Tag Archives: personalized news

Will The “Next Web” Belong To Yahoo-

Yahoo Chief Product Officer, Blake Irving, spoke about “the subsequent web” (not the technology blog) on the Adobe Digital Marketing Summit last week. Yahoo has posted a “concise version” of his opening remarks from he event, within which he talks in regards to the way forward for the internet, so one can be driven largely by Yahoo, if Irving has anything to claim about it.

“I see a future where deeply personal digital experiences are easy to find, delightful to consume, and effortless to share,” he says. “If done right, it’s going to transform the way in which people use the net. After I say ‘deep personalization,’ I don’t just mean some preference controls; I mean content that’s so timely, relevant and private that it actually adds desiring to your life.”

While he doesn’t actually discuss it inside the post, Yahoo recently revealed a brand new personalization engine for delivering its content to users, called Content Optimization and Relevance Engine or C.O.R.E.

“Every hour C.O.R.E. processes 1.2 terrabytes of information for you to learn the way a user’s behaviors and interests influence the possibility of clicking on a selected article,” the Yahoo spokesperson told us last month. “And, everyday, C.O.R.E. personalizes 2.2 billion pieces of content for Yahoo! users.”

“Since optimizing with C.O.R.E., Yahoo!’s Homepage click-through rate has increased 300%,” she said on the time. “Yahoo!’s personalization approach is a clever mixture of scientific algorithms and human judgment, as editors have control to override C.O.R.E. at any time, to make sure certain stories are seen. Initially developed within Yahoo! Labs, C.O.R.E. has become an important tool used through the day by editors around the company to bring our users personalized news, first.”

We can’t ensure that if that is the most driver of what Yahoo is thinking about “the following web,” but my guess is that it’s a key element. Without a doubt , it’s not as though personalization of content can be a new thing, not to mention the subsequent thing. In truth, Irving have been singing an analogous tune for quite a while. Here’s a video from 2010 where he’s talking about making the net personal:

Still, personalization of content can still get well, and that looks to be a main focus for Yahoo.

“In future, I see an online that acts on my behalf, one who finds content and connections for me and presents it to me in context—aware of my location, my activity, my social situation, my economics and my most timely considerations,” says Irving. “I see an internet where trust and transparency are the cost of entry for publishers and technology providers, and where relationships are understood and cherished—on all sides of the relationship.”

“If the technology economic model is completed right, the right content will just come to me, and it’ll be as diverse and nuanced as I am—and as you’re,” he says. “It’s not about vague categories of interest—cars, sports, technology, advertising, whatever. It’s about just the content I’d exit to locate if I had the time and resources do it manually. It’s down there within the tail of the net. And, much more so, it’s down within the torso of the Web—where there are economics at play, albeit a model that’s mostly broken.”

He says that there’s “absolute confidence” that the net turns into deeply personal, and that it’s only a matter of who makes it happen. He seems to think Yahoo has a shot at being the only, or at the very least an important contributor. And that would surely be the case. As I write this (at about 12:15 EST), Yahoo has already had nearly 60 million homepage views for the day.

There are loads of other companies contributing to the personalization of content consumption. Yahoo could possibly be the gateway to lots of it, however the social efforts of businesses like Google, Facebook and others are already driving this to an incredible extent.

Yahoo is undergoing an immense transformation. Will it work- Who knows-

Yahoo is 17 years old. Where will it’s in another 17 years- What do you believe- Tell us within the comments.