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Transcript: Michael Bayer - Utterz.com
Aaron
Strout:
I’d like to introduce today’s special
guest, founder and CEO of Utterz, Michael Bayer – Michael, welcome.
Michael Bayer:
Thanks, Aaron.
Aaron
Strout:
So Michael, you have created a product
called Utterz that has been very well received in the social media
circles. You and I actually met I think
five or six months ago, just as you were launching Utterz. It was an exciting tool. I tried it out a little bit. I played with it a little bit since then and
I think subsequently it’s seen a lot of pickup, which is one of the reasons why
we wanted to talk to you today. Do me a
favor and tell me a little bit about yourself, what you did prior to founding
Utterz, and then we’ll go through a series of questions and ask a little bit
about the product.
Michael Bayer:
Sure.
Thanks for giving me the time to chat today. My background is in technology – several
companies in technology, actually – in various elements of it starting out in
consumer telecoms many years ago. I had
an internet e-tailer that I helped start called mothernature.com, went to
another company called SoundBite, which was in the voice messaging space, and
that’s actually where I met my cofounders Randy Corke and Paul Gagne. Then went on to, of all things, an optical
networking company, and then a storage software company, and now here I am back
into a consumer business, a consumer telecom, and internet technology is coming
together with Utterz.
Aaron
Strout:
Great, interesting background,
particularly the mothernature.com. I
remember mothernature.com, actually. I
date myself a little bit. Tell us a
little bit about the product. I know
I’ve used it to do some podcasting, but I know that there are more dimensions
to it. What prompted you to develop it
and talk a little bit about what it is and how people are using it?
Michael Bayer:
Sure.
We’ve been thinking about ways to leverage these really cool devices
that people have in their hands for quite some time, applying what we know
about group communications, and telephony, and internet technologies, and
trying to come up with services that we could offer that would really allow
people to make full use of the phone they have in their hand. Utterz is the easiest way to instantly share
your thoughts and experiences with your friends and followers from wherever you
are, and what we’ve done is created a service that’s all about user
empowerment. We let you the user, decide
how, when, and where you wanna communicate.
We will take in voice, video, pictures,
text, however you want, in any combination, and then we let your friends and
followers choose how they wanna consume your content, and then let them reply
from wherever they are however they want.
So what we’ve done is woven together the mobile phone experience, the
mobile web experience, and then the online PC experience to enable online
conversations, and we do all of this using any mobile phone, or any PC without
any special clients or software that goes on it. It really gets back to the roots of all the founders;
again, in voice telephony, and group communications, and messaging as a way to
leverage today’s technologies, which are having mobile voice, mobile web, and
PC, and digital media all converging, and we’ve launched a service to enable
all those to come together.
Aaron
Strout:
So Utterz has been out for several
months now. What has surprised you most
about – is it how rapidly people are adopting it? Are they using it in different ways than you
originally expected? Give us a little
bit of insight into that.
Michael Bayer:
Sure.
I guess I’m always most impressed by the power of communities, I guess
that’s what we call a Web 2.0, to come up with unique and interesting things to
do with every service that’s coming out.
We had envisioned lots of use cases and certainly when we went out and
did our venture pitch, and put the whole company together, we thought we knew
what our users would do with our service.
It turns out they find new things to do with it every single day that
range from the things that we thought they would be doing, like on the spot
reporting and reporting from conferences, and political rallies, and things
like that, to having conversations about current events and things that are
going on in society, and then unique, everyday moments.
When we launched, I would not have
thought that a mother would be announcing her new baby right from the delivery
room. I would not have thought of the
story of a young lady who was stuck on an elevator for a couple of hours, and
she was going back and forth with her friends just so she could keep in touch
while she was stuck, and also amazed that she had cell phone service while she
was stuck in the elevator, but that’s an extra side. I guess it’s the breadth of experiences that
we’ve seen people share on Utterz that surprises us most.
Aaron
Strout:
Now Michael, every product has its
tipping point, to reiterate a term that Malcolm Gladwell coined. I believe you mentioned that you’ve got some
major traction at PodCamp Boston. Was
that your tipping point? If not, what
really pushed you guys over the edge to start to get some traction in the
social media space?
Michael Bayer:
I think there were two events that
happened in rapid succession. PodCamp
Boston was one, and certainly a quick shout out to Chris Bogan and all the
folks that organized that for helping create awareness for others at that time,
and then right around the same time we were at Blog World, which was the first
show of its kind, Blog World Expo, and at both of those, we were able to create
some awareness with a service which was pretty new, pretty exciting, and gave
bloggers a new set of capabilities that they haven’t had all in one place
before, and so those two events really were the start of building out the
Utterz community, and we’ve continued to grow since then.
Aaron
Strout:
Now you and I were able to attend Bryan
Person’s Social Media Breakfast this morning, and the main focus of it was how
Twitter has changed my life, and there was a little bit of a tongue in cheek
attitude towards having that, but a lot of the folks that do attend the Social
Media Breakfast in Boston are folks that are active on Twitter. I would think that there’s been some element
of success beyond the other items that you mentioned, both Seesmic, which is
I’ll say the video equivalent to what you do, as well as Utterz, have really
benefited from people using the multichannel of not just text, but voice and
video. You talk a little bit about your
experience with Twitter, and was that unexpected that you got picked up as
quickly as you did through that tool?
Michael Bayer:
Sure, I think the value of Twitter has
been around awareness within the social media community because we offer our
users a connection out to whatever social network or networks they’re already
part of, and help enhance that existing relationship that they have. We’ve been able to leverage many of our
users, leveraging their Twitter connections to create awareness for Utterz, so
whenever I Utter, I automatically have a tweak done by Utterz that I have just
Uttered, and my followers can see that, and they can come back and see it on
utterz.com, and likewise, it can go out onto many other networks, by blog on
WordPress, by blog on TypePad, by LiveJournal, and so on, so by being this
agnostic technology that allows people to publish on Utterz, but also in the
social networks they’re already part of, we help enhance the value of those
existing social networks. You ask what’s
the power of creating awareness in Twitter, well, a lot of the folks in the
social media committee watch Twitter very carefully, and when they see many of
our users whom they follow in turn starting to Utter, it’s created awareness,
and quite a draw onto Utterz to start using it as a publishing platform as
well.
Aaron
Strout:
So you brought up an interesting point
in your answer, and that is that you’ve gone the agnostic route, one that I
think a lot of smart companies are seeking out, because you get almost
instantaneous mass distribution, you’re building on the backs of well
established platforms like Facebook, blogging tools, things like Twitter. How does that work when you’re monetizing it,
so obviously as you build a business plan, I think you’ve said it’s worked a
little bit differently than you originally thought. How do you monetize that? How can you take advantage, and I ask this
for a very specific reason, because I think there are a lot of companies that
love the concept of widgetizing, but you do run the risk of being disintermediated
a little bit from your end users by piggybacking on some of these other
services.
Michael Bayer:
I guess we combine the benefits of
enhancing existing social network connections with creating an environment
where there is a community that creates Utterz as a destination on its own, so
I don’t wanna suggest that people don’t come to Utterz for Utterz sake. Quite the contrary, there’s a vibrant
community on Utterz. We’re not asking
people to give up their existing connections.
We want to enhance those, and over time I think it’s seen that there’s a
nice community on Utterz as well.
I think today we are entirely focused
on building our customer base, so we’re offering Utterz as a free service, but
you’re right, companies have to make money, and it’s important that we have
built Utterz knowingly transitioning to commoditization at some point in the
future. We will later on be capitalizing
on incoming texts, advertising both online and over the phone, because we have
a number of touch points with our users, also offering premium services, for
example, tiered storage and capacity, customizable and personalizable
interfaces, widgets, and so on, and then as we move towards additional group
communications and collaboration capabilities as we move forward, there are
enterprise applications that we can leverage where it’s not just a consumer
communication platform, but a more professional business oriented one. All of those are ways that we look at
monetizing in the future.
Aaron
Strout:
Great, so my last business question was
around that. What’s next? It sounds like you’ve talked about some of
the ways that you see Utterz growing in the future. Anything in addition to those particular
items you’ve got on your road map that you’ve like to share with folks
listening in?
Michael Bayer:
Well sure. I think you’re aware of our most recent
release, but just to make sure that we’ve touched all of those, Utterz has for
quite some time been able to take any media off of a mobile phone and upload
various types from a PC. What we’ve done
in our recent release is add onto that to enable Utterz to import from webcam,
provided support for PC mic, again, with our focus on anytime, anywhere, anyhow
you wanna do it, you make the choice of how you wanna communicate and we’ll
make that work for you. Along with this,
we’ve added this capability to have threaded conversations, enabling people to
engage in a dialogue over the web. You
mentioned a few point solutions for different media types a little earlier, and
lots of those are evolving.
There are times when I wanna use a 140
character message to communicate. There
are times I wanna use a video, times I wanna use a picture. Sometimes audio’s best, sometimes the
combination of these types. We’re not
gonna presume to choose how our users wanna communicate.
Let them choose the media type and
combination that’s right for them at that moment, and then let their friends
and followers choose how they wanna consume it, whether over the phone, whether
in front of the PC, or some combination of the two. We also extended our platform to provide
international support. We started out
with about 20 countries worldwide where there are now local dial ins for
others, and we’re starting to see some pick up by global users, which is just
great to see, and we’ll be expanding that footprint, and as we move forward,
we’ll be extending these capabilities more towards group and collaboration
capabilities, allowing groups of people to engage in dialogue, in multimedia
dialogue conversation more easily, leveraging Utterz.
Aaron
Strout:
So that sounds great and I like that
philosophy of the multichannel. I’m a
big believer in what I’ll call right channeling. I actually stole that term from a friend of
mine, Ron Shevlin, who worked at Forrester for a while, Forrester Research, and
then moved over to Epsilon, but I think it’s essential, and I think that’s the
beauty of all the channels that are erupting now, is that you just have so many
choices, and it allows you to express yourself the way you want to. I do have two final questions for you, and I
guess the first is one that I try to ask all the guests to impart.
At the Twitter speech this morning at
the Social Media Breakfast, one of the things that Jim Storer, one of my
colleagues, brought up was the fact that in a lot of ways, Twitter is just
another community and so a lot of the best practices around community
apply. I would argue that Utterz is the
same paradigm. If you have a couple of
tips that you can share that you have learned yourself, and that you see other
good Utterz community members using that you can impart to customers that are
trying to foster their communities, or trying to learn how they can work better
in communities themselves.
Michael Bayer:
Sure.
I think it’s all about exposing yourself as a person in your
communications. I think the folks that
have built up the most vibrant followings within the Utterz community have been
the ones who have shared the most along the way, who have combined sharing
professional analysis and insight with some of their casual moments. I think as all of our social graphs expand
very rapidly across the boundaries of space where we’re no longer able to shake
hands with all the folks that we meet in our day to day lives, getting that
personal touch, hearing someone’s voice, seeing their face just enables a level
of personality to come to the interaction.
It makes it much more vibrant and
friendly as we expand our networks to encompass these folks, so I would really
encourage everyone to add a bit of personality to what they communicate. What that means for me is I’ll share some
things that are going on in the business on Utterz and I’ll also share some
shots from a restaurant or a basketball game.
It’s just a way to communicate with people.
Aaron
Strout:
So great message. My final question, which I’m actually gonna
have as a two part question because of the fact that your unique role – I
usually like to ask guests for the last question, what is your favorite blog,
and the way I ask it is if you could only read one blog for the rest of your
life, whose blog would it be, and I’m gonna ask you that question. I’d also like to know who your favorite
Utterer is, because you obviously have the opportunity to see and listen to a
lot of these folks, so maybe there’s someone that imparts a lot of wisdom that
you would recommend that some of our listeners check out.
Michael Bayer:
You’ve set a trap for me. Look, it’s hard to pick a single page or a
single blog. There are just so
many. Of course my favorite bloggers are
the ones that use utterz.com, and many of our Utterz users have blogs that I
surf through regularly, Pizano and Tobiazon, its pod Jordan and Robert, and there’s so
many others. I’m not gonna miss someone
and offend anyone, so I’m not gonna try and list them all here.
There are a lot of folks who I just
enjoy listening to what’s going on.
We’ve got folks that’ll Utter from their commute in. We’ve got folks that will wait until late at
night just to share some thoughts on the news that day. There are just so many. I guess what’s really cool about the web
today though is that it doesn’t have to be just one blog.
I’m not gonna be stuck reading just one
blog for the rest of my life. Everything
is cross linked and cross referenced so I can always find interesting things to
read. I’ll watch or listen to the news
in the morning and something will catch my attention, and I’ll hop off on a
hyperlinking journey through 15 different blogs and news sources, and just get
a bunch of opinions on something that are interesting to me, and enabling me to
think about things in a way that I couldn’t just five or ten years ago, to get
the multitude of opinions on something so quickly. There just aren’t enough hours in the day to
keep up with all the information and opinion that’s out there, and I feel
fortunate to be in a business where I’m allowed to call surfing around and
reading people’s blogs’ work.
Aaron
Strout:
Well, a great non-answer for your
answer, and I think you actually were very telling in how you answered that, so
I appreciate it, and I would like to thank you for joining us today. I wanna be respectfully of your time and the
others listening in. It’s been a real
pleasure for those listening to this podcast.
Michael Bayer, the founder and CEO of Utterz, thanks for joining us,
Michael.
Michael Bayer:
Thanks so much, Aaron. I really appreciate it and I look forward to
seeing you all on Utterz. That’s
utterz.com. Please join us and anytime
you want, call in 712–432–6666, and you can hear what other people are saying.
Aaron
Strout:
Great. Thank you, Michael.
Michael Bayer:
Thank you.
Wed, Feb 13 2008
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