Author Archive
22
03
2008
Jelly on CurrentPosted by: Nate Westheimer in Heat, Kicks, Sneakers, affiliate marketing, internet, new media, nextNY, online advertising, web 2.0
18
03
2008
Showing off Silicon Alley - The Jeremiah Owyang editionPosted by: Nate Westheimer in Heat, Kicks, Sneakers, affiliate marketing, internet, new media, nextNY, online advertising, web 2.0
See Jeremiah’s coverage of the lunch here (his photo above) One of my favorite things to is show off the best of Silicon Alley to people visiting Silicon Valley - especially influential folks. Today, I did just that, by having folks converge on Shake Shack in Madison Square Park for lunch with Forrester Researcher Jeremiah Owyang who writes the influential Web-Strategist blog. I’ve known Jeremiah since Frank Gruber introduced us at Blog World Expo in November. Anyway, those in attendance for lunch were (aside from Jeremiah and myself): Kyle Bragger I was especially glad to introduce Jeremiah to Kyle, as he had been following BricaBox since back in November. Also, it was great to have Matt there because their community stuff at CafeMom is of such interest to Jeremiah’s work. I hope they stay in touch going forward. Overall, though, it was just a treat to show off Silicon Alley and show that with just a few Twitters you can have folks coming out of the woodwork to a nice lunch. Hopefully Jeremiah’s post finds it back through the Valley and they learn how great our community of tech people here are.
11
12
2007
Notes on the Alley 100Posted by: Nate Westheimer in Heat, Kicks, Sneakers, affiliate marketing, internet, new media, nextNY, online advertising, web 2.0
I say much “awaited” because (I feel no shame in pointing out) leading up to the release of the official list there was a large amount of activity on, and buzz around, a site I put up (using BricaBox) called the “Silicon Alley 100: People’s Choice.” This was a place for “the people” to nominate and vote on folks to be recognized for their influence in the NY tech scene. It was this list which stirred up quite a controversy within the nextNY community and greater NY tech scene, garnering scathing posts from folks like my friend Charlie O’Donnell along with mostly excited and engaging posts from folks like Greg Verdino and Darren Herman, to name a few (here are a few others). Regardless of opinion, it was clear that with the People’s Choice version of the list everyone had an opinion. Either it was the best thing ever that “the people” had their own version of the list, or it was an example of how “the people” are ineffective at measuring influence and power. So, when the Insider finally released their list last week, my first questions was, “How close were We?” The answer: Today I finally got around to posting a quantitative analysis comparing the list up on Google Spreadsheets. Check it out. I think it tells an interesting story. What the list shows is that the “people’s” list had about 20 of the 100 people on the SAI list, under-weighting the average person by 13 places. This under-weighting was due, in part, to the fact that the “People’s Choice” list included 6 of the 21 unranked “Up and Comers” that the Insider recognized. (Full Disclosure: SAI put me in this list, which I can only attribute to a “typo,” as Caroline McCarthy did for herself.) Now, there are several ways to interpret the difference in weighting of the lists, but I think it has to do with community and entrepreneurship versus power and the establishment. To illustrate this point, consider the folks who were most under-weighted and most over-weighted by the People’s Choice list. Most under-weighted by “the people”:
Must over-weighted by “the people”:
What makes the first three folks “power and the establishment” is that their influence in exerted on the exiting and king-making side of “influence” (supposedly the measurement we were going by). Quincy buys “new media” companies; David sold DoubleClick; John sold Fotolog. It’s not a knock on them or SAI: It’s an observation of one way to measure influence. The “over-weighted” folks, however, are the foot-soldiers, the folks changing (read: influencing) the face of NY tech literally from its grassroots. Perhaps it’s a chicken and egg question, but I’m not surprised the “the people” sided with the grassroots side of influence (the egg?). Anyway, I think the type of influence each list weighted is an important way to analyze what went on. Another way to analyze the two lists is by omissions. Looking down the SAI list, it’s clear to me that “the people” missed some pretty important people altogether. Consider these “holes” (in order of measured importance):
Then look at these omissions from SAI’s list (in order of measured importance):
Once again it seems to the a “people have spoken” vs a “powers have spoken” thing. Again, not that “power” is a bad way of measuring “influence,” it just shows you from what mindset a “people’s choice” list comes from and from what mindset a curated “kind-maker” list comes from. So, I’m interested in what *you* read into these two lists. I personally believe that each has its place and each is important in its own right. I wouldn’t want the “official” list to have many of the folks who made it into the top of the People’s Choice list, but I also think a people’s choice version keeps the “official” guys honest. Besides from the usually cries of “lists are stupid,” what are your opinions? I’d love to see a blog post or a few comments of your reaction. |