare app on my phone always crashes, is that a sign?
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      17 May 2010

      Top 5: Why I joined foursquare

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      This is a much anticipated follow-up to Top 5: Reasons I won't join foursquare.  I made up that much anticipated part.

      1.) I decided that if I tried it for a week and thought it was silly then I could stop and not be bothered, only problem was that my boss @ByteEngine found me within a couple of days. I thought about it and decided that I needed friends in order to get the whole foursquare experience. So, I'm giving it a month now, with friends, to prove itself.
      2.) I was worried that my lack of knowledge about popular social media tools would make me vulnerable and would snowball into me moving from the group of digital marketers that "get it" into the group of everyone else.
      3.) When I was in Brownies growing up I would fake being sick so I didn't have to go unless it was a night where we were earning badges.  I like badges.
      4.) I wanted to know how popular foursquare was in Salt Lake City.  It's pretty popular, I figured most places I went wouldn't have any other people who ever checked into them- I was wrong.  Yesterday I pulled into a new McDonald's to get some Sweet Tea on my little shopping outing, I figured there was no possible way anyone had checked in there seeing as how it was in the middle of suburban sprawlville.  I was wrong- 14 unique visitors- I'm impressed Utah. 
      5.) I need to be the mayor of the creepy corner market on my block.  I feel like this might be my foursquare calling.

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      10 Jan 2010

      Top 5: Reasons I won't join foursquare

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      1.) It's trendy and we all know that I am not trendy. I'm not even cool. 
      2.) If I wanted to "check-in" all the time, I would still live with my parents. 
      3.) Why would I want to earn a Douchebag badge? What exactly does that get me and how do I earn it? I'm not making it up either, check out there Learn More section and see for yourself. 
      4.) I can't imagine there are a lot of people in SLC using foursquare and I'm afraid I might become the major of something like the gym after just a few visits and I don't need people getting the wrong idea.  If you do a search on their site for 'Salt Lake' or 'SLC' most of the locations are actually hotels and there are only a few matching "Tips and To-Dos" since mid-October. I suspect a lot of these are actually there because of people from out of town. 
      5.) It is one more thing I have to update every time I sit down with friends to enjoy a meal, cup of coffee, movie, shopping trip, etc.

       

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  • kaylanmalm.com

    I am currently a Product Strategist at iCrossing in charge of Business Intelligence. Formerly, I was the Manager of Advanced Analytics. I'm a marketer, mathematician, sociologist, student of the web, crafter of my own social network, amateur knitter and potter, people watcher, Red Cross disaster volunteer, and warrior against clutter.

    I do all of this from Salt Lake City, UT. Don't knock it until you've lived here!

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