Could the world now be ready?
In 2009, along with a group of bright, energetic team members, I founded a startup called Grabbit. in a nutshell:
Grabbit created a new web services platform, for social media publishing and subscribing, real-time content consumption, and highly targeted social shopping. The Grabbit Social Commerce system matches content, people, and the products, services, and brands they want, all based on recommendations from both Grabbit and from the people in their social networks. “As much as 25% of retail e-commerce is based on automated recommendations such as Amazon’s “Recommended for you” offers.” (Gartner Group)
Grabbit’s analysis of users, content, and content consumption results in very timely and highly personalized product, service, and donation recommendations. Grabbit starts by analyzing content items using keyword analysis, tag analysis, and semantic analysis and embeds matching social commerce offers in that content. Grabbit’s optional social tools add the ability to analyze profiles, behaviors, and preferences of users and their friends to increase the ability to the match offers and recommendations to content and people.

In short, the beauty of the service is this: collect all of your streams (email, Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, email accounts…), SAVE them all from inception (they are “yours” after all), back them up, and efficiently be able to sort and search across all of them. Like Google Desktop, but sequestered to your own files, not hidden files like many people were suspect of with Google Desktop and other services like it.
Overview:
Grabbit™ aims to become the leader in real-time stream management and in the monetization of real-time streams. Grabbit has developed a rich “stream browser” that helps with tasks such as stream aggregation, content filtering, friend management, and more, making it compelling for people to use Grabbit as their primary real-time stream. Grabbit gives users access to personalized streams from Twitter, Facebook, news, blogs, email and other content sources any place, anytime. Grabbit runs on smart phones (iPhone, Palm Pre, Android), the web, and TV to provide an integrated multi-platform system that allows people to view, send/receive, and manage ongoing real-time updates and alerts across a wide range of social networks, information, media, and commerce.
Grabbit leverages the high level of user attention and interaction given to real-time streams by offering vendors and service providers the ability to make highly targeted and personalized offers directly to consumers using Grabbit’s revolutionary new Real-Time Direct Marketing™ and e-commerce system. The profit potential is enormous.
Opportunity:
Grabbit leverages the major new trend of people spending significantly more of their attention on real-time online streams of short or summarized information.
More and more information from the web is being streamed to users in real-time. Twitter is credited with igniting the shift from browsing relatively static web pages full of information to browsing a real-time stream of short snippets of information, shared among a social network of friends. Now many other web services, including Facebook, Google, and AOL are jumping on the bandwagon by offering real-time streams of information to their users. The value of such companies is high, with FriendFeed recently selling to Facebook for approximately $50 Million.
But, more than just social networks are delivering real-time streams of information. The move to smart phones such as the iPhone has created a bumper crop of applications that deliver summarized real-time information that is well-suited for the small form factor of smart phones. Some of the many examples of these smart phone apps on the iPhone are iPhone mail, Google News, Bloomberg News, and many e-commerce smart phone micro-sites such as Amazon’s.
The massive popularity of receiving and sending small amounts of information is indicative of today’s “short attention span society” in which there is more competition for an individual’s attention than ever before. Delivering summarized information in real-time streams helps people cope with the massive amounts of information available, and the resultant information overload. The real-time nature of streaming services offers an immediacy that is appealing and attention-grabbing. For many people, real-time streams are the “new” news.
But the popularity of these real-time streaming message services has created some new problems: keeping track of all of these real-time streams, and keeping track of friends and associates on various social and business networks. It’s inconvenient to have to check all these streams individually, for example, logging into Twitter or using a Twitter app to participate in the Twitter stream, and then having to do the same for Facebook, AOL, Plaxo, LinkedIn, etc. It’s also difficult to keep track of and manage various friends who may be on one or more of these various social networks or other online services. Furthermore, all the messages create a lot of “noise” and it is difficult to find and focus on what is most interesting and important.
Despite the enormous popularity of Twitter, it has had trouble developing a viable business model. Other similar services face the same problem. There is both a real need and a major opportunity for a new system that can effectively monetize the attention of people browsing real-time streams of information.
Grabbit’s Solution:
Grabbit solves these problems, and more. For the user it aggregates all of their social network streams into a single stream, the Grabbit Stream. Other services such as FriendFeed provide limited solutions, but Grabbit takes real-time stream management to a new level with its rich “stream browser.” Grabbit not only consolidates many different types of streams, but also helps users with tasks such as managing alerts, messages, friends, and subscriptions. Grabbit gives users the ability to add many different types of real-time streams, updates, and alerts – e.g. email alerts, news alerts, blog alerts, alarms and reminders, shopping alerts, and more – across a broad range of social networks, information, media, and commerce.
Because aggregating all of that information into a single stream could create its own information overload, Grabbit lets users instantly filter their streams in a variety of ways to focus on specific information or people. Grabbit also gives users a powerful set of tools for managing friends, contacts, and groups of friends and other contacts, across a wide variety of social and business networks.
For marketers, Grabbit offers a new platform for real-time direct marketing and e-commerce that is highly targeted and personalized. Grabbit leverages the specific interests of each individual user based on detailed analysis of the content within their stream and their friend’s streams, behavioral analysis, and explicit information users provide in their profile and on other areas of Grabbit. Ongoing interests that are actively subscribed to and viewed in a user’s stream are more powerful for targeting active buyers, and more effective in generating impulse buys, than the more passive and unpredictable interest levels represented by search engine marketing or other types of advertising.
By aggregating a comprehensive array of information sources into a single, manageable stream, and delivering a unified service across phone, web, and TV platforms, Grabbit provides more value to users than its competitors. Grabbit profits from this value exchange via its innovative real-time direct marketing and e-commerce system, a major revenue source that other social messaging services lack.
Grabbit’s system connects buyers and sellers in real-time, allows users to purchase items immediately with a single click, and eliminates significant inefficiencies inherent in traditional advertising. Grabbit offers a large inventory of products and services directly to users through its extensive affiliate/partner network. In addition, Grabbit features a self-service vendor interface (similar in concept to Google Adwords) that lets anyone offer products or services directly to consumers. Grabbit provides direct payment methods via credit card, PayPal, and phone billing, thus allowing sellers to close and complete sales, and maximize the potential for impulse buying. The efficiencies of Grabbit’s system provides benefits to both consumers and marketers, and maximizes Grabbit’s revenue and profit potential. Annual revenue from this type of service could be in the $100M to $1B range.
Service Description:
Grabbit Service: Grabbit is a free service available on smart-phones, the web, and TV that provides consumers with a powerful new type of browser for real-time streams of information and a set of tools and utilities for managing content, alerts, and networks of friends and associates.
Grabbit helps users send and receive real-time messages and updates to and from people in any of their social networks, as well as receive and forward updates from a wide range of information sources including:
Grabbit is designed to be multi-platform and available anywhere, any time, on your phone, the web, or TV. Grabbit will be offered in the following formats:
Grabbit Discovery Center: The GrabbitDiscoveryCenter is a real-time personalized portal that helps its users discover other users, new real-time content, and real-time commerce. Accordingly, the DiscoveryCenter is composed of three main sections, the People Finder, News Finder, and Deal Finder. Each user’s DiscoveryCenter is a personalized micro-content portal, drawn from editorially-selected items most closely matched to each user’s interests. This matching is based on the user’s viewing history, online usage, profile, and metadata, as well as a friend recommendation system that draws on data such as analysis of other user’s social networks, content usage, reputations, marketing responses, and system interaction. Whereas existing portals focus on web content, Grabbit specializes in helping display, organize, and recommend friends, and real-time streams of content and commerce.
Grabbit Real-Time Direct Marketing and E-commerce: Grabbit’s powerful revenue engine is a sophisticated platform for real-time direct marketing and e-commerce based on a number of technologies including a distributed data repository code-named the “Deals Database.” The Grabbit Real-Time Direct Marketing system makes offers to users based on detailed profiling, content analysis, behavioral analysis, and other metrics. Offers are provided to users in a compelling yet unobtrusive, soft-sell, opt-in manner that doesn’t clutter up or otherwise interfere with the user’s Grabbit experience.
Grabbit’s Real-Time Direct Marketing system uses this advanced content and behavior analysis to provide a very high degree of targeting, which is used to present users with marketing messages, special deals, e-coupons, and other e-commerce offers that are precisely targeted to that individual’s current interests. Users who register a payment method with Grabbit (e.g. credit card, PayPal, phone billing, etc.) will be able to purchase items directly from the Grabbit application on their phone, on the web, or from their TV.
Team:
CEO: TBD
Fred Davis, Co-Founder and Chief Technology Officer: Fred has a long string of publishing and technology successes. Fred was on the founding teams of a number of startups including Wired, CNET and Ask Jeeves. Prior to that Fred was a top executive at Ziff-Davis Publishing where he served as editor of PC Magazine, PC Week, MacUser, and A+, as well as running and leading the industry-leading product testing laboratories at those publications. Fred has been named one of the most influential people in the industry by several publications in both the U.S. and Japan, and is listed in Who’s Who in America.
Lisa Padilla, Co-Founder and Chief Marketing Officer: Lisa has been helping businesses like Apple, Intuit, Hewlett-Packard, Microsoft, Datek, Clorox, Levis and Drugstore.com reach consumer customers and partners with effective marketing campaigns for over 15 years. She has led product launches and corporate marketing for companies in technology, financial services, entertainment, travel, sports, news, gaming and other industries. Lisa’s strategic and hands-on experience offers specialization in advertising, search marketing, social media strategy, micro-media and channel marketing. Lisa is also the host of Lisacast.com.
Danilo Black, Development Partner: Grabbit is working with the world-renowned design and development group, Danilo Black. In its 20-year history in media, Danilo Black has helped many major news organizations successfully convert their print brands into digital hubs. Roger Black has designed many of the publications you are familiar with today such as Newsweek, Esquire, Rolling Stone, Readers Digest, and many major web sites such as MSNBC.com and Discovery.com. Danilo Black brings considerable expertise and development p rocess helping us deliver a world-class product design and user experience.
Grabbit presently resides on Github, awaiting it’s next development and distribution partners. If you are interested in getting involved, in management, fund raising, engineering or as a partner or customer, please contact us.
Social TV catches the eye and attention of Nielsen, after 50 years of the same tracking metrics
On December 17th, 2012 Nielsen cited the one billion tweets sent every 2.5 days, which it said makes “Twitter data a necessity” in keeping tabs on TV-related conversations. TV and Twitter interaction looks something like this:

Per ReadWrite.com research has shown that “social chatter about TV shows actually correlates with ratings and Twitter itself has been taking its role in television more seriously through media partnerships and launching promotional campaigns for new shows” and nearly “90% of tablet owners use them while they watch TV”.
You missed a spot
One needs to closely consider that when the numbers are scrubbed, some networks are missed. Vevo is catching some flack for not removing views like other YouTube channels have.
Who’s leading the charge
According to Trendrr’s second annual Year End Stats Report for Social TV, NBC is the most social network for 2012, while the Nickelodeon-produced SpongeBob SquarePants is the most social TV show on all of television. Analysts argue NBC had a card up its sleeve as the 2012 Olympics boosted NBC past all other cable and network broadcasters in terms of Social TV and its implementation of apps on a variety of devices.
Accordingly, once you take the Olympics out of the equation FOX and its singing-competition show “The X Factor” bring home all the bacon for 2012, as the social activity-per-episode for the popular reality TV show is off the charts. Wondering which device OS reigned supreme in 2012 when it came to social TV? Without a doubt its Apple’s multitude of iOS devices, including the iPad, iPhone and even the iPod Touch.

Read more internet TV news from Worldtvpc.com: Social TV Is Growing, And Is Here To Stay
To support this trend are facts like this one reported on TechCrunch. One of the positions listed on [Twitter's] jobs site is a “Manager of TV Relationships” [a] position based in Los Angeles.*
HuffingtonPost reports that VH1′s Sacher: Social TV is the New Reality of Television as 80 Percent of Viewers Use a Second Screen.
BetaKit reports that Stevie, a social TV startup launched on the iPhone and received more funding. there are many other startups attacking this new feast as well: GetGlue and IntoNow, Shelby.tv (currently hibernating), Showyou and Telly.
Facebook might be close behind
Social TV doesn’t end at Twitter, Facebook may prove a very strong contender, even though Twitter leads real-time. Read this article from Forbes for more on that story.
“Viewers generated 874 million TV-related comments in social media this year — up 363 percent from the 189 million in 2011″, according to Bluefin Labs, a Boston-based firm that specializes in social media analytics.
The Grammy Awards grew 2,280% — generating 13 million comments in social media during the 2012 telecast on CBS. (http://articles.baltimoresun.com/2012-12-23/entertainment/bal-twitter-facebook-taught-us-how-to-talk-back-to-the-tv-20121223_1_bluefin-labs-social-media-social-tv)

For some basic talk about social TV, listen to this Social TV Discussion which goes over the idea: ”Broadly speaking, social TV is the integration of social media and TV programming.”
For those of you looking for a top-level, and very general look at optimal social network posting days/times:

How Are People Really Using LinkedIn? INFOGRAPHIC http://ht.ly/5AxCk 61% of LinkedIn users use LinkedIn as their primary social network
Online Advertising Privacy Regulation: In It To Spin It! http://ht.ly/5yjW7 about Quantcast’s free privacy online icon
Lisacast.com Daily http://ht.ly/5yjNn thank you @CNN @pitchforkmedia @exponentialedge @zeldman
AdAge is talking about the release of the free privacy online icon to smaller companies, not just the license of them to large companies. The icon allows users to opt-out of behavioral targeting. Here’s what the icon looks like:
![]()
Open or Closed
It’s not black and white but if it were, there would be ‘open’ people, and there would be ‘closed’ people with regard to behavior online.
Open: Yes, pay attention to my behavior so I don’t receive irrelevant ads. Oooh, horseback riding just a couple of miles away!
Closed: I do not want you to track anything I do online. And, stop sending me stupid ads! (?)
Open: Remember me. I’m terrible at remembering passwords and I sign up for a lot of stuff because I love the Internet.
Closed: Do not save or cookie any information of mine. Hey why do I have to fill out this form again! (?)
Open: Online privacy controls are fine, but allow me to hand the keys over to the Digital Advertising Alliance or FTC. Innocent until proven guilty. I have little to hide.
Closed: I demand online privacy controls, um I have no idea how to use them exactly, what does this lever do? (?)
My point is, smart people are making legislation in 2012 to give you closed people options, for your protection. But, you are wearing swimming earplugs to the fire hydrant party, it’s underkill.
You know how when a police car rides up behind you arbitrarily, though you are doing nothing wrong, he’s like a yellow jacket flying around your picnic sandwich, your heart rate increases, and you wish he’d leave? On the other hand, when the neighbors are fighting in the middle of the night and it sounds like are going to kill each other, when you see those red and blue flashing lights you feel safe and happy they are there?
That’s my policy. The government has every right (and responsibility) to protect you. You, as well, should have every right to opt out of that. Me? My policy is be careful with my money, and separate my spam from my important email, but other than that, I fall hard into the ‘open’ category. Here is a Klout.com list you can follow of others I find ‘open’ on Twitter:
(…and by the way, I’m open to suggestions to that list. Because I’m open. You get it.)
Either way, as usual, expect growth in online ad spending in the upcoming years:

Because as web sites, blogs, magazines, promotions and more expand online, so does the advertising landscape:

The biggest activity (behavior) we take part in online (beside perhaps the one-handed 30-second rewind ~ meow!) is search. Here is where you’ll see most of the digital advertising:

I Hate Shopping
An estimated that 30% of online digital ads ($28.5 billion) in the U.S. use behavioral tracking, says AdAge. I want my advertisers to know me, what I like, and how I act. Maybe I’m lacking the old-fashioned gene that makes people drive to a store and walk around looking on the racks and shelves for supplies. It just feels a bit Little House on the Prairie to me.
Online recommendations (live or culled), stylists and catalogs with fun interactivity and social sharing sounds better. Webvan is gone but did you notice Safeway has taken it back up?
Microsoft, Baidu to Expand Web-Search Partnership in China “Google has lost market share to Baidu in China” Bloomberg http://ht.ly/5xinu
Lisacast.com Daily – Interesting news in tech today! http://ht.ly/5wpN6 thank you @partnerup @mchammer @thenextweb @nprnews and @aparanjape
Ready to spend timeless hours creating another social profile with groups and learn a new interface? i.e. anyone looking for a google+ invite? #googleplus #google+ #ihatehashtags