Interview With Technocrati’s CEO

Yahoo had an interview up today with Technocrati CEO Richard Jalichandr today, check it out:

IDG News Service talked to Jalichandra last week about Technorati’s future and its biggest challenges and opportunities. The following is an edited transcript of the interview, conducted at the Social Networking Conference in Miami Beach, where Jalichandra gave a speech.

IDGNS: Is calling Technorati a blog search engine too narrow a definition of what the company does?

Jalichandra: Our heritage has been, is and will always be in blog search. We’re one of only two real-time search indexes covering the blogosphere: us and Google. That said, one of the things we found people are doing on our site is trying to discover things that are going on in the blogosphere or follow conversations. So we recently added a discovery layer [called Percolator] on top of the search infrastructure so people can have more of a reading/browsing experience in addition to searching. Percolator’s intention is to find out what’s gaining attention either in blogs or mainstream media.

IDGNS: The boundaries between blogs and conventional Web sites have blurred significantly in recent years. How do you tackle that challenge if your mission is to index blogs specifically?

Jalichandra: Yes, there’s a huge blur that’s occurring. Mainstream media gets it now, and they realize that they can create a lot more content with participation from the community. Today, a lot of mainstream media articles are written on a blogging platform as opposed to a [traditional] content management system, and it’s an interesting challenge.

IDGNS: Has Technorati then become a much broader and more encompassing search engine?

Jalichandra: That’s absolutely true. Our audience has more than doubled in size in the last year, and so has the amount of data in our index. We’re definitely collecting and serving a lot more information than we have in the past.

[According to comScore, Technorati's traffic grew from 948,000 unique visitors in December 2006 to 2.8 million in December 2007. By comparison, Google's Blog Search declined from 398,000 unique visitors to 359,000 in that period, although Google also serves up blog results in other of its engines, like News, Images and general Web search. Meanwhile, Technorati says it currently tracks 112.8 million blogs and more than 250 million "pieces of tagged social media."]

IDGNS: Are the executive changes at Technorati now finished?

Jalichandra: In the evolution of any company, and particularly startups, you have different skill sets for different stages. Our founder [David Sifry] is an amazing technologist, product evangelist and visionary, and he realized about a year ago that the business was getting big enough and that he needed professional media expertise, because at the end of the day the ultimate business model will be based around online advertising — and he didn’t have that background. Then, subsequently, we had some more people join the company with that kind of media expertise and, if anything, we’re going to be throwing gasoline on the fire and adding a lot of people both on the technology side and the media and business sides.

IDGNS: Will Technorati seek more funding?

Jalichandra: There are some things we want to do to expand for which we might seek additional funds, but the great thing about where the business is today is we’re sitting on a very large audience that allows us to monetize, so we’re starting to see fairly significant increases in revenue, so that will also help fund some of the growth and expansion.

IDGNS: Technorati remains independent and privately held. Will it be sold to a larger company?

Jalichandra: My plan is always to build a great business, and those things usually take care of themselves when you build a great business. That’s been my experience and what I intend to do now. You build a great company and either you’re a great independent or somebody else finds a nice fit for you.

IDGNS: What are some key goals for Technorati in the coming year?

Jalichandra: The high-level objectives are to continue to provide a great user experience, and that’s both search and discovery. On the business side, the objectives are simply stated: to build a monetization infrastructure to grow the business from the revenue side.

IDGNS: You carry Google ads. Do you sell your own ads as well?

Jalichandra: We do have our own sales force, and they’re doing fantastically well. We recently hired a new VP of sales and a new VP of business development, and they’re really working on building up that revenue machinery.

IDGNS: What is your international presence?

Jalichandra: We have a joint venture with Technorati Japan, and that’s the only dedicated country-specific site. But in the blogosphere, language doesn’t have a lot of barriers. We’ve counted close to 30 languages that appear regularly in the index. So while we don’t have a very big international focus, by the sheer nature of the blogosphere we’re an international company.

IDGNS: Any plans to expand your international presence?

Jalichandra: Absolutely. The blogosphere knows no borders so eventually we’ll get there, but we’re still a 30-person startup.

IDGNS: A lot of the content in social networks is trapped in those sites. Does Technorati feel it is getting locked out of indexing the content on those very popular sites?

Jalichandra: It’s not a concern right now. There’s enough people writing content specifically on blogs as opposed to their MySpace or Facebook page. Typically what you find with MySpace and Facebook is that there isn’t a lot of serious blogging. People are just making one or two sentence proclamations and not writing [in-depth] about a subject matter.

IDGNS: Do you have any plans to increase the social applications or features within Technorati?

Jalichandra: People have Technorati profiles today, and registered users always check out who is linking to them, so that’s one way that a lot of bloggers use Technorati today. In the future, we’re looking certainly at anything we can do to improve the user experience or the community aspects of it.

IDGNS: Do you consider social-news sites like Digg and Slashdot competitors?

Jalichandra: What people do on Technorati is different from what they do on Digg. Digg is a more participatory news experience, whereas a lot of people that come to Technorati are looking to just follow a conversation happening on the blogosphere about a topic. I have a feeling that, like me, people use both Digg and Technorati for slightly different things.

IDGNS: What can Technorati fans expect to see this year in terms of enhancements to the site?

Jalichandra: In December we launched topical navigation categories, and because we have such an amazing amount of data we can create very granular topical areas, so I would look for an expansion of topics that end up with their own channels and sub-channels to highlight the conversations going on in those subject areas.

From a blogger standpoint, we also launched Blogger Central in December, and we started putting a number of resources there to be a one-stop shop for bloggers to find out what the latest and greatest and the best way to grow your blog and all that, with Technorati and non-Technorati material.

IDGNS: Do you feel you’ve got the spam-blog problem under control at Technorati?

Jalichandra: It’s never fully under control because sploggers keep finding new, creative ways. It’s not just us. Every search engine has been spammed to death. We feel we do a reasonably good job of it, considering how much spam there is in the blogosphere. It’s a big part of what we do.

Win A Free WordPress Revolution or WordPress Remix Theme

Revolution ThemeBloggingmix.com is giving away a free WordPress Revolution Theme or WordPress Remix Theme. Personally I’m hoping to win the Revolution Theme, I’ve had my eye on it for awhile and it really seems to have the look and functionality I need for a site that I am soon to be working on.

This is a sweet contest, and a great way to get one of the top WorPress themes on the internet.

To check out Bloggingmix and the contest click here.

Getting The Word Out About Your Free WordPress Theme

One of the biggest bummers for someone designing a free WordPress theme is after all your hardwork, the release day is here and hardly anyone is using it. How do you get the word out about your theme? WeLoveWP.com has compiled a nice little list of sites to submit your free WordPress theme to and I thought I’d pass it along. The more sites you submit your theme to the better distribution you’ll get, don’t limit yourself to one or two sites.

The list:

http://wpthemesplugin.com/
http://freewpthemes.info/

http://themeboss.com
http://themes.blogflux.com/
http://themes.mygreencorner.com/
http://themes-wp.com
http://wptemplates.org/
http://www.bloggeries.com/forum/
http://www.bloggingthemes.com/
http://www.forum.easywordpress.com/
http://www.freewordpressthemes.com
http://www.fresheezy.com
http://www.templates-free.com/wordpress-themes/
http://www.themebot.com
http://www.themes.iwebnet.org
http://www.themes.rock-kitty.net
http://www.themesbase.com
http://www.themevibes.com
http://www.veckd.com
http://www.web2feel.com
http://www.wordpressthemebase.com/
http://www.wpskins.org/
http://www.wpsnap.com
http://www.wpthemesfree.com/

Meta Tag Generator

One thing many bloggers forget to do is put Meta Tags in their blog.

Meta tags give search engines vital information about your blogs such as keywords, description, and even if they can index your site. Submit Corner (click here to check them out) has a nice little meta tag generator that can make you some very nice and simple meta tags in seconds.

After generating your tags, simply go to your WordPress Dashboard, click on presentation, then click Theme Editor, then select your header and insert the generated meta tags right above the </head> tag. Save and you’re done. If you are like me and don’t have your permissions set to do this via Dashboard, simply modify your header.php file via ftp client.

Creating You Own Blog Disclosure Policy

DisclosurePolicy.orgDisclosurePolicy.org has created a step by step tool to create your own disclosure policy for your blog. Why a disclosure policy? Here’s a good explanation from their site:

“By including a disclosure policy you are protecting the integrity of your blog and providing a service to the advertisers, sponsors and organizations that you support you. Disclosure encourages trust amongst your readers and promotes an ethical blogosphere.

Disclosure does not mean you are not changing your voice, perspective, values or persona. You will always be you, and that’s why you blog.

Disclosure does mean that you will be open, honest and transparent about the things that influence your blogging.”

To check out their easy to use generating tool click here.

WordPress SEO Plugin

The great thing about WordPress is the wide range of plugins available. One of the most useful for getting word of your blogs content out is the All In One SEO Pack plugin. Search Engine Optimization is the most vital part of getting your blog seen, and this plugin does the trick. Here’s a list of features from the plugin’s homepage:

  • Titles
    The text that you see in your browser’s window bar is the most important thing *on* your page. Make sure your titles are getting rewritten and the important stuff (your post titles) always come before anything else. You can leave a few words from your blog title to do some branding but don’t overdo. If your post titles don’t contain your most precious phrases you want to rank for then tweak them. Leave the post titles as it is but change the meta title.
  • Descriptions
    Once your pages rank in search engines your description (aside of course from your title) makes a potential visitor want to click through, or not. It’s mta descriptions, believed dead by many people, that decide over your site’s fate. If you don’t want to invest the time and write a description for every post at least let them be auto-generated. This vastly better than the usual “Share This … Posted on … under …” description that is often used. If a post has an excerpt it is used, but not if you specify an explicit description.
  • Keywords
    All in One SEO Pack can generate them from your categories (this was the old way of tagging your posts in wordpress) or from Ultimate Tag Warrior or, starting with Wordpress 2.3, the built-in tagging system. Using your categories is optional, the rest is auto-detected and used if there.
  • Duplicate Content
    You can have “noindex” and the like generated for archive-, category- and tag pages if you seem to have trouble with duplicate content.

For a screen shot, more info and download information visit the plugin authors web page by clicking here.

Pinging Your Blog

One of the most important steps when trying to get your blogs content seen is pinging. What is pinging? Here’s a good description from Pingoat.com:

“A ‘Ping’ is a basic Internet program that lets you verify that a particular Internet address exists and can accept requests. The verb ping means the act of using the ping utility or command.

Pinging in the blog world means different, but still similar. There are certain services that scans blog regulary for updates and publishes the recently updated blogs (for an example). So once you’ve updated your blog, you should let such a service know that you have your blog has peen updated. for this, you send a PING to the service. Most of the blog software have the ability to ping on their own. But pinging a dozen such services could be time consuming. Read more »

Make Money Blogging With PayPerPost!

Get Paid to Blog About the Things You Love! That is the motto of PayPerPost, one of the latest and most respect blogging revenue generators. Signing up is free and easy, once you sign up select products you have used from their list and write a blog post, and get paid. Some people are reportedly earning more from this than their Google Adsense. If you want to check them out just click here.


Get Paid to Blog About the Things You Love

Earn Money From Your Blog Using Widget Bucks

Monetizing your blog isn’t as easy as it sounds. Advertising on your site needs to be unobtrusive, and related to your content in order to maximize it’s earning potential. Widget Bucks is a contextual ad service that provides relevant ads in a very non-annoying way.

You can choose categories related to your site, or have Widget Bucks crawl your site and deliver ads based on key words they pick up. Either way you get ads your visitors will be interest. They operate on a pay per click model and it’s easy to quickly ad up the $$$.

What Makes Us Different

With WidgetBucks, you can start earning more money today — and keep your focus on publishing.

  • Higher eCPMs Hands down, WidgetBucks exceeds traditional publisher’s CPM targets of $1-$2
  • Content vs. ads WidgetBucks delivers engaging, contextual, rich-media widgets that complement your site content
  • Easy deployment Placing customized code on your site takes just minutes, and only MerchSense auto-optimizes your widget rotation based on performance tracking

You can also refer other webmasters/bloggers and earn residual income off of their ads as well. If you think you may be interested, click on the banner below and check them out(and if you sign up I’ll earn residuals yay!).


Earn $$ with WidgetBucks!

Rockin Black 3 Column WordPress Theme

Rockin BlackOne of my all time favorite WordPress Themes is Corey Miller’s Rockin Black Minimal Theme. It’s a great theme and easy to customize. Best of all it’s a 3 column theme which allows you to really spread things out.

I used this myself on World’s Best Wrestling, you can click on the name to see how I customized it.

To check it out, and download the them click here. I’m sure Rockin Themes has something everyone will love.

Also you can check out a modification of the theme I did for World’s Best Wrestling at this link.

Next Page »