TECH cocktail Boston: September 6th

August 5th, 2007

TECH cocktail was started by Frank and Eric, as a relaxed informal social event for the Chicago tech startup community. It has very quickly grown into the one of the hottest events in town. Their last event was attended by over 600 VCs, techies, journalists, bloggers, etc in Chicago.

TECH Cocktail just expanded to DC, and we simply had to bring it to Boston next!

The Boston team (Shawn, Pete, Brian, and myself) has been working very hard for the past few weeks on getting the many moving pieces of Tech Cocktail Boston together. We’re hoping to have everything locked down soon!

We do know:

Date: Thursday, September 6th
Time: 6:30pm – 9pm
Venue: Tequila Rain on Landsdowne Street

Open bar. Must be on guest list to attend. Guest list opening up soon.

Hope to see you there. Cheers!

Sponsors of the event:
Compete.com, ZoomInfo, North Bridge Venture Partners, Geezeo

TECH Cocktail


Filmed in the NYC MTA – The Sunshine Underground!

August 5th, 2007

Davey Dance-BLOG. A project started while traveling Europe during Spring 2007. Armed only with an ipod and a Canon PowerShot, Davey picks a location and a pop song. Then Davey records an improvised dance.


Free hugs for everyone

July 26th, 2007


Online Videos by Veoh.com


Compete Blog on CNN last night

July 20th, 2007

About one year ago, we started the Compete Blog, and today it is on CNN and ranked in the top 3k on technorati :)

The blog now has some great authors and analysts contributing very compelling content often. It’s super cool to see a project blossom into something from nothing. This sort of thing simply pumps me up to do more.


Death of the Pageview and Engagement

July 14th, 2007

Defining a universal “engagement metric” (sounds like what Nielsen/NetRatings trying to do?) is like finding the holy grail. So while we all are trying to crack the code on how to best measure engagement, Compete created an important sister metric a few months back called “Attention” (freely available on Compete.com).

The Attention metric considers total time we collectively spend online and determines what percentage of that total time was spent on a given site. For example: If MySpace has Attention of 12%, it translates to: Of all time spent online by all U.S. internet users, 12% was spent on MySpace. You can also interpret the 12% as “the average internet user in the U.S. spends 12% of their online time on MySpace”.

Since “Attention” is based on time, logically the more time we spend on a site, the more attention we give it. Think of Attention as finite – a pie-chart – so the sites that are increasing in Attention over time are performing well along this metric.

I believe true engagement on the other hand is more of a spectrum that requires attitudinal inputs, and that the idea of a “universal” engagement is nice, but in practice it should generally be specific to a firm or product. What constitutes engagement for one product may be very different to even its competitors, let alone firms in other industries.

Why care about “Attention”?

Marketers need universal measures in order to put their own performance into context – relative to rivals, peers, or anyone else they want to compare themselves to. While Compete doesn’t present Attention as the king of all metrics, and certainly not as a one-size-fits-all metrics, it is an important additional piece of the puzzle of online measurement and engagement, and a step in the right direction.