Tag Archives: Lullabot

Ten of Thousands of Websites Are Using Buzzr Software Before We’re Even in Public Alpha. What’s the Deal?

Buzzr, our platform for simplifying the creation of sophisticated websites, has been in development for more than a year now. Yet even though we aren’t public yet, tens of thousands of sites have already adopted software from the project. More than 100,000 sites, we estimate. How? Open Source.

For this of you not too familiar with open source technology projects, a word of explanation is necessary. Strange as it may seem, we’ve released, free of charge, interesting parts of our work (“modules”) well before we were ready to release it on our own site. We’ve also contributed extensive work we’ve done on existing modules to make them much better.

The work ranges from making it easier for website visitors to vote on content they like, to making it easier to create a custom form, to making it easier to configure a website to begin with.

The open source deal is this: you can use the module for free, but once you come to depend on it, you’re probably going to want to see it working well. So you help by reporting bugs, submitting patches and making suggestions.  And we end up getting free help supporting our work. Below, I’ve listed some of the modules we’ve created or done a great deal of work on, along with some usage statistics.

We’re building Buzzr leveraging the Drupal project. A big part of what we’re doing is creating a usability on top of Drupal, as well as integrating a bundle of Drupal modules that work as a simplified solution for creating, hosting and running websites.  You can see a preview of the work here. http://buzzr.com/buzzr-demo-video-making-drupal-usable

We have lots more good stuff coming.  And if there’s a particularly important feature you hope becomes part of Buzzr or one of the modules we release on Drupal, please let us know!

Thanks to the entire Lullabot team, including Karen Stevenson, Nate Haug, Jeff Eaton, Angie Byron, James Walker, Jeff Robbins, Addison Berry and Matt Westgate for their work on these and many other Buzzr tools.

New Modules:

jQuery UI ; SimpleViewsViews Attach; Views Gallery ; Form Builder;

And here are some of the modules we’ve made significant contributions to:

Embed Filter ; Fivestar; jQuery Update ; MultiblockVoting API

Sample Usage Charts:

Picture 3

Picture 2

Simple Views Usage

Picture 6

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Filed under Buzzr, Drupal, social networking, Start Up

Guess Who’s Buzzed?

by Ed Sussman

Everybody.

On April 13, a little over two weeks ago, we released a demo video and blog post about our new business, Buzzr.com. The demo, which is kind of wonky, is aimed at the crowd of developers who live and breathe Drupal, the publishing platform underlying the new business I co-founded with Lullabot and Bond Art & Science.  About 10,000 geeks have come to check out the blog so far.  Our ultimate audience will be more ordinary people who run businesses, write blogs, publish online newspapers and magazines, operate non-profits and just want to create cool, great websites. We should have something ready for them to play with before too long.

For now, though, it was pretty amazing to hear from the developers who are immersed in website creation. Along with the comments from the blog post, we set off a twitter storm. I thought I’d select a bunch of the comments and tweets, edit them down a bit, and give those who didn’t follow the chatter a feel for the overwhelming excitement. “Jaw droppingly awesome” from @torgospizza is probably my favorite.

Twitter-logo-small

Comments from the blog:

terrific

Well, this is a masterpiece, that won’t easily be topped. Just like Drupal builds upon Apache/PHP, Buzzr builds upon Drupal. It takes unusual vision and talent to execute a leap like this. And buckets of hard work. Thanks for taking drupal and content management to the next level.

Now I can see how Drupal will take over the world

It’s always been powerful – but now I can see how it will be easy to use too!

Thats hot.

And its real. Nice!

o_O

This is a very impressive demo! Holy cow! You took every recent Lullabot-related module and put them altogether!

Nice

This will be fantastic when it’s available. It’s an “everything not Drupal” killer.
Favorite line: “Mildly OK-looking stuff…” LOL.

It looks amazing

But you knew that already.

WOW!

All I can say is “wow!” Drupal is now a product.

This is #!@&$ awesome

This is #!@&$ awesome, it’s something that I have thought about but didn’t have enough Drupal mojo to actually do. I guess if anyone can get it done it’s you guys.

Smooth…….

gr8 work guys cant wait for Buzzr to be realized & get my hands on it…

Holy Crap!

LOVE THIS!Believe it or not I think the “features instead of modules” UI enhancement is the best thing… and you saved it for last!

Just a thought. VERY VERY nice work. This is the future.

Kudos!

This is a very good example of the type of thinking that developers have avoided and that designers and administrators need. Drupal is very back-end oriented and that is it’s greatest strength. While not losing any of that layer, you’ve captured many of the issues that the end user has to struggle with after the development is done.Keep up the good work and for the bravery to unveil something at the right time even if it’s still a work in progress and even if you were looking for VC for it. L

holy crap!

Finish and sell this! Right now, I’ll buy it and finally leave ning.com!

Very exciting

Ah this demo makes me happy in so many ways.I hope this demo give the money tree a solid shake for you.

excellent

That’s what I’m calling pushing forward functionality

It’s very original

The concepts are very original and the result is very cool. The UI is really more friendly (you have a feeling of less settings to ‘touch’ to customize drupal and it definitely don’t look like drupal :)).Keep on guys, you are doing great as usual 🙂

damn … this is so cool. i

damn … this is so cool. i was mentioning some of the issues i was busy trying to address in the blog post http://espresso-online.info/site/node/114. you seem to have covered the issues and then some. this is really exciting, drupal is beginning to become appealing to normal people and is not just something used by programmers surrounded by pizza boxes and empty beer bottles.

Awesome. Photoshop for web

Awesome. Photoshop for web sites.

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Filed under Buzzr, Drupal, Media, online communities, social networking, Start Up

Why Start (Up) Now — 10/24/08

The following is reprinted from my announcement of the creation of Codename Enterprises. It orginally appeared on the Lullabot  website: http://www.lullabot.com/blog/edward-sussman-why-start-now

by Ed Sussman

Amid the gyrations of the stock market, and predictions of a severe economic downturn, I have found myself in the interesting position of launching a start up with my friends at Lullabot and Bond Art + Science. Over the past six years, I’ve worked within the comfortable fold of two well known brands in the media world: Inc. and Fast Company, the last four years as president of a digital division with six websites, 40 employees and more than $10 million in revenue. Now I’ve left to be the CEO of a self-funded company formed by Lullabot and Bond Art + Science that doesn’t even have a name for its product yet (even the name of the company is just Codename Enterprises.)

Some people think we’re crazy to do this now. Jason Calcanis wrote a couple of weeks ago that he expects 80% of the start ups already funded would collapse because of the down, part of a “start up depression.” And legendary VC Fred Wilson said companies without angel or VC funding in place would probably have to try to make it without VC funding.

There’s an old axiom, “There’s no bad time for a good company” but that’s a bit flip for the times. After all, some companies with good products are going to fail this year because of the downturn – they won’t be able to cut their expenses deeply enough to make up for lost revenue, and VCs will cut the cord before second or third round financing becomes available. That’s why there’s some panic in the start-up world right now, tempered by lots of practical advice from VCs about tucking in for the long winter of recession ahead. Sequoia Capital’s long slideshow shared with their portfolio companies recently is the best I’ve seen on the subject.

With our fledgling company, we only need to move around headcount numbers on a spreadsheet to make phantom staff we never hired go away. We’re working lean from day one. If this were a funded start up, about three million dollars of other people’s money would have been burned up so far. Instead, we just burned a few more pounds off of Lullabot Jeff Eaton. (That’s an inside “skinny” joke.) By the way, Eaton talks about the technical work done by Codename so far, and the excellent contributions that will ensue for the Drupal project, in this blog post.

That’s been the story for almost a year, now, actually. Day one for Codename was about ten months ago, when Lullabot managing partner Liza Kindred and I started talking about how damn hard the Drupal open source social publishing platform was for the likes of her and me (non-developers), and seemingly, even for the many developers who were working on a large project for me. I was in the midst of launching two of the most complex Drupal-powered sites to date – FastCompany.com and IncBizNet.com – and the separation between the promise of Drupal and the practical restraints were fairly maddening. I advised the Lullabots (the world’s leading Drupal consultants) to start working with Bond Art + Science, one of the best user experience firms in the nation. I also read an amazing post called “How Drupal Will Save the World” by Lullabot CEO Jeff Robbins, that pretty much laid out all the guiding principals that came to be the Codename company.

Some 4,000 hours of development and design by Lullabot and Bond Art + Science ensued. The object was and is to build a hosted platform, powered by Drupal, that gives ordinary people, businesses and organizations simple tools (like drag and drop or point and click) to custom-craft websites with features such as multi-user blogs, social networks, wikis, member reviews and ratings, photo sharing, and custom form fields. With these tools, even newcomers should be able to build feature-rich multi-user websites that go well beyond the boundaries of blog sites, or more rigid products such as WordPress.com and Ning.

“Working lean” is an understatement of what happened. Working for nothing is what happened. Lullabot juggled consulting and Codename to make it happen so far. The excellent user interface experts at Bond similarly kicked in their valuable partner time. An amazing advisory board has similarly been offering up valuable advice: Jeff Dachis, former CEO of Razorfish and senior partner at Bond Art + Science; David Bradley, owner of Atlantic Media; Jeff Veen, founding partner of Adaptive Path and former design manager for Google; and Lane Becker, co-founder of GetSatisfaction.com and a founding partner at Adaptive Path.

The Product

But “Why Start Now” isn’t answered just by saying, ‘we know how to do it if we want to, even if it means working lean and in a tight economy.’ “Why Now” requires a deeper examination of the importance of this product, especially in tough economic times.

The short answer is that websites that are social and dynamic are dramatically more useful than websites that are static, and that has a powerful social implication. In his post, Jeff Robbins tells the story of a village in Nigeria that allowed an oil company to use its land in exchange for clean water and schools. Because they had a website with some flexibility, they were able to post the contract with the oil company and bring attention to the oil company not living up to its obligations.

It’s incredible how many organizations and businesses in the United States, let alone the world, still have static websites where they can\’t even change their business hours without going back to the developer who built the site for them. The simplest CMS back-end remains unavailable to them, unless perhaps they keep a blog (which in all likelihood is hosted elsewhere.)

I switched FastCompany.com over to Drupal in February, making it a dynamic site for the first time. Within three months, repeat visits had increased 1000%. The site went from a straightforward publisher to a platform for conversation. But it took us almost a year to build and the work of half a dozen full time developers – not something ordinary people or businesses can do.

Yet, think of the practical implications if we could create a widely accessible web publishing tool with great social tools and format flexibility:

  • Small businesses in search of leads for scarce business online could do a significantly better job attracting and creating a conversation with clients. More efficiency means more business and more jobs. Really.
  • Small organizations could tap into the knowledge and needs of their members, and help them better engage with one another. Stronger organizations mean more powerful grass roots social movements. (Or at least better organized bowling leagues.)
  • Bloggers could expand their work into real websites, with highly flexible formatting of pages and forms, rich tools to interact with their readers, and a back-end CMS akin for group blogging to what a major publisher pays thousands of dollars for. Better blogging platforms mean better information to readers at a time when newspapers are disappearing.

Earlier this year I was a judge at a startup competition put together by Jeff Jarvis, one of the great voices of \”citizen journalism.\” We were charged with judging the business plans of a group of grad students who thought running their own websites might be a better alternative to getting a job. A couple of the plans were, in effect, community newspapers, and a big chunk of the money they were after would have gone to pay for development of their sites. A few others involved more sophisticated dynamic tools: bookmarking, ranking and rating, user profiles, and the like.

When our platform reaches its potential, the startup costs for making these business plans real will drop dramatically. Companies will launch that would otherwise have never had a shot. And more start ups equals a better economy — it’s large enterprises that shed jobs during a recession. Job growth comes from small business.

Drupal is a magnificent modular platform that lets you build most any website you can imagine. If only you have the special know-how. It\’s hard even for developers to master, though. And that\’s not good enough to reach the mass audience that needs a social platform to build their websites.

That\’s why we\’re building a layer between Drupal and the end-user — a layer that simplifies choices, but leaves Drupal core intact. And it\’s free.

Can we make money with a free product?

Yes.

Some websites will want help with advertising. That something I\’m good at, having grown ad revenue almost 600% during my time at Inc.com and FastCompany.com. Some will want premium services, like extra storage space, beyond what we\’ll provide for free. And some websites will want to tap into our expertise in how to maximize a social website with great copywriting, custom branding, SEO, SEM, and community building.

The business model for freemium remains viable even in a weak economy. Fred Wilson wrote a good post about this. The services surrounding a free product can be very valuable, and even in the worst economy, people will pay to get help succeeding in whatever is most important to them.

We\’re well aware that plenty of others have their own visions of expanding social media platforms to more people: Ning with better social networks, WordPress.com with better blogs; Acquia with better, supported distributions of Drupal itself.

What we will offer as an alternative is a more flexible format that\’s still straightforward for average users. And we\’ll be improving Drupal all along the way by giving back to the open source project. Jeff Eaton discusses a number of important breakthroughs we\’ve already contributed in his blog post.

We\’ll see over the coming months whether this approach interests outside investors — outside investment money would certainly speed things along. But we\’re going to keep going in any case.

So why start up now?

Because innovation is always important.

Because getting in at the bottom is how you make the most money in the long term.

Because aggressive companies pick up market share more easily during bad economic times.

Because efficient ad-supported media, like radio during the great depression, can and do catch hold even when times are rough.

Because, as investor Mike Moritz put it, the best time to invest is when people are cowering under their desks.

Because people need this product.

Comments

What’s the alternative?

On October 14th, 2008 Scott Phillips (not verified) said:
What’s the alternative? Simply throwing in the towel because the Dow had a wild ride this week? Bah. Go get ’em, I say. I can’t wait to see how this turns out. Very exciting stuff.

Fantastic news

On October 15th, 2008 Benjamin Melançon (not verified) said:
It’s always bothered me that the minimum cost for a genuinely good dynamic web site was too much for many people, groups, and even businesses that should have one. And Agaric makes money doing those sites!Best to you and Lullabot in this venture. benjamin, Agaric Design Collective

Something like Elgg?

On October 17th, 2008 Lucas Pereira (not verified) said:
Are you guys trying to achive something like Elgg?

Hi Lucas, Elgg appears to be

On October 17th, 2008 liza said:
Hi Lucas,Elgg appears to be very similar in offering to Ning – a way for users to create their own social networks. This is definitely a part of what we are going to offer!We’re going to offer a lot more, too. We’ll offer social networking capabilities, as well as social publishing, media sharing, wikis, blogs, and tons more.Thanks for your interest, and stay tuned!

It’s the “Perfect” Time to Launch!

On November 10th, 2008 John Smart (not verified) said:
My logic has always leaned toward following the crowd, however, after many hard lessons, 20 years of experience have taught me that I\’m usually wrong to take that path! Now is the \”perfect\” time to launch a serious enterprise..1) Talented human capital is readily available.
2) Every major business is trying to “leverage” their market to survive – The web is their natural means to do this.
3) “Downturns” are ALWAYS the source of innovation, to do it better, faster, employ smarter thinking… (the little “G” company that began in ’98 but “thrived” during 2000-2003)
4) Everyone will “watch” you just for kicks, so you can cut back on marketing expenses. Every press release that hits their inbox will be read! :>
5) Open Source is here to stay…business just wants a solid partner behind it to deliver a solution and hold their hand.I plan to drop all my focus on Microsoft solutions in favor of a value added “FREE” (license wise) solution to my business customers that includes my service delivery aspect. And I have always received better response from the Drupal Community than the “paid” MS support option.Best Regards,

Please heed my Vote of Confidence!

John Smart
http://www.smartechweb.com

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Filed under Drupal, Start Up