A review of
Seth Godin's e-book about the search for meaning online.
This e-book is mainly an exposition on using Blogs and
RSS to create a new online experience, secondarily it is an "infomercial" for
Godin's Squidoo.com Lens Portal.
Everyone is using the Internets to find something, and "Search" has become a billion-dollar industry. However, when you are searching for something on any of the various engines, you are likely to find thousands (if not millions) of results. In which case you haven't really "found" anything! Having too much information is only a little better than not having enough. It takes a long time to
seft through all of those search results to find a meaningful answer to your query. To quote
Godin:
"The engineers who built the Web believed that if they presented the 'right' answer, intelligent humans would be pleased. In fact, before you get it, before you discover the meaning, there is not right answer."
The as-yet-unfulfilled promise of Web 2.0 is creating networks of meaning. Networks which are easily found and navigated in order to speed up the process of actually finding what you are searching for: a meaningful answer.
Godin calls this network a place where one can go for instant context on their search, he calls it a
Lens. The purpose of a Lens is to
answer the question,"What do I need to know?"
"A lens gives context. When it succeeds it delivers meaning. A lens can tell you which books, records, and websites are the best way to appreciate Miles Davis. A lens can show you the ten most important things you need to know about copyright on the web. A lens can highlight the key players in the hospital crib business and give you the confidence that you need to go ahead and buy something - without worrying about whether you missed a key player or didn't understand a critical choice."
The essential point is to make the collections of lenses your starting point when you are searching for something. Because a lens provides context, rather than content. The lens is an
aggregator of "pointers" on a particular subject. The components of a lens: Links,
RSS feeds,
Adsense Ads, all are things that "point" to content - Blogs, Websites, and even other lenses that contain trusted and
meaningful information.
Here is the good news:
- Squidoo is free
- You can earn royalties $$$
- You can generate more traffic to your blog & website
- You can build credibility as a trusted guide
- Improved SEO rankings
Sounds pretty good, doesn't it? In fact it is good, and it is working. Affiliate programs have popped up all over the place to help you drive more traffic and make more money. It is also
not working, in a sense, as there are quite a few people creating lenses that either do not have the time or skills required to invest in making a truly useful lens. I spent some time looking around for a meaningful
Getting Things Done lens, and didn't really find a thorough one. In fact, many of the lenses, on any given topic, do not live up to their potential. My impression from reading
Everyone's an Expert was that the lens would be a tool for creating a more meaningful experience,
starting a new conversation and increasing the power of the
Internets. Not just another sign that says "
Look at me."
So I
built a lens. Yes, it does have a link to this blog, but the main purpose is to give the lens value through context. The information is about
Getting Things Done, and for creating your own web business and
global microbrand. I also made it a very open system, with links to several other blogs that I have found to be interesting and useful. You can go to the lens and check them out, rank them by voting, and add sites that I may have missed (feel free to add your own!). You can even get the
Plexo (as it's called) as a widget for your own site (see left sidebar) and increase your exposure that way.
The idea of the lens is to create a community, and give
valuable information.
The Ultimate Getting Things Done Index is a lens of sorts, in that it pulls together all of the
RSS feeds for every blog that discusses
GTD.
The Hidden Dragon Lens is designed to create value, credibility, and context for the various resources that exist for
Getting Things Done.
Go ahead and
download Everyone's an Expert here, and get to work on your own lens. Then come back and tell about it!