Nov20
Most companies in the US monitor two things like a hawk: 1. Revenue and 2. Employee Vacation days.
Are you over your allowed vacation days? Have you accrued enough days to take that week off to visit Grandma? Only employees here over 5 years get an additional week…
Well more companies should take the European model of 4 weeks plus off and mid day siestas. One company in the US is doing it correctly: Netflix.
They don’t track vacation days at all. Instead they trust and believe in their passionate employees to take vacation when they need it and not to abuse it. Wow. Imagine a company believing in the integrity of their employees and their company culture. Don’t believe it? Read the full Mediapost article here
Nov13
Facebook is letting brands advertise to not only fans of theirs but to friends of their fans… FoaFs look out! The spam and lead gen deals be coming!
Read Media Post article here
Nov11
Despite having fewer titles and less revenue than Zynga, EA bought Playfish for ~$400M. Both companies have similar business models and very similar products, but the philosophy of the companies are much different.

Playfish focuses on the quality of their games with a consistent design aesthetic and compelling game design. While this might mean fewer games and higher cost per game it ensures their mission statement of creating the best games they can stays true.
Zynga focuses on making money. They either acquire games or fast follow/emulate other games and pump money into the space to drown out the competition in marketing and customer acquisition.
Zynga makes alot of money. Playfish does as well. And both companies have a lot of users playing their games. But at the end of the day is it the quality of the customer (repeat player, organic word of mouth, user turned ambassador) versus the number of customers (one time players, subversive acquisition, lead gen tactics) that really matters to potential acquirers?
It will also be interesting to see what will happen when the changes to the Facebook platform take effect in the new year in regards to notification spamming, customer acquisition flow, and direct messaging.
Read the Silicon Alley Insider article here
Nov5
Digg is testing a new feature to “compete” with Twitter’s real time trending topics. Digg Trending Stories is a spot on the Digg.com homepage where trending stories, selected based on an algorithm of among other things Diggs, shares, comments, are surfaced to allow users to either Digg it or let it fade back into the internets…

Digg Trending stories
This seems very redundant. Isn’t the notion of Digg already all about top stories that users have pushed to the top? Especially on the homepage? Perhaps a Digg Trending story more like an article still in the “minor leagues” waiting to get called up? Ironically Digg has also set up a Twitter account when a new Trending Story is posted.
Read the Media Post article here
Nov2

Facebook announced last week 19 new items on their development roadmap to be implemented in the last two months of the year and into 2010. Of the 19 items some, if utilized correctly, will help social games become more mainstream and accepted. Others will bury a lot of the existing game models that have allowed the mafia type games to take off. continue reading »
Stalqer: a new app to meet all your friend/frienemy stalking needs pretty much does what it says it does, stalks your and your friends’ locations actively and passively even if the app isn’t open. continue reading »