Archive for April, 2009

Deprecating old API versions

Fellow Nestorianos,

apologies for the lack of notice, but yesterday evening we deprecated several old versions of our API. If you have not yet already, please upgrade to version 1.14, or, even better, don’t specify a version at all in your request and get the newest version by default.

Again, apologies for the impromptu switch. circumstances necessitated it. In fairness, version 1.14 has been the stable version for almost 10 months now.

As always, please feel free to send us any feedback you have about the Nestoria API or Nestoria generally.

Propertynews.com on Nestoria

Fellow Nestori,

as you can see from the requisite screenshot below, we’re pleased to announce another new partnership to help make your property search as easy as possible.

Propertynews listings on Nestoria

From this weekend we’ve started working together with Propertynews.com.

Keen followers of the UK media scene will know that Propertynews.com is owned by our longtime distribution partner, Independent News & Media Group, and we’re delighted to extend the relationship.

Happy house hunting!

Nestoria at nonick09

Fellow Nestorpheliakis,

This week some members of the Nestoria team will be returning to terrain that we know well. We are glad to announce that we will be attending nonick09 in Bilbao on April 24th and 25th. We expect it will be as enjoyable (and much warmer) than past Nestoria outings to the Basque country.

Nonick09 is an international conference, held in English and with a focus on TV and web. It is the natural evolution of Blogak 2.0, held in Bilbao the past two years. In very little time, Blogak (which means blog in Basque) attracted major speakers such as Rob Malda (Mashable guru), Bernardo Hernandez (global head of geomarketing at Google) and Loic Le Meur (seesmic and LeWeb3).

The structure of nonick09 will be split amongst panels (with senior speakers of YouTube, DailyMotion, Nielsen), two competitions (Startup 2.0 and EuroBlogAwards), a new edition of the successful Facebook Developer Garage and some workshops inspired by the ones organized at DLD or SeedCamp. In short, there will be plenty of interesting thing to discuss, and no doubt the discussions with other attendees will be as fruitful as the set agenda.

If you are there please say hello (or “Hola” or “Kaixo”). A big thanks to the organisers, we look forward to seeing you all at nonick09!

Same Same is Bad Bad

Fellow Nestorlinians,

As is our habit, from time to time we like to update you on our efforts to improve the quality of the property search experience on Nestoria. We put a great deal of effort into addressing all aspect of a high quality search experience, not least being relevance. I’m thus please to reveal that this week we went live with a significant improvement to the algorithms we use for detecting duplicate listings. Because we aggregate from many sources, it often happens that we have the same property from mutiple partners. This is clearly not an optimal user experience.

Techncially detecting duplicates isn’t always trivial as the information available to us from different sources can be, well, different.

Duplicates are evil!

We’re pleased that we’ve been able to make good progress on this important part of relevancy. As with all aspects of improving quality, the work is never “done”. No doubt there are still the occasional dupes lurking out there. Please let us know when you spot them.

On a related note, a few months ago I dashed off a post about quality (it’s not the same as quantity) and why we believe it’s better to show our users fewer high quality listings than many bad listings. Our finetuning of deduplication is another step in that direction.

Finally, for our international fans, rest assured the same improvements have been rolled out across Nestoria in all the markets we’re active in.

Enjoy the weekend!

Mike drops some box knowledge

Fellow Nestorinaks,

a few weeks ago we had the pleasure of sponsoring an east London gathering of #geomob and minibar. Our CTO Mike seized the opportunity to take the stage and thrill the crowd with his thoughts about “The Tyranny of the Box”. For those that couldn’t make it, we’re pleased to offer a recording here:

Based on the comments we received afterwards it seems the talk was well received, which will hopefully stimulate an interesting discussion about the pros and cons of text based querying of geographic data versus other interfaces, while hopefully not over-inflating Mike’s obvious desire to one day drop this internet nonsense, grab the mic, and become the baddest MC in all of EC2

Many thanks to everyone who attended – the mob was out in full force – for the interesting presentations and resulting discussions. A full overview of all the speakers and podcasts is available over on SkillsMatter – many thanks to them for recording everything.

Enjoy!

Nestoria Interview – Lance Johnson – Nokia Interactive Advertising

For our April Nestoria interview we have the pleasure of interviewing Lance Johnson, Global Head of Sales for Nokia Interactive Advertising. Nokia Interactive Advertising allows brands to create more valuable relationships with the world’s four billions mobile consumers.

A regular speaker at industry events, Lance worked as a consultant for numerous startups before joining Nokia. Before that he was GM of Mobile Media for Yahoo!, rising through the ranks there from his original role in Yahoo!’s Munich office where he was responsible for various media products. Orignially from Colorado in the US, Lance was a Fulbright Scholar studying economics in Freiburg, Germany.

Lance, thanks for speaking with us. A few questions:

1. The one area the economic downturn doesn’t seem to have dented is innovation in the mobile space. The last few years have seen an amazing amount of new development, from the traditional heavyweights like Nokia but also new entrants like Apple and Google. For those of us not in the industry, can you briefly summarise the current state of affairs in the mobile world?

Services are really what’s driving innovation in mobile at the moment, with the top end devices but also with low and mid range devices. Nokia has a 37% market share globally and we’re really looking to create sticky services and content that consumers love as it helps us to strengthen our connection to the consumer. This is the reason we’ve launched Ovi, which includes services such as Nokia Maps that come bundled on device.

If services are what’s driving innovation, then advertising is what’s going to drive revenues. Increasingly consumers want something for nothing (or not much), and they have high expectations. By linking up with brands, we’re ensuring quality content for consumers through a sustainable business model, and matching up brands with consumers that are likely to be interested in their products.

What I think is interesting for mobile advertising and for digital advertising in general is that the lines between advertising and good service are blurring. When an ad campaign is executed well, it can be indistinguishable from direct customer communication.

2. Mobile advertising has long been heralded as “the next big thing”. How will the current economic climate effect that? What are some of the innovations you’re seeing (or even developing).

The advertising industry is undoubtedly having a difficult year. Most analysts see advertising spend shrinking by 15-25% this year. The fact that mobile and likely interactive are predicted to grow (if only slightly) is testament to their effectiveness, and to the growing importance of the mobile device to the consumer.

Technology that ensures relevance of marketing is key, not only for better brand returns, but also for the future of advertising. We’ve lived in a world where the amount of noise from different media channels has continued to grow. Digital mediums can reverse this trend and put the consumer back in control. If you’re a brand and you want to engage a target demographic you need to meet consumers on their turf. Mobile advertising that uses location data is going to be a really interesting play.

3. Here at Nestoria we love all things geo. Nokia recently dove headfirst into the mapping game with the acquisition of major geo datasource and technology firm NAVTEQ. Likewise we’ve seen the big online players maneuver into the location space, be it Googe’s Latitude or Yahoo!’s FireEagle (to name just a few of many). Why’s everyone so hot on location?

Despite the many advances we’ve made at Nokia and as an industry, we firmly believe that the mobile phone can still be far more useful. By leveraging data based on your past behaviour, what your friends like, where you are and where you’ve been, the mobile device will become even more useful at pre-empting your needs, and providing useful services, and sometimes brand messages to help you on your way. The better the targeting and results, the higher premiums advertisers will be willing to pay. Location will be our emphasis in the 2H of 2009 and we will work every more closely with our subsidiary business NAVTEQ.

4. What chances does the mobile space hold for vertical search engines like Nestoria?

I think it’s an opportunity to differentiate your offering and innovate. In regions like North America and Europe, convergence matters. Both PC and Mobile penetration rates are extremely high. Consumers are using services on their mobiles and on their PCs that should offer useful ways to connect the two. Whether it’s researching a property online on a PC and then going mobile or capturing information while on the go and then making that information useful, there are lots of use cases. These ideas are no longer on the drawing board. Convergence is coming and the successful verticals will make use of mobile’s unique characteristics.

Thanks Lance! Interesting times ahead. For those interested in keeping up with Lance and the bleeding edge of mobile innovation he’s @lancej on twitter.

past Nestoria interviews: Peter Le Masurier, Henry Yates, Andy Allan.