Posts Tagged ‘finally’
Other features round-up
by matt in namethis (39) - September 25th, 2008
Lacy covered the biggest change, about which I’m sure y’all will have plenty to talk about. Try to keep that discussion there. I’ll cover the best of the rest in this post.
Comments
There are now comments on each project, right on the Namethis site. In the past there’ve been lots of discussion on the blog regarding names, whose came first, which are good and bad, etc. We thought it made sense to move those discussions straight into the projects themselves. There’s now a toggle in the upper right side of the page to switch between the names view and the comments view. Keep it civil, keep it fun, keep with the Namethis spirit. Hopefully this will foster an even tighter community of namers or voters.
Another super-exciting addition to Namethis is the ability for clients to increase the reward to the community. Every project now shows the exact cash splits for winning names for all three place. Projects with increased rewards will display with a blue plus (plus means even better!). Because we needed to change the algorithm to scale to various amounts, the initial split is slightly different for $99 projects. We hope you’ll agree that the chance to make even more money outweighs any negatives from a different split at $99. And to the clients, our namers are the best around, I think they deserve greater rewards!
Full Archive (w/ stats)
In the past once a project fell off the home page, it disappeared forever. Now you can go back and look at all the projects that have ever been run, complete with winners, your stakes in your invested-in names, and neat graphs and information (like what times of the day do names get suggested). There’s also some summary leaderboards at the top of the page and I’m hoping we can add lots more information (ideas?) as time goes by.
Experience Points
Lacy got into this a bit in his post as well, so in a rare attempt at using less words instead of more, I’ll leave you to read more there. Suffice to say, experience points are the equivalent of rewarded watts that never go away. They’ll be used to track who’s our most successful community member behind Troy … *grin*
One extra note on experience points, I’d love to hear from the community on different ways we can integrate this into the site (for now they’re only available after each name in the list, blind submissions have been disabled). We have some thoughts, but we didn’t want to unleash unfettered wholesale upheaval without at least culling your creative craniums. This is a community where we come together to find the best ideas, after all. So you tell us, how should we use our shiny new XP?
For the most part (speaking for myself) when I write these blog entries, I address them to our community of namers and voters, and not to our clients. I know there’s probably a lot of overlap and I’m guessing a lot of you namers will someday need things named for yourself, as well. This next feature is just for the clients, though.
Clients, wouldn’t it be awesome if you had deeper information about why and who loved your name? Welcome to analytics. For each name receiving traction, you’ll be able to see the demographic breakdown of its supporters (age, gender, and household income) as well as a tag cloud of their capabilities/interests, and the velocity of voting in the name (Did the name come late with a lot of support? Was it early and support ebbed as more names were added?). If anyone wants to see a demo of the information, its available from the start a project page. Reasons for this feature? Well, it’s cool and the graphs are kick-ass, but for a concrete example of when it comes in handy, our own Stacy “Mean to Stef” Prince …
Keep-in-touch with Projects
We’ve also given the client the chance to send one message to all participants in the naming (voters and namers) so they can update those interested on their progress. One of the consistent messages we’ve heard from the community is a desire to find out what’s happened to some of the products and services that have been named. We’re hoping that clients will take advantage and keep-in-touch. Balancing a desire to fix that problem with a strong understanding of privacy, these messages are on-site, not directly to your email. If you’re so configured, you’ll hear that you have a new Kluster message, whereupon you can jump into the discussion, and even partipate in an entire thread as opposed to being the recipient of a one-way message.
I hope you guys enjoy these changes. I know they’ve been a long time coming and you’ve been anxiously awaiting them. In the future, we’re going to try to bite off smaller chunks. A lot of other factors kinda came together to make this a bigger release then we had originally intended. The other good news is that we’ve layed the groundwork for even more exciting features to come. I can’t wait to hear how you think we can take advantage of the new experience points for an even better experience. And while I don’t want to pre-empt any later announcement, there was one big feature that didn’t make this release we have 95% done in our back pockets, that I know you’ll love. As soon as we can find a partner befitting the excellence of our community, we’ll be able to launch that feature, as well.
Longest blog post ever …
With sparkling tulip love,




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