Category archives: Quant
Summary Engine
Posted by Shaun Abrahamson on Tuesday, 1 July 2008
Pluribo launched their summary engine yesterday and has been quite widely covered. The first implementation is based on a Firefox plug-in, which you can use when browsing Amazon.com. Rather than having to read reviews, Pluribo summarizes the reviews and shows how the product compares to other products along the most critical dimensions (as determined by use reviews).
Another Firefox plug-in. Great, hopefully they will add a Facebook app, too. Does the world really need another plug-in, widgety thingy? Why would I use this thing?
The Pluribo team identified an interesting issue – that is, while there are more and more reviews on sites like Amazon, Newegg and even Walmart (powered by Bazaarvoice), you still have to read them to figure out what people think.
Now you might want to find the best. But is your best the same as my best? What happens if your version of best is “lightest” or “fastest”. The star rating doesn’t tell you this, so you cant cheat and look at that. You have to read through reviews which might not even talk about your best.
What Pluribo does is figure out criteria – i.e. what dimensions are people talking about. So if people offer their thoughts on weight, you can find the lightest. If people weigh in on other issues, such as “scratchiness” or the likelihood that the product will scratch – thats there too. So you might want to take that carry case after all.
This seems like it could make life really easy. Imagine standing in best-buy and asking – is this the lightest? You could summon Pluribo and get short summary, readable on a small screen.
Or what about manufacturers. If I am a product designer, wouldn’t it be nice to know the most important attributes which people are talking about? And which products score best for these attributes? Pluribo already knows. You have a permanent, always available focus group and Pluribo is constantly summarizing the results.
I’m excited to see what is next. Maybe Pluribo will summarize their reviews to see which dimensions users think are most important.
Posted in: Product Development, Quant | Tagged: Amazon, Bazaarvoice, newegg, pluribo, Product Development, reviews, summary engine | No Comments
Online Analytics for the Physical World
Posted by Shaun Abrahamson on Sunday, 29 June 2008
Knowing what people say and knowing what they do, can be a powerful combination. Online marketing has capitalized on this via rich analytics to look at what people are saying or searching for and ultimately what they are buying. Web analytics is letting online marketers sort through the differences between what people say they do and what they actually do.
This is the core of online marketing’s advantage over traditional media. But what is happening where most of us still live? i.e the physical world.
Well, we have various profiling tools, such as affinity cards. So we can figure out how people are spending. But how did we land up in the store that day? A coupon code perhaps? We cant really be sure. We know things like 12m people are supposed to have visited this location. But then we don’t really know where they went or where they came
from (we think perhaps 25% are international based on surveys, for example).
But this is starting to change. Mutopo is working with one client to track in store movement, using signals from cell phones. The approach lets us show a location owner how people move around the space, not unlike what I might see from online analytics – navigation paths, entrance and exit points, time spent at certain locations etc. And so now, I can make changes in reality and measure the responses, not just changes in sales.
While we are working on a very local scale, we were excited to learn about Prof Tony Jebara’s new project, Sense Networks. Tony and his team are harvesting a variety of data sets to understand what people are doing – they are, in effect bringing online analytics into the real world.
Things like the most searched items on Google Trends might have realwold analogs such as the most visited restaurants. Or conversion reports might now be possible from outdoor campaigns, as you can get a real sense of the number of people who might have walked past a specific location.
The image on the left shows an example application to show the “hotspots” in San Francisco. These are literally the places you want to be if you are asking the question: where is everyone going tonight? Yes, its realtime. You can learn more about this app at Citysense.
It might be possible to know for sure how many more people in New York City have chosen to bike to work. I can start to see if more people are going to the new Ikea in Brooklyn instead of alternatives in New York City, such as Bed Bath and Beyond or the Container Store. Where I might have used Google Analytics to benchmark my site, now I can do the same for my store.
And we can now play what-if, in the real world. What if we:
- change the layout of the store?
- place new promotional signage at the hallway?
- invest in signage alongside the highway?
- purchase the locaton on 26th and 5th?
- notice that more people are starting to cycle in NYC?
- see more people dining out in a new area of town?
- see more people going to Trader Joe’s than Wholefoods?
Its feels like we are on the verge of a significant change in how data from cell phones, GPS devices and the like can be analyzed in new and interesting ways. Good luck to Tony and the team at Sense Networks. We cant wait to see what people are going to do with your analysis.
Posted in: Quant | Tagged: data mining, gps data, location based services, MIT, mobile data, Proximity Marketing, reality analytics, reality mining, sense networks, trends | 1 Comment
Fewer Lies. More Statistics.
Posted by Shaun Abrahamson on Wednesday, 19 December 2007
The Economist.com reviews the greatest works in this area of visualization. In an ever growing information deluge, it is a great reminder of the power of visualization to easily distill data down to actionable intelligence.
The folks at Juice Analytics do excellent work and have some very useful tools, such as the Chart Chooser. Infothetics does a nice job tracking the latest and greatest in visualization. I personally find Google Analytics to be a very handy out of the box online analytics solution, primarily because of the ease with which data can quickly be visualized and compared against historical performance.
From the Economist’s Worth a Thousand Words article, “Nightingale’s Rose” named after Florence Nightingale who sent this chart to the British War Office arguing for better conditions in soldier’s barracks.
A sample from one of our clients sites using Google Analytics, to quickly compare current site visits with a month prior.
Juice analytics chart chooser, suggests the best chart for your data set. And they have the excel templates, too.
Posted in: Quant | Tagged: | No Comments
New Newsware
Posted by Shaun Abrahamson on Tuesday, 6 November 2007
Daylife.com gives you a variety of ways to quickly and easily create quotes and images about the things you care about. This one tracks, "Barack Obama", but you can create your own.
And if you want to watch the run up to the US elections…Funny, news coverage almost seems to track polling results. hmmmm.
And finally, it is always important to know who is partying where, so RedCarpet, is the way to be in the know
Nice. More from Daylife Labs.
Posted in: Quant | Tagged: | No Comments


