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5 ways B2B commerce must change to survive

Cameron Priest BY CAMERON PRIEST CEO of TradeGecko

To avoid the fate of retail chains that disappeared after overwhelming competition from online retailers, wholesalers and other suppliers must develop new customer-serving e-commerce skills.

Since the age of the Silk Road, middlemen have been necessary for international trade. They’ve been the only conduit for sellers to connect to local buyers, and the only source for accurate information on the products they sell.But all that is changing in the Internet age.Ten years ago, e-commerce platforms like eBayAmazon, and Alibaba started to compete with physical retail stores, undercutting or completely destroying consumer-sector giants like Borders and Best Buy. Now they’re doing the same to the wholesalers and importers that supplied those retailers with goods. Today, 97% of U.S.-based eBay sellers export to other countries, compared with 4% of brick-and-mortar businesses. And their market share is rising.This tsunami of Internet competition may be too much for most middlemen to withstand. But there is hope. Here are five ways that businesses selling goods to other businesses can stay relevant for the next 10 years:1. Treat business customers like retail consumersOver the last decade, the so-called “consumerization” of enterprise commerce has already blurred its former distinction from business-to-consumer retail commerce. Customers across all markets and industries have heightened demands for their shopping experience, driving great investment by sellers in customer service. Moreover, while most of their transactions occur through impersonal purchasing and procurement processes, enterprise companies increasingly see themselves as selling to people. As one chief marketing officer said in a post for The Economist Group: “We don’t approach our target audience as a group of decision-makers who buy our services, but as people who are time pressed and have a difficult job to do.”This adjustment is a great start, but it’s not enough. For the middleman to survive, the distinction between selling to businesses and selling to consumers will have to collapse entirely.2. Sell directly to customersLarge and trusted brands increasingly use their own distribution channels to reach business customers. This revolution in how retailers and manufacturers do business is going to have casualties, most notably, intermediaries who provide little value besides a smiling face for potential customers. By bypassing traditional car dealerships, Tesla is already proving that one of the most recognizable intermediaries no longer provide as much value as they once did. In the past local dealers were necessary to hold inventory, taking on the associated risk and building trust with customers who had few resources for updated product information. But now, technology allows consumers to do their own research, and the demand for totally customizable automobiles makes hoarding inventory a moot point. Most likely, Tesla won’t be the last car company to leave local auto sellers in the dust, and other industries will soon follow suit.3. Play to the customer’s sense of selfB2B marketers tend to stick to the facts. But in reality, business customers are just as likely as consumers to make purchase decisions based on subjective feeling. For example, a study by business research firm CEB  published in Harvard Business Review found that perceptions of a product’s value to the company often weren’t enough to seal a B2B deal. Offerings that touched on personal identity—“positively reinforcing a customer’s self-image”—were much more likely to turn stakeholders into mobilizers “personally motivated to champion the deal.” And without those mobilizers, researchers found that sales often fell through.That doesn’t mean that B2B marketing should abandon facts. But it does mean it needs to intertwine them with consumer-style branding. For instance, many of the videos telling the stories of Grainger customers in the Everyday Heroes campaign have hundreds of thousands of views on YouTube. One video about a racecar driver’s pit crew has almost a million views. Grainger’s ads connect to their target audience’s tastes, interests and emotions while maintaining the brand’s focus on industrial equipment—truly the best of both worlds. Companies don’t buy things, people do—and people care about a company’s image.4. Make the leap to e-commerceWhile big, more-established companies may be able to sell directly to customers, smaller and younger ones still need help reaching the market. Huge opportunities exist in the realm of business-to-business e-commerce for those who realize how to seize them. Frost & Sullivan predicts that by 2020 the global market for this type of e-commerce will rise from $3.2 trillion to $6.7 trillion—twice that of the consumer market. Moreover, the research firm also predicts a compound annual growth rate of 7.7% in B2B e-commerce over the next five years.Companies that adopt an e-commerce model have broken out of the swirling tide that has begun sinking older models like the auto dealers. Studies have shown they can decrease the cost of sales by up to 90% by shepherding customers through an online shopping environment. Moreover, the same research shows the average conversion rate on B2B e-commerce sites is 7.3%, compared with 3.0% for consumer retail sites. Industrial supplies company Grainger, a pioneer in online B2B platforms, offered more support for that idea when it announced that 94% of its 2014 revenue growth came from online sales.5. Make your catalogs mobileE-commerce platforms aren’t just for reaching customers from afar—they’re useful at trade shows and for client meetings as well. A well-designed mobile catalog empowers salespeople to take orders from customers directly on their mobile devices, replacing cumbersome paper orders and line sheets. Best of all, when inventory changes, companies don’t have to order an expensive reprint—the mobile catalog can be updated in real time.For wholesalers, importers, and other middlemen that have not transformed to fit the current digital landscape, the future looks bleak. But for companies willing to change how they approach their customers, there’s still hope. Better e-commerce platforms, a smoother shopping experience, and more creative marketing and sales techniques can only make customers happier—and profit margins fatter. In the end, the new consumerization of B2B could be a huge opportunity, for former middlemen and their enterprise customers alike.Matt Holzapfel and Carl Paulus of Hippo Reads contributed to this blog.Cameron Priest is CEO of TradeGecko, a provider of cloud-based technology for managing customer orders, customer accounts and inventory through desktop and mobile devices. Follow him on Twitter @cameronpriest. 

Here's How Buzzy the Super Bowl's First Half Ads Were in 7 U.S. Cities

 Doritos did great everywhere but San Diego By Christopher HeineScreen Shot 2016-02-10 at 10.40.02 AM

Chicagoans seemed to love Mountain Dew's #puppymonkeybaby Super Bowl ad, while Californians apparently thought Skittles' Big Game spot was cool, according to Geofeedia. The tech vendor also said Doritos' commercial was a hit just about everywhere, except for San Diego.

Geofeedia shared exclusive, location-based social data with Adweek to show that some commercials generate more buzz in different U.S. markets. It pulled stats for the seven cities below and ranked how brands were performing in each market.

The outcomes represent 140,000 geo-tagged posts across Instagram, Twitter, Sina Weibo, Periscope, Vine, YouTube and VK.

Check out the results below:

New York

1. Doritos2. Mountain Dew3. Audi4. PayPal5. Pokemon

Los Angeles

1. Mini (BMW)2. Audi3. Doritos4. Skittles5. PayPal

Chicago

1. Mountain Dew2. Mini (BMW)3. Doritos4. Skittles5. Toyota

Houston

1. Doritos2. Taco Bell3. Bud Light4. Skittles5. Hyundai

Philadelphia

1. Acura2. Honda3. Audi4. LG5. Doritos

San Diego

1. Toyota2. Skittles3. Acura4. Honda5. Audi

San Jose, California

1. Doritos2. Mini3. Skittles4. Marmot5. Pokemon

Geofeedia Raises $17M To Help Businesses Tap Into Social Location Data

By Anthony HaGeofeedia, a startup that pulls real-time, location-based data from social media, has raised $17 million in Series B funding.Co-founder and CEO Phil Harris said the company “invented a new way of organizing social data” — most other analytics tools allow businesses to look at the data based on things like keywords and hashtags, while Geofeedia is focused on location.The product helps customers see when users have explicitly shared their location on Instagram, Twitter, Sina Weibo, Periscope, Vine and YouTube. Harris said the real advantage to Geofeedia’s technology lies in its ability to quickly ingest all these posts and then present them in a map-based interface.He added that the data is currently being used for marketing, for journalism and for operations — a national hotel chain, for example, might want to know what people are saying around each of its locations.Chicago-based Geofeedia was actually founded back in 2011, but Harris suggested that businesses now have a better idea of what to do with this data: “A couple of years ago people said, ‘Wow, I can’t believe you can do this,’ but that didn’t necessarily result in a sale.” In contrast, the company added 200 new customers in 2015 and saw revenue grow 250 percent year-over-year. Customers include Dell, CNN, Mall of America and the NCAA.Vice President of Product Management R.J. Talyor added that with the new funding, Geofeedia is prepared to broaden its location data — not just pulling from social media but also beacons and other sources.“I think there is an opportunity to expand into a whole new set of competitors in location-based marketing and advertising,” Talyor said.The Series B was led by Silversmith Capital Partners, which contributed $15 million to the round, with Silversmith’s Todd MacLean joining Geofeedia’s board of directors. The company previously raised just under $7 million from investors including Hyde Park Venture Partners (existing investors participated in the new funding).Harris said he plans to more than double Geofeedia’s 60-person headcount this year, and to open offices across the United States.

Geofeedia nets $17 million in latest funding round

By Jared CouncilGeofeedia Inc., the Chicago-based location-analytics firm that aggressively boosted its Indianapolis presence last year, announced that it raised $17 million in growth capital.The fast-growing company, which opened a local office in late 2014 and now employs about half its workforce here, said it plans to use the fresh cash infusion on people–including salespeople and marketers to accelerate customer acquisition and programmers to enhance its platform.The software-as-a-service firm said it expects to at least double its Indiana employment of 25 by the end of 2016."Indianapolis is our product and technology hub," CEO Phil Harris said Tuesday, "and we want to build on that."Founded in 2011, Geofeedia built a name for itself as a social-media intelligence platform that allowed clients such as CNN, the Mall of America and the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department to monitor and act on location-based social media activity.The NCAA, another client, used Geofeedia's software last year to guide operational decision-making for its Final Four men's college basketball tournament in Indianapolis.Social data still represent its core offering, but the company has expanded into allowing companies to analyze and layer their own location-based data on a private map. A manufacturer, for instance, can assess in real time what physical assets it or a supplier has in the vicinity of a natural disaster."Our customers have been dragging us into this capability, asking us 'What if?'" Harris said. "It's really exciting. This is the beginning ... and it is the future, for sure."This Series B round, or second institutional investor round, was led by Boston-based Silversmith Capital Partners, which invested $15 million of the sum. Geofeedia secured $3.5 million in a Series A round in October 2014 led by Chicago-based Hyde Park Venture Partners, which also has an Indianapolis office.Geofeedia doesn't disclose the annual value of its booked contracts, but claims it grew them 850 percent in 2014 and 250 percent in 2015. It added 200 customers last year and now has more than 500, company officials said.The company opened its Indianapolis office with about five employees in December 2014. Last April, it announced plans to add 336 workers by 2020 in a conditional tax-credit deal with the Indiana Economic Development Corp worth up to $4.4 million.

Geofeedia Raises $17M to Expand Sales, Improve Location Technology

By Felicia GreiffReal-time location technology monitor Geofeedia brought in $17 million in series B funding, for a sum of nearly $24 million in total. The funding will be used to further develop the company's technology and sales efforts. Sales offices are planned in New York and San Francisco in 2016, and the company is preparing for international expansion later this year.Within a geo-fenced area, Geofeedia's technology analyzes data from social media sources in real time so that brands can target audiences. Clients include Dell, CNN, Mall of America and the NCAA.The round was led by Silversmith Capital Partners’ $15 million investment with participation from existing investors.Additionally, the company said Todd MacLean, managing partner and co-founder of Silversmith, will join Geofeedia’s board of directors.Geofeedia was founded in 2011 and has offices in Chicago, Indianapolis and Naples, Fla. 

Geofeedia raises $17 million to mine social media data by location

By Meg GrahamGeofeedia, a Chicago company that helps agencies and organizations collect location-based social media intelligence, has raised $17 million in funding.The round, the company’s largest so far, was led by Boston-based growth equity firm Silversmith Capital Partners and included previous investors. Geofeedia CEO Phil Harris said the funding will help the company continue to build on its technology, which lets customers monitor social media posts and other data tied to a specific location. The company also plans to grow its team.The company’s more than 500 customers include businesses or organizations in the public sector, media, corporate operations and marketing. Pricing for yearly subscriptions to the platform varies on the amount of data and users, the company said.Harris said the company plans to expand the platform’s reach in powering marketing campaigns. He gave the example of using the platform to find people at a Cubs game. The company could use social media data to identify social handles for those individuals, then target those fans in a paid Twitter ad campaign for a retailer.

“That has yielded really powerful results for them,” Harris said. “With the new capital, we’ll be able to expand those new areas and develop new businesses within Geofeedia.”The company will also continue to integrate new social streams as well as companies’ own data into the platform, Harris said.Geofeedia, founded in 2011, also plans to add 50 staffers to its team of 60 before the end of the year. The company has other offices in Indianapolis and in Naples, Fla.Silversmith managing partner and co-founder Todd MacLean will join Geofeedia’s board of directors.

Experienced e-commerce entrepreneurs launch Bedface to sell bedding online

Retail analysts question whether the entrepreneurs have thought through looming challengesBy  Screen Shot 2016-01-11 at 8.15.21 PMTwo experienced e-commerce entrepreneurs have just launched Vancouver’s newest online store – one that they hope will disrupt the traditional bedding retail sector.Industry analysts, however, are skeptical.Brad Westerop and Fraser Hall know that their new company, Bedface, faces competition from the likes of established e-commerce players Brooklinen and Parachute Home. They also have to compete against bricks-and-mortar behemoths, such as Bed, Bath & Beyond (Nasdaq:BBBY), which also have online stores.They believe, however, that they can compete, in part, because of some innovative aspects to their business strategy.For example, they guarantee customers the ability to return their sheets, duvet covers, pillow cases and other items for up to 100 nights even if the products have been used and washed.“Every month we’ll wash those returned sheets and then donate them to local homeless shelters,” Westerop told Business in Vancouver January 7. “That’s the plan. We’re trying to make sure the safety and cleanliness is there.”He and Hall are both serial entrepreneurs who have each put about $100,000 into Bedface. They have so far spent about half of that on things such as their website, warehouse and on product development.Westerop, who is 30 years old, generated much of that investment from his adult sweatshirt company Thuggies.Hall, 36, operates the furniture e-commerce venture Bryght.com and was a co-founder of the heads-up display company Recon Instruments, which was sold last summer for an undisclosed sum to Intel Corp. (Nasdaq:INTC) .The duo are using a warehouse in East Vancouver’s Railtown neighbourhood to store product that they contracted a Chinese manufacturer to make.“We had a fabric in mind,” Westerop said. “We told them the technical details and then they wove it, dyed it and sewed it.”All orders that are more than $50 include free shipping as well as free shipping on returns.Challenges remain, however.Other entrepreneurs who have entered the online bedding space have pitched their ventures on TV shows in attempts to get capital.Brooklinen co-founder Rich Fulop, for example, faced venture capitalists on FoxBusiness’ Risk & Reward in late 2014.One of the concerns that Catalyst Investors managing partner Brian Rich had for Fulop was that Brooklinen was in a sector that had a low-cost barrier for entry. That means that competitors, such as Bedface, were predictable.Rich was also concerned that Brooklinen customers would not need to buy bedding very frequently. As a result, the company’s cost to acquire each new customer would be comparatively high.Fulop responded that his expected cost to acquire each new customer would be about $30 – a price that Westerop believes is quite low.“We have a budget of up to $50 for each new online customer,” Westerop told BIV.To encourage repeat business, there are incentives to refer friends.For each referral, Bedface gives a $15 credit both to the friend and to the person doing the referring.Retail analyst and DIG360 Consulting principal David Gray told BIV that he is not that familiar with Bedface but he thinks that succeeding will be a challenge because customers have plenty of options to buy sheets.“They’re in an incredibly tough situation,” he said. “You could go to Ed’s Linens and get stuff cheaper than [Bedface]. I don’t know what problem they’re solving.”One niche that Gray thinks would be smart to target is the burgeoning industry of Airbnb operators. For that sector, he said, any upstart linen-seller would have to provide volume discounts.“We will have volume discounts,” Westerop said.“We’re looking into starting with boutique hotels in Vancouver and the Pacific Northwest. Obviously, we won’t supply the Sheraton but for boutique hotels, we’ll be a great fit.”

Hybrid Hosting: The Third-Generation Cloud

Screen Shot 2016-01-05 at 9.02.39 PMIt is important to keep perspective when picking technologies to base the future of your company’s IT on. Technologies go through generations of improvements along multiple dimensions before they reach true ubiquity.Take the disk drive as an example. First built in 1953 by IBM, each new generation of disk drives replaced larger, more sensitive, and more cumbersome devices. The cost also dropped precipitously with every generation. Not many people remember, but the earliest drives were usable only in the protected environment of a data center. Disk diameter was 14 inches and disks were typically mounted in standalone boxes that resembled washing machines. Individual drives often required high-current AC power due to the large motors required to spin the large disks.This is a far cry from the sleek, quiet, and high performance solid-state drives (SSD) we use today, which can be considered the third generation of hard drives. Third generation technologies are faster, cheaper, and better.That’s why IT leaders should select third generation technologies for key IT infrastructure.Similar to hard drives, the cloud is a multi-generational phenomenon. Its story is distinguished by three distinct generations of cloud. With the introduction of each generation, platforms, applications, and companies have been transformed by these emerging technologies and their radical advantages.It’s important for companies using the cloud to make the correct “bet.” By one estimate, we are on track for a volume of nearly 7 zettabytes of data across the world by the year 2020. The rise of analytics and other modern applications are directly linked to cloud-based opportunities. Companies must make the right technological bets to take advantage of this amazing growth.

The Evolution of Virtualization and How We Approach Computing

The concept of virtualization in computing dates back 50 years. As computing transformed and evolved, server computing has become more affordable than ever. This means virtualization didn’t get a chance to take off; it was economically feasible to have individual servers take on individual workloads.The tide turned as data began to grow, and each generation of technologies brought an insatiable thirst for power, space, and cooling. Costs began to swell, and it turned out that the one server-one workload architecture that was the de facto standard was extremely inefficient. Total resource utilization in countless data centers across the world ranked in the single digits.As a response, virtualization re-emerged through innovations introduced by VMware in 1999. A number of other open-source projects like Xen spawned, and software companies starting their own efforts, like Microsoft Hyper-V, Citrix, and Virtual Iron. Today, virtualization has enabled the development of Virtual Desktop Infrastructure (VDI) and container technologies, which indicates we should expect the sustained evolution of improvements in the realm of virtualizing systems, applications, and workloads.

VPS Hosting: The First-Generation Cloud

Virtualization opened the door for VPS, which was implemented by hosting providers around the world. VPS enabled hosting providers to offer customers a step up from the notoriously poor experience of shared hosting and segregate environments (based on selected partitions) into separate server systems.The technology helped create a new type of offering that provides the cost advantages of shared hosting with the virtual control of dedicated hosting. DigitalOcean, Linode, and SliceHost have blazed a path on this front and continue to provide VPS today. The VPS space has become a place for open competition for bargain pricing, complete with concerns about reliability, quality, and support due to that “race for the cheapest.”Nonetheless, VPS remains one of the most important innovations in the history of web hosting as it is essentially the first generation of cloud technology. Due to its nature, though, VPS never scaled to corporate IT and never gained ubiquitous acceptance.

The Second-Generation Cloud: A Virtualized Hypervisor

There is no more significant milestone than the innovation of web-enabled applications and the infrastructure that supports them. Salesforce introduced the concept of web-enabled applications in 1999 by introducing the delivery of enterprise applications through a website. It would not take long for more applications to gravitate toward a more dynamic model.Virtualization was the key component enabling the enterprise to launch apps on the web. As it has evolved, it has responded to a number of resource and management requirements at the infrastructure level with advancements that still benefit companies today.Amazon was an early pioneer in the cloud industry, along with Rackspace, Hewlett-Packard, and a few others. Amazon’s cloud (Amazon Web Services) dominates the scene today (which is not a good thing). When Amazon entered the field, it was building its own web infrastructure to address a particular set of rapid needs and lessen the gap between its application engineers and infrastructure engineers. This led to the development of a proprietary set of reliable infrastructure tools that Amazon’s application engineers could use to deploy, monitor, and control systems.Amazon saw an opportunity to create a product out of web-scale infrastructure so that web-scale applications could be easily utilized by customers. AWS is distinguished as a second generation cloud product by a number of factors we take for granted today. The virtualized system, the console, the ordering process, and the cloud Application Programming Interface (API) make up some of the cloud advancements within this generation.This cloud generation enabled significant advancement in application structure and application delivery. Hovering overhead, however, is a set of shortcomings that have dogged the public cloud industry for years. For example, companies that face compliance, security, and performance needs have long struggled with the control and application structuring that this cloud generation lacks. Within a public cloud, there is no native way of structuring capacity, flexibility, and control that modern applications require. Various workarounds and accentuated offerings have been clumsy, costly, and inefficient.

The Third-Generation Cloud: Hybrid Hosting

In time, enterprise demands led to the emergence of the hybrid cloud: a platform that can provide a multi-tiered architecture of capability. This architecture has to include a dedicated layer for control, security, and performance. It must include a cloud layer that offers cost benefits and scalability. Flexible and ever-growing storage has to be there, too, because data is always growing. Finally, a network must be dedicated and exclusive to unify this architecture.The case for hybrid is simple. With a unifying interface that is fully programmable, modern applications and computing needs are met by delivering the features of cloud computing and dedicated servers. Hybrid cloud users get the horsepower and control they need, where they need it, while also being able to utilize the flexibility and scaling power that the cloud provides. Hybrid delivers whatever computing resource is required, wherever it is needed, and allows your computing to match your application structure and workloads. It means more efficiency, which leads to better capacity management and financial savings.However, not all hybrid models are the same, and successful models require tremendous feats of architecture and automation. A scalable and customizable infrastructure is necessary to give companies of all sizes (from startup through enterprise) the computing platform right-fitted for their needs and the ultimate platform for any company and any application.In many cases (like AWS), second generation cloud platforms are pseudo-hybrid in nature at best. A true hybrid platform delivers every element of the infrastructure to customers on demand. The management interface must be flexible, tunable, and programmable in order to be the ultimate solution for today’s cloud needs.This generation of cloud is here to stay because it provides endless configuration, customization, and advantages for all customers and applications. This is why hybrid is the most discussed architecture in the business and on its way to becoming the infrastructure of choice for all companies.

Have a Strategy

What does the future hold? Based on indicators of the needs that lie ahead and the abilities to meet them, the next generation of cloud computing will have to deliver even better value, faster. Automation, manageability, and reporting will be key factors in this next generation cloud.The next-generation cloud is an intelligent platform with the ability to integrate with existing technology processes and management tools. It will support various business tenants and, in essence, be a flexible service platform. This platform will be unified and behave as a single, simple-to-configure entity. It will be defined by software to accommodate the needs of software and applications, and it will address needs for identity, security, and the Internet of Things. Finally, it will be free of the anchor of a single infrastructure.The challenge can be simply stated. Many organizations do not have the capacity and resources to deploy and maintain systems that are complex in nature. At the same time, however, the need for increasingly complex infrastructures and applications is increasing, as many organizations face regulations, budgetary concerns, customer service, and the overall customer experience.The answer to these questions will be based on simplicity and value. It’s a delicate dichotomy balanced by the tremendous value that only hybrid delivers. The hybrid cloud, the third-generation cloud, is the only smart bet for today’s IT infrastructure.About the AuthoremilEmil Sayegh, CEO of Codero Hosting is a pioneer of cloud computing. He is credited with launching the cloud computing and hosting businesses for HP and Rackspace. He is also known as one of the “fathers of OpenStack,” having created the open source software. Emil joined Codero in 2012 and recently introduced a hybrid cloud solution.

Finding the Right Home for Cloud Apps

By Emil Sayegh, Chairman & CEO, Codero HostingScreen Shot 2016-01-05 at 8.57.05 PM

Finding the right place for your apps to live is like shopping for real estate, with choices between owning, renting and hybrid models.

Owning your own home is like owning your own data center. Alternately, a hotel lets you use as many rooms as you need without much of a commitment, which is like parking your applications in the public cloud. And hybrid clouds are somewhere in the middle.Owning a data center and owning a homeRunning your own data center is similar to owning your home. It takes a strong -- and expensive -- commitment, and it assumes that you will be staying at a location for a long time. You have total control and ultimate responsibility. The homeowner bears the burden for power, cooling, paint on the wall, smoke detectors and the lawn. You have the keys; you're in charge of who can come and go. For privacy, you don't share driveways or walls with your neighbors.Likewise, owning and managing a data center introduces substantial liabilities and costs in security, power and cooling. Modern facilities require huge amounts of power to run effectively, and all of that power must be backed up with generators for emergency purposes. The data center needs a cooling system powerful enough to keep a giant room packed with hot machines at around 70º Fahrenheit. It also needs a top-notch physical security system with multiple cameras, biometric readers, and checkpoints. Data center management quickly becomes a very expensive business decision.As a home owner, you must pay for insurance, taxes and mortgage and you have to update and maintain your house as it ages. All responsibilities fall to the homeowner, and it takes a lot of work to keep things operating smoothly.Likewise, when you own a data center, upkeep, maintenance, taxes, insurance and the added liability of meeting compliance requirements to house customer data, common expenses add up to a significant portion of the bottom line. The trade-off for these liabilities is that you get ultimate control and privacy. You don't have to share network traffic, servers or storage resources with anyone, and you can make any changes you need, within reason.Natural apps to live in your own data center, in your own home, are those subject to regulatory compliance (e.g., PCI, HIPPA, FISMA), legacy and back office apps, such as custom software, complex and custom websites, OSS workflow and legacy ERP applications. These apps require a lot of customization and have very specific security needs.Dedicated server hosting and renting a homeWhen renting a home, you have much less liability. You still live with the security and privacy benefits of owning your own home, but the impact of maintenance and costs are someone else's responsibility, freeing up some of your capital to invest elsewhere. Renting a home is similar to hosting your website or app with a hosting provider specialist. You're not locked into a long-term commitment. Less responsibility means more flexibility, but it also adds concerns. For hosting, the consideration is whether your hosting provider has a solid and secure network and is offering exceptional service and 24/7/365 support.

Why Silicon Valley Should Bring Unsexy Back

By Rana Gujral (@RanaGujral)Screen Shot 2016-01-05 at 8.51.41 PM

Neckties embedded with QR codesPants that make drum noises. “Uber for medical marijuana.” These are just a few of the goofy startup ideas that have cropped up in Silicon Valley in recent years.I can’t be the only one who’s disappointed with this. The Valley is the birthplace of game-changing innovations, like the microprocessor and the PC. It’s home to enough brainpower to take on the biggest problems of today, like world hunger and climate change. So why, in 2015, was it so myopically focused on silly wearables and more efficient pot delivery?
To me, the answer seems like an obvious one. Like middle-schoolers at a high-school dance, startup founders are trying too hard to be cool. And it’s not only hurting the world — it’s hurting the longevity of the entire tech industry.

So cool, it hurts

I know tech industry insiders want to be cool because I used to be like them. I started my career at big companies with famous names, like Logitech and Kronos. But I quickly grew disillusioned with the waste I saw in the corporate environment. I wanted to solve real problems, not just fatten a bottom line.But that was before I joined with my partner, Stephen Kawaja, to found a startup that makes software for the least Silicon Valley of industries. In the eyes of Generation Y, actually making things — as opposed to apps — seems hopelessly unsexy.A recent IndustryWeek salary survey found only 2 percent of 21-29-year-old respondents worked in manufacturing. Students interviewed called the sector slow and out of date. Most people associate factories with repetitive work and mindless conformity — like that disrupted by a sledgehammer-wielding Anya Major in the iconic 1984 Apple ad.But just 150 years ago, factories were the Silicon Valley startup incubators of their time. Henry Ford’s Model T was every bit as disruptive as Uber (or Facebook or Google). How does a once-cool industry become so uncool — and yet still survive?For one, by realizing that cool doesn’t matter that much in business.Just take our customers, for example. Specialty chemicals have become an $800 billion industry, despite making what are frankly some of the most prosaic and least sexy products on earth. They’re behind the coating on a washing machine that makes it look shiny and new, the polymer added to concrete that makes it more flexible and less likely to crack, the glue that sticks the wood veneer to your desk securely enough to make it look authentic.“Innovation” in this context is often incremental. It’s not about “disrupting” a whole industry — it’s about redesigning to improve performance by a mere 0.0001 percent.But here’s the secret: That 0.0001 percent is ultimately more useful to the world than 10,000 pairs of DrumPants. To quote the tagline of German specialty chemicals company BASF: “We don’t make a lot of the products you buy. We make a lot of the products you buy better.” And customers are willing to pay a premium for those better products.How many people are really willing to pay a premium for timpani in their khakis? My guess is, beyond the Silicon Valley bubble, not many.

More than a 1 percent problem

Already in today’s crowded startup ecosystem, a new company that can’t make inroads outside the Silicon Valley bubble is bound to fail. In a survey by venture capital database CB Insights, 42 percent of tech startup founders cited “a lack of market need for their product” as the main reason for their company’s failure. Just look at Secret. The VC-backed anonymous messaging service was a Silicon Valley darling — but folded last April, having failed to take off outside of the tech-industry fairyland.That’s a trend that’s likely to accelerate in upcoming years. Most of today’s fast-growing tech companies are created by and for a small, affluent, urban population — the 1 percent. But these users’ share of the market is contracting. By 2020, four out of five smartphone connections will be in developing nations, where efficient pizza delivery is often less of a concern than access to clean drinking water. And woe to the tech company that doesn’t prepare itself for this change.I’m not suggesting that startup founders drop everything and start to work on an app that somehow makes washers shinier. Nor am I suggesting that developers resign themselves to merely making incremental improvements to their existing products forever. What I am suggesting is that developers, startup founders and venture capitalists stop running headlong from every business opportunity that doesn’t have a catchy, easy “Uber for X” nickname attached.

Getting back to basics

Think about the roots of the computer revolution. They’re not in the flashy offices of venture capital firms. They’re in unsexy industrial labs like Bell Labs, where scientists invented the transistor in 1947. Or Xerox PARC, home to the world’s first Ethernet connection and its first Graphical User Interface (GUI). These were places where great minds worked hard to solve big problems, without pressure to rush new products to market or create early exits for VCs. And as they’ve declined, America has been left with a huge gap in our innovation infrastructure.To move toward the future, the Internet really needs to get back to its roots — its unsexy, specialty-chemicals–like roots. It needs to turn its attention to real, practical problems that matter outside the urban, affluent 1 percent. And it needs to learn how to think big again.The good news is that some tech companies are already showing the courage to do so. They’re stepping up to solve the real-world problems the Valley ignores. Bright, a solar panel installation and distribution startup, recently raised $4 million in seed money to expand its operations in Mexico, where power from conventional sources is often prohibitively expensive.Veeva, a cloud-based solution for the life sciences industry, fills a much-needed technology space by tailoring data services specifically to big pharma and biotech. Aditazzdesigns and builds complex buildings like hospitals for 20 percent the usual cost by applying the same software and techniques used to automate microchip design. It’s these types of companies that will continue to see profits long after goofy wearables startups have faded away.The question is only whether the rest of the Valley will ever catch up.With contributions by Jean Thilmany of Hippo Reads.

Datavail attracts $47 million in funding to expand database service

Broomfield firm that offers outsourced database administration has quintupled staff in past five yearsBy Tamara ChuangBroomfield's Datavail Corp., which offers outsourced database administration, added $47 million from investors Wednesday, bringing its total funding to date to $62 million.CEO Mark Perlstein said the funds will be used "for growth, both organic and inorganic."The company was founded eight years ago by Mike Jones, the former chief information officer at Level 3 Communications, and has grown rapidly as more companies have outsourced tedious database duties.Datavail has grown from 90 employees five years ago to 540 today. About 75 work in Broomfield, which is half of its U.S. staff. A larger chunk — about 400 — work remotely in India."The company leverages a highly tuned onshore-offshore delivery model with headquarters out of Broomfield and offshore delivery operations out of Mumbai and Bangalore," Perlstein said.This fifth round of funding was led by Catalyst Investors, a New York equity firm. Others include Tahosa Capital, Lumerity Capital Partners, Boulder Ventures, Meritage Funds and MC Investment Fund.Tyler Newton and Susan Bihler, both with Catalyst, joined Datavail's board.  

Database admin company Datavail raises $47 million round led by Catalyst

By 

Screen Shot 2015-12-16 at 7.51.25 PM

Datavail, a company that offers database administration for enterprises, took in a $47 million investment led by Catalyst Investors, the VC firm announced today. Tahosa Capital,  Lumerity Capital Partners, and Boulder Ventures also contributed to the funding round that gives Datavail a total of $60 million in venture funds.

Catalyst’s Tyler Newton and Susan Bihler, alongside Tahosa’s Derek Pilling, joined Datavail’s board.

A Look Ahead: Why Cloud, Traditional Infrastructure Can’t Go It Alone

By Scott KoeglerScreen Shot 2015-12-17 at 5.43.57 PMCloud-based systems have grown in size and scope, and are increasingly important to enterprises as they grow their presence and their use of data. For companies that already have significant internal technology infrastructure in place, the lure of cloud computing platforms presents the promise of on-demand expansion and service deployment at the same time their existing systems support current operations. With all that said, the cloud pendulum seems to be shifting as companies figure out what does—and doesn’t—work in the cloud.“As more companies with legacy applications want to try cloud technologies, cloud computing is headed from just a pure public cloud--à la AWS [Amazon Web Services]--to a hybrid cloud combining traditional computing and storage infrastructure, together with the ability to spin up cloud instances,” said Emil Savegh, CEO and president of Codero Hosting. “Companies using AWS are starting to feel the limitations of an ‘only public cloud’ strategy. They are feeling it in their pocketbook and budget, and in performance and flexibility.”One of the biggest issues CIOs are facing is that no one knows what the biggest issues—and technologies—will be moving forward, even in the relatively near term. In this digital economy, in which change is increasingly driven by customers, companies must be able to quickly adapt or they will almost surely die.“The world of IT is changing at an ever-increasing pace,” said Savegh. “No one can tell in detail what the next big technologies will be, what they will be called or how they will exactly work.”Despite all the uncertainty about the future, businesses can count on the fact that data and the need for large-scale storage will be major drivers for business and the technology that enables it—with mobile overarching everything.“The mobile explosion will continue--there will be more mobile users than ever before, and BYOD [bring your own device] and the Web applications that have come along with these trends will continue,” noted Sayegh. “When looking to build for the future, CIOs need to understand that there will be a lot more devices everywhere. To plan for the future, CIOs need to think about infrastructure that accommodates scale, flexibility and ubiquitous access. It’s a simple formula with many underlying complex components.”Sayegh said that while we hear about “the cloud” all the time, few realize it is the key to building IT for the future.“Clearly, traditional infrastructure can’t handle it because it cannot scale,” he said. “Cloud alone can’t do it, as the virtualization layer introduces latency and performance issues when faced with large data sets.”Companies experiencing or anticipating high growth, or those expanding their global footprint and needing to support highly distributed operations, are already looking at hybrid environments that offer both internal stability and external expansion. The deployment of hybrid cloud infrastructures offer options that support these kinds of plans.“It is the bridge between the performance and control of dedicated infrastructure and the flexibility and benefits of the cloud that we know,” he said. “This is where CIOs need to focus for the next two years.”This content is underwritten by Hewlett Packard Enterprise (HPE).

Microsoft Filters Social Media for Location-Specific Security

SECURITYBy Rachael King

Sent to WSJ

Companies, taking advantage of the digital detritus released by location-tracking smartphones, are finding new ways to monitor what their employees post online. By using technology that connects social media posts to their physical point of origin, companies can clamp down on intellectual property theft, establishing a new connection between cyber and physical security.

Microsoft Corp. uses a software-as-a-service platform that organizes social data by physical location, to detect the possible leaking of intellectual property. The technology,from Chicago-based Geofeedia, lets Microsoft set up a virtual net around the event space used for its annual Microsoft Global Exchange event for employees that sifts through social media content posted by attendees.

Generally speaking, employees are not intending to leak product information. “It’s just that they’ll catch a slideshow in the background of a photo and it will have information on it,” said Jake Lanum, protective intelligence program manager for third-party contractor AS Solution where he works directly with Microsoft. At that point, Microsoft will try to match the social media account with an employee and ask the person to take the post down.

“It’s a new concept in social analytics that leverages smartphones which have GPS in them,” Geofeedia CEO Phil Harris tells CIO Journal. The company primarily does geolocation social media monitoring for marketing, public safety and corporate risk and security purposes. Customers use the company’s patented technology which lets customers organize and filter social media posts by location or a series of locations. A hotel chain, for example, might be interested in content posted near the locations of its properties. A company may want to understand what’s happening in a particular location where a CEO is visiting.

“A lot of these intelligence decisions or security advisory decisions have been made on social media before but they were really reliant on keywords,” said Mr. Lanum.That approach misses slang or images that don’t use words, he said. In addition, there may be lots of people tweeting about a certain event who are not even there.

Microsoft has found other uses for the technology. In 2014, a man stormed Ottawa’s Parliament Hill shooting a soldier at Canada’s National War Memorial, just a few blocks from Microsoft’s building.

Geofeedia pulled in all public social media posts in the vicinity, mostly Twitter posts and Instagram photos. “Our building was circumnavigated by the gunman as he was making his way through,” said Mr. Lanum. “We were able to determine when our building was locked down and when the lockdown ended and with reasonable certainty we were able to determine there was only one gunman well before conventional media,” he said.

The way Microsoft Global Security is structured, the company has site security managers which work at the buildings themselves. In a much smaller region such as Ottawa, there are regional security advisors who cover a much broader area. “They don’t track everything so it’s our job to inform them what’s going on in their own region at times,” he said. In that instance, Microsoft was able to inform the security manager that employees were safe and that they were headed home. That information is also used in the C-suite to make decisions about whether work should be cancelled and what the company response should be, said Mr. Lanum.

How Emoji Intelligence Can Create Actionable Insights

By Kimberlee MorrisonScreen Shot 2015-12-14 at 11.30.53 AMEmojis have emerged as a new form of communication. From simple emoticons to a pictographic languageall its own. Indeed, depending on the region, emojis can account for up to 60 percent of text on Instagram, and they are being used to tell stories and send hidden messages to those in the know.Even brands have even caught on, with 35 percent of the Interbrand 100 using emojis in their captions, according to data from Simply Measured. But R.J. Talyor, vice president of product management at local social intelligence software provider Geofeedia, says emojis can also be used as a listening tool, for brands to take action and create better customer experiences in real time.Talyor told SocialTimes:About 24 percent of posts include emojis. We know that consumers are able to communicate a lot with a single emoji that they may or may not have communicated in text.While emojis can be used as folksonomic organization similar to hashtags, Talyor said emojis are also used to express sentiment among consumers. For instance, if someone has a positive experience, they might use a happy face or celebratory emoji. If they’re unhappy with their experience, they might use the frustrated or angry emoji.And for brands that listen closely, emoji communication present an opportunity take action on the ground. Talyor said emojis are particularly useful for identifying actionable insights at a local level.In addition to using what he referred to as “emoji intelligence” to find potential brand advocates, he said emojis can also be used to identify people who are frustrated and turn their negative experience into a positive one:Geofeedia has an alert system that allows brands and marketers to listen to places of interest–store locations, restaurants, malls, etc.–and because they’re receiving an alert, they can alert the store manager to take action. Maybe there’s a long line, or bad customer service, people are being rude or the store is dirty; they can take action on that immediately and improve the experience for everybody else.Still, this kind of real-time monitoring and taking action seems to be one of the biggest challenges for businesses. Talyor pointed to the Mall of America and the NCAA as examples of brands with dedicated social media teams that use social listening tools to take action and create great experiences. Ultimately, he said, it’s about being willing to allocate the necessary resources and taking social seriously, adding:I think there’s a lot fear or the feeling that this is just a ton of work. [Using the right tools] makes it really easy to surface those items that are of particular concern, then you can apply a customer service resource or assign anyone responsible for customer experience to reply to these communications where customers are having bad brand experiences in real time.Readers: How often do you use emojis?Image courtesy of Shutterstock. 

Three Challenges For The Hearables Future

Three Challenges For The Hearables FutureBy Ruochen Huang (@RuochenHuang)In Spike Jonze’s Her, Joaquin Phoenix falls in love with his earpiece — or rather, the female voice inside it. The film depicts a society in which artificially intelligent hearing devices serve as human companions.A cliché for the hearables futureHer nonetheless raises several key issues regarding the increasingly saturated industry of ear-worn wearables that must be resolved — not only to prevent an isolated world in which people become increasingly obsessed with their trinkets but also to herald the advancement of hearable technologies that will perhaps even be capable of their own self-reflection and introspection.

Reshaping The Stigma

The lonely future portrayed in Her is exactly what hearable technology should not evolve into. Yet, it reinforces how people generally perceive these earpieces — isolating and potentially embarrassing. We’ve already seen (and joked about) them with early iterations of the Bluetooth headset — this clunky, protruding device gave an almost comical impression that one was talking to oneself. It also attempted to standardize hearable technology, an effort to combat the existing stigma of isolation and introversion exuded through headphones and earphones.Bluetooth headsets introduced the world to the potential of hearables, but the stigma is still there and especially present in health devices, such as hearing aids. They give the impression that the user is immersed in their own world; they’re perceived as socially awkward.Yet, instead of merely combatting the existing stigma, hearables companies should also aim to reshape it. Making devices less visible is a step in the right direction, but the challenge is to make them normative. To facilitate the transition to AI companions, they need to be socially accepted.According to Maurizio Cibelli, co-founder and CEO of Italy-based Hutoma, a startup that is developing the technology to create emotionally intelligent neural network systems similar to that of Her, this is one of the biggest challenges. “There is a lot of discussion about AI, and people’s perceptions immediately turn negative when they hear the term — that’s a difficult thing to measure at the moment.”One solution is to transform these earpieces into more of a social experience. Instead of tuning out from their environment, why not develop hearables that also tune-in to the world around them?Products like Doppler Labs’ Here and Motorola’s Hint aim to curate live experiences by not only enhancing the sounds that people want to hear, but also isolating and reducing unwanted noises, such as train sounds and airplane turbulence. These features are amazing; they’re transformative.In a previous interview with TechCrunch, Doppler Labs’ co-founder and CEO Noah Kraft says that he envisages a world where “every audio experience is perfect.”It’s more than just making the technology outstanding; people should feel comfortable going out in public wearing these devices. “This is something you should wear proudly, not something you should hide or something [that makes you] feel socially stigmatized,” says Kraft.

Demographic Adoptability

With wristbands and fitness trackers, we often discuss the concept of “stickiness,” or the lack thereof; many users who buy these products stop using them after a few months. A survey conducted by Endeavour Partners found that 33 percent of U.S. consumers stop using the device after six months.One goal of companies is to develop a product or service that will be used by consumers throughout the day for as long as possible. Certain devices, such as the iPhone and the iPad, have reached widespread adoptability and usability because they cater to all demographic groups; they are accessible and easy to use. Similarly with hearables, the devices should be intuitive, easy to learn and as unobtrusive to one’s lifestyle as possible, lest the technology becomes a temporary fad.According to Dr. Steven LeBoeuf, co-founder and president of Valencell, a Raleigh-based company that develops biometric sensors for hearables, that’s an important thing to consider.“What people care about is how you improve their lives,” says LeBoeuf. “The way mobile phones do that is very clear. The way fitness trackers [and hearables] do is not quite as clear and what needs to be done is find ways to integrate the experiences and how people are already living, because what people really want is to know what they can uniquely do — what’s uniquely happening with them to improve their lifestyles.”To better understand public perceptions, some of the companies developing hearable technology are seeking to first cater to niche markets — enthusiasts, if you will — before phasing-in to the mass market.“[Our product] would apply at the beginning to a niche, and that’s who we’re targeting. These are tech enthusiasts and it’s a perfect point for us because we want to grow organically,” says Cibelli. “It actually works pretty well for us if we can target those people first.”Noah Kraft agrees. “The ideal customer to start isn’t even a customer; it’s someone who is deeply passionate about music that they’ve contacted us to be part of this waitlist — part of this beta program — where they go out into the world and really give us feedback about what they like and what they don’t… that is a niche demographic, but we have found that it’s a very passionate one.”

Technical Obstacles

The potential in this sector is almost limitless. In a few years, there may be wireless earbuds that can facilitate real-time language translation and use sensors to integrate biometric data to influence gaming. Companies like Elbee and Valencell are already trying to tackle these problems. They focus on using the ear to interact with other applications. With the Elbee, for example, users can tell their wireless earbuds to turn lights on and off, control temperature, send text messages and more — in addition to playing music.Yet, there are some technicalities that need to be developed further, depending on the uses of the hearable.

Smaller And Smarter Sensors Earbuds that intend to measure vitals such as blood flow, calories burned and pulse prioritize the accuracy of their sensors. The challenge is to incorporate sensors that are not only validated and rigorously tested, but also small enough to fit comfortably within the ear.The ear is already comparatively more advantageous than the wrist; it’s relatively stationary, which means that it’s a lot easier to measure vitals effectively. However, each ear has a unique shape. Unlike the wrist, it is also a small environment filled with moisture and earwax. Developers should take into account these factors when optimizing their devices.“There’s a need to make sensors smarter. In making ‘true wireless earbuds,’ you have only so much real estate you can put into these devices … you start running out of space,” says LeBoeuf. “Now that people want to add more and more sensor functionality, the sensors are starting to become big. One of the things to do is to find ways of improving and reducing the size while adding more functionality into these sensors.”In addition to accuracy, sensors need to be smart.“Assessments need to be based off of real accurate data,” says LeBoeuf. “How does [the earpiece] know that it’s accurate? If it’s only getting data, then it wouldn’t know. One of the things that [Valencell] developed is a way to know if they have the right measurements or not so that if they aren’t right, they don’t go into the model.”Battery LifeCurrent recreational wireless earbuds can last an average of 3-5 hours of continuous usage; hearing aids such as Eargo are able to last an entire day on one charge.Minimizing processes to conserve battery life is one tenant, but it is also about longer battery life as a major determinant of whether or not people will wear the hearable. Ideally, the device should last as long as a smartphone, withstanding constant usage. While this obstacle is an issue for all wearables, it is especially important for hearables to transform them from simply a commodity to a necessity. Portable battery chargers are also a plus.Choosing The Right Wireless TechnologyMany wireless earbuds use Bluetooth, but some companies are attempting to utilize other wireless technologies for music streaming. HearNotes, for example, is using Kleer, an alternative to Bluetooth developed by Microchip Technology. According to HearNotes, Kleer is optimized to deliver lossless high-quality wireless audio across portable audio devices and consume less power, resulting in up to 10x the battery life of comparable Bluetooth devices.The analysis draws upon comparing the current 150 milliwatt Bluetooth headsets with the 30 milliwatt consumption of Kleer devices. This discrepancy is further increased by Kleer’s ability to carry 3-4x the data rate.One challenge for prototypes is providing clear communication between the left and right earbuds, as well as with the device itself. According to Elbee co-founder and CEO Konrad Holubek, the positioning of the antenna within the earbuds is crucial to ensure that your hearables device operates seamlessly.

Moving Forward

The future that Spike Jonze’s film envisioned is actually not too distant. There are companies that are developing deep learning neural networks that would transform your digital assistant from merely taking commands to a virtual companion that would help you learn and grow — an AI that is capable of thought.Indeed, Hutoma’s Project HER (inspired by the film, of course) is developing the technology to do just that. They aim to develop a neural network that would provide the basic intelligence off of which potential users could build and customize.According to Cibelli, technologies like this would further the potential of hearables. “I hope that hearables will adopt AI, because I think it’s pretty much needed,” says Cibelli. “There are so many benefits and applications.”Hearables companies are currently developing products that aim to both supplement and augment hearing. The products come in all variations (in-ear, on-ear, around the ear). And while these companies all have the shared goal of engaging and expanding the ear’s advantages, they all have different ideas for how to do so.As a result, it all comes down to the user experience that hearables provide.“It’s easy to see these individual technologies all taking off and doing their cool stuff, and it’s interesting to connect the dots, but there’s a lot of validation to be done,” says LeBoeuf. “Testing the technology out with people will take time.”

SPECIAL - Can Law Enforcement Detect Radicalization Before An Individual Turns Violent?

By Zeke Fraint

Screen Shot 2015-11-19 at 10.27.02 PMCan law enforcement detect radicalization before an individual turns violent? It's complex, but certainly possible for savvy law enforcement and intelligence officials to detect signals early on with the assistance of actionable social media data.

As Mitch Silber, former intelligence chief for the New York City Police Department, pointed out in his July TIME articleHow to Stop the Next Domestic Terrorist, social media monitoring can be the most useful action law enforcement takes to increase the chances of finding the  needle in  the haystack.

That said, pointed, purposeful and nimble use of social media technology by well-trained professionals can be—and indeed has been—a critical tool in mitigating the radicalization process and the potential for violence.

The FBI defines  Open-Source Intelligence (OSINT) as “a broad array of information and sources that are generally available, including information obtained from the media (newspapers, radio, television, etc.), professional and academic records (papers, conferences, professional associations, etc.), and public data (government reports, demographics, hearings, speeches, etc.).”

OSINT has played an increasingly critical role in intelligence gathering since the CIA opened its National Open Source Center in 2005. At the time, the focus was largely on traditional, publically available sources such as newspaper articles, speeches, radio and television. More recently, the focus has shifted to Internet-based open sources, particularly social media.

In September 2015, CIA Deputy Director David Cohen announced the new Directorate of Digital Innovation (DDI).

“[It] will be at the center of the agency’s effort to inject digital solutions into every aspect of our work. It will be responsible for accelerating the integration of our digital and cyber capabilities across all our mission areas—human intelligence collection, all-source analysis, open source intelligence and covert action,” Cohen said.

The acknowledgement that digital capabilities such as social media are vital to successfully carrying out those missions is enormous validation marking another step towards bringing the intelligence picture into focus.

We all leave digital footprints, but nowhere are these footprints more prominent than in social media. As Cohen noted in his remarks, the DDI will manage the CIA’s Open Source Enterprise, a unit that is “dedicated to collecting, analyzing and disseminating publicly available information of intelligence value” as more information is “openly available on foreign web sites and in social media.”

The abundant information that is willfully shared via social media provides  extremely valuable insight. and a prominent OSINT data source. Furthermore, the public, as well as open posts by our adversaries and nefarious characters, are rich sources of insight into their true beliefs and, all too often, malicious intentions.

It is difficult to quantify OSINT’s role in the intelligence gathering process, or that of social media in the OSINT intelligence gathering phase. However, we know entities such as college campuseslocal law enforcement agencies and the United States Air Force are using social media monitoring for intelligence collection, storage and analysis. These efforts have aided in prevention of a range of incidents, including self-harm and on-campus violence, shutting down teen drug parties and locating Islamic State militants.

Combining social media intelligence with covert intelligence paints a much clearer picture of the world than either open source or clandestinely acquired information could on their own. In addition to being a source of intelligence in and of itself, OSINT offers supplemental data to classified information to help corroborate or disprove theories. The most actionable social media data is that which is geo-located. Social media posts, tweets, comments and pictures that are tagged with GPS coordinates are highly actionable for several reasons: 1) they give context to dates and times in addition to exact locations; 2) they provide precise situational awareness; and 3) they provide the exact whereabouts of posters – which can be as specific as which corner of a house a person may be hiding in.

Actionable intelligence gained from social media data plays a crucial role in connecting the dots needed to create a clear and accurate intelligence picture.

Law enforcement and intelligence officials must strive to stay ahead of the social media curve as they work to safeguard our communities and interests. Analysts should constantly pursue legal, safe and proactive methods of leveraging the data trove that is social media.

Through the use of thoughtful, holistic analysis that includes OSINT social media, authorities are empowered to potentially prevent attacks and threats against their communities.

Zeke Fraint is director, government programs at Geofeedia. Prior to joining Geofeedia, Fraint worked as an intelligence analyst at Cook County Sheriff's Office Intelligence Center (SOIC), and brings valuable experience to the team with his background in criminal intelligence, law enforcement, homeland and national security. Fraint has a Bachelors of Arts in Government, Diplomacy and Strategy, with a major in Counterterrorism and Homeland Security at IDC Herzliya, and Masters in the Security Studies Program at Georgetown University's School of Foreign Service.

Making Social Media Investigation Easier - Geofeedia iOS App v4.0

Screen Shot 2015-11-19 at 10.31.10 PMGeofeedia released version 4.0 of its platform. With new capabilities and features, the updated platform makes it even easier to cut through the massive amount of social data to understand social media signals in real-time at a specific place. Geofeedia enables the use of location-tagged data to discover, engage, and analyze content across Twitter, Instagram, Facebook, YouTube, Picasa, Flickr, Sina Weibo and other social channels.With the new Geofeedia iOS app, users can gather location-based social intelligence in the areas directly around their current locations, create or monitor any location while mobile, and access a streamer view of location-tagged social media posts on-the-go.Geofeedia research shows 74 percent of social chatter cannot be discovered with hashtag and keyword monitoring. In addition, six percent of posts solely include photos or videos without any text. Geofeedia fills in the data gap where most social listening tools fall short and empowers organizations with a dynamic way to pinpoint the critical signals found using location-tagged social media posts not only based on keywords and hashtags, but images and even sentiment.In addition to the core capabilities of Geofeedia’s location-based intelligence platform, the enhanced version includes the following innovations:

  • New Look and Feel: Now it’s even easier to discover, engage and analyze social media data with a streamlined and updated user interface.
  • Upgraded Data Platform: With the upgraded capacity to process more than 1 billion posts daily (~10,000 per second) by the platform, Geofeedia enables the most complete searches across the largest location-based data set in the world.
  • Aggregated Location Monitoring: Save time and gain insight by collecting intelligence across many locations in a single search.
  • Enhanced Location Analytics: Make smarter real-time decisions through updated and interactive location analytics.
  • Location Sentiment: Quickly understand the sentiment (positive/negative) of posts from one or more locations.
  • New Data Source: With the largest Chinese microblogging site Sina Weibo added to Geofeedia, users now have an even larger data set to discover, engage and analyze.
  • Templates: Save time by creating and reusing search criteria (including locations, keywords, networks, usernames) within a search template.
  • Influencers: Discover top influencers in a location and their social connections.
  • Salesforce Integration: Increase sales and improve customer service by creating a Salesforce.com lead or customer service case from a location-tagged social media post with a single click.

According to the company, more than 400 organizations and 10,000 users rely on Geofeedia’s powerful subscription-based patented platform, which was included in Gartner’s 2014 Cool Vendors report and and G2 Crowd’s Spring 2015 rankings of the top social media monitoring products. The company is on track to quadruple its client base by the end of the year. Customers leveraging the Geofeedia platform include major Fortune 500 companies such as McDonald’s and Dell and leading news outlets like the AP, BBC and CNN. 

The Elbee could be the very visible future of hearables

By Lloyd AlterThey are both in your ears and in your face. Will this be socially acceptable?Screen Shot 2015-11-10 at 3.32.15 PMThere are those who think that the wrist is the best place for wearables, and those who think it is the ears. I am in the ear camp, wearing hearables all the time. So when the Elbee was launched on Kickstarter I was intrigued. It's a device that you wear in your ears that wirelessly connects you to your smartphone all the time. They are not only high-quality headphones, but they have motion detectors so that you can control your phone (and by extension many other things) simply by moving your head. They have built-in accelerometers. So almost everything that you can normally do by taking out your phone and tapping it, you can do by tilting your head or talking to your Elbee units.Screen Shot 2015-11-10 at 3.34.37 PMAs a user of what are normally called hearing aids, I get the great benefit of being permanently wired to my phone. But the Elbee offers more: not only the connection but the control. It has inductive charging instead of having to change batteries (although they don't last nearly long enough on a charge). It doesn’t pretend to be invisible, as hearing aid manufacturers strive for, but is in your face and clearly visible.Screen Shot 2015-11-10 at 3.35.45 PMI asked the inventor Konrad Holubek about the visibility of the units — did he not think this was a huge handicap? He was surprised by the question; he could not imagine that someone would want to talk into the air on a phone call without people being able to see that the person actually had something in his ears. He didn't see these as devices for people with bad hearing, but as a form of wireless headphone with added features. I see it as being possibly a bit of both, and certainly see it as a device that could change the way people think about having things in their ears.I asked him also about how nodding your head to control them might not get problematic and have false alarms; it turns out that it's designed to have trigger movements, you look up and that lets the Elbee know that you're about to do something. It’s the same with voice commands: You say “OK Elbee” and it is like “Hey Siri” — it triggers the response.Screen Shot 2015-11-10 at 3.36.25 PMThe Elbee has some great things going for it; it promises to do much of what my hearables do at a fraction of the price. I remain concerned that they are so in-your-face visible and wonder whether that will really be acceptable socially to most people in a way that the bluetooth phone earpieces or Google glasses have not. However if they are accepted, then it will open up many opportunities in the hearable world.Most importantly, it could be the gateway drug for many more people to accept the need to wear hearables, the kind of people who are happy to wear glasses but consider hearing aids to be for old people. These are not designed for old people; they are a better way to connect to all of our technology and to control it with the nod of our head. But they could open a lot of doors.Screen Shot 2015-11-10 at 3.37.30 PMElbee has a way to go, another year before delivery, which is what Konrad realistically notes is what it takes to bring a sophisticated product to market. I am not certain that it is the kind of project that can succeed on Kickstarter; it’s a complex device that does not elicit an instant “I want that now” response and probably has higher risk than most.However the they are on to something with the Elbee. The big companies in the hearables business should watch this closely; it could be a major challenge to their way of designing hearables. Make them bigger, make them cheaper, make them do more, make them cooler and make them in your face instead of hiding them. Nod your head to the left to say you agree; to the right if you don’t.