Journalist truths: “One of these days you’re going to fuck them over”

I am not sure you guys noticed, but VentureBeat’s traffic has risen by a multiple this year. There’s many elements of success behind this, one is the editor-in-chief’s Dylan Tweeney’s management of the writers. In my limited time I have I still open up my VentureBeat emails to read Dylan’s weekly goal/vision/bootcamp emails. There’s so much to learn from him. Here’s an example, a memo from one of the VB bootcamps. It actually points out in plain English that relationship between journalists are their sources is antagonistic in the end. Here’s the learning for startups - even if tech blogs hype you up, don’t take it seriously. Ride it, but don’t mistake it for reality. As Tom Petty says: what brings you up will bring you down.

“One of these days you’re going to fuck them over, and you need to make that clear up front.” - a veteran legal reporter

Some  weeks ago Dylan had a veteran legal reporter (VLR) come in to chat with us. He was all kinds of awesome. Here are some highlights from my notes. (I’ll ask him for some links to big stories he’s done and send those around later.)

Interviewing:
Don’t start an interview by accusing or confronting your subject. You want to get people on base, not just hit a home run right away. Start by talking about the topic, ask questions you already know the answers to, make incorrect statements to get them to respond. If you ask a straightforward question, they can just say no. If you make statements, they will want to interject, correct you and give the right answers.

Persistence:
Ask the same question over and over again in different ways. It’s amazing what people will tell you if you ask the right questions, are persistent, and continue to call back. Send a ton of emails, call a million times.  Even if you can’t call someone or go see them, send actual notes. On paper. [VLR then told a story about the time he wrote Ted Kaczynski a handwritten letter, and Ted wrote back. Creepy.]

Relationships with Sources:
People should know that you are friendly, and they should also know that you are not fucking around. The reporter is in a position of power and authority, so it’s important that you put on a professional game face, know what you are talking about, and don’t ramble.

Never make it sound like you’re their friend or you’re on their side. One of these days you’re going to fuck them over and you need to make that clear up front.

Stay in Touch:
Stay in touch with people. Keep track of people. Contact your sources, even when you aren’t working on an article. Call them up out of the blue and ask them, What’ve you got cooking? Always call the subject of an article up afterwards, even if the piece was unflattering. What’s amazing is that they will usually tell you even more shit.

Get Color:
A story of lots of facts isn’t a good read. You need to add color. His example was a big story about a Ford recall, and the human element was a woman’s story of how her husband died when his car was hit by a train because the car malfunctioned on train tracks. [Did I hear this story right? Sounds like something that only happens in movies.]

Staying Hungry/Avoiding Boredom:
We all gotta feed the beast. Not everything that we feed to it is that tasty. There’s no fucking around, you just gotta spit it out at times. But you always have to have stuff going up on that you’re interested in. Always be working on longer, important pieces in addition to the daily rigamarole. If you don’t, you’ll get bored. It’s one thing to be busy, and it’s another thing to be excited and have all this stuff up your sleeve and be excited about what you do.

You gotta have a drive. Instead of being content flipping pancakes all day long, you have to want to make chocolate cake too.

On Pandering:
We’re supposed to tell people what they need to know, not what they want to know. You can’t lose sight of that. If you’re writing about something that’s important, people won’t always read it. But you have to keep feeding people smart stuff.

Organization:
VLR recently started using Evernote to keep track of his interviews and notes and legal briefs. But he claims to actually be a disorganized mess, which I found comforting.

Collect Contacts:
“All contacts are gold.” VLR names, titles, and contact info from unsolicited emails, PR pitches, and anything else and puts them into Google Contacts with appropriate keywords. Then, one day down the line when he needs to find a contact, he can search the keywords and find great sources.

Writing the Article:
A story will only take you long to write if you don’t understand it or if there are holes in the reporting. If you have it all the information, it writes itself.

Building products from improvised user behaviors - the cynical CMO view

There’s tons of wisdom in this post by Chris Dixon. Quick add-on from a marketing view: when you do your business planning, you should also check out where these existing communities are in the digital universe and come up with a bottom-up estimate of their numbers. in conversations with startup CMOs or with CEOs - whenever they can not give me these numbers or can’t tell me who the key figures of these communities are I know their marketing and the numbers they sold to their investors are a hail mary.

Chris’ original post: For a long time, there were niche communities of “lo-fi” camera enthusiasts: people who shared photos taken on old cameras that had interesting ways of filtering shots. The iPhone app Hipstamatic popularized lo-fi filters, selling over 1M copies … 

MG Siegler Special on Android’s Openness

There’s good posts arguing Android’s “Openness” like the post Andreas from Visionmobile did back in 2010 where he asked “is Android evil?” Then there’s MG Siegler’s constant tirades which are super speculative and most of them times don’t get the most basic facts on the issue. I like and respect my part-time VentureBeat ex-colleague MG, but on this one he’s very much off. Hence I invite him to some cliff notes courtesy of Rich Miner on Android’s Openness. Even some shots against Apple are included, for example “if you are forced in a business model then it’s not open” ! They also go well with Rich’s 2007 Stanford lecture on Android which I have repeatedly referenced already.

The Best Piece on the iPhone 4S Launch comes from Dean Bubley

Dean Bubley: “The real story of the iPhone 4S is under the hood. It’s all about Apple’s chipset strategy for the next few years.

“To sum up - in my view, the iPhone 4S is all about the hardware platform shift. Stuff like Siri is window-dressing in comparison, to give the fans at least something visible…

This might be disappointing for some, and could possibly give Microsoft and Nokia an opportunity to profit from a temporary lull in external iPhone evolution, but it’s likely set the scene for continued growth and profitability from Apple’s mobile devices for a few more years.”

One big lesson I learned as I have become part of the Valley tech blogger scene is that, amongst the so-called mobile influencers , there are less than 30 (and yes, this ‘30’ is the result of a popular vote; folks who have a hard time to get on a record  aka Google/Apple execs were excluded )who frequently come up with an independent opinion that takes more than the user experience element of the mobile stack into the account. User experience, of course, is what most tech bloggers (and most startups and investors) concentrate on.

Source: Lars Kamp

In contrast, few of the 30 names which came up in my vote are widely heard. I learned, however, they are influential with people who want to get things done.

Back in 2009, as an advisor to my MobileBeat conference, Sprint’s VP of Strategy, Russ Mcguire, pointed me towards Dean as a source for key issues around the network, hardware and phone middleware.

Back at MWC in February I talked to my friends at ARM, Marvel, Nvidia, Qualcomm and asked them what innovation this year will be about, - in plain marketing ghibberish - “distribution to new low level consumer segments” aka the under $100 Android phone as good as an iPhone 3G that will be available by the end of year. The pricing seems familiar ? This is what Apple just announced and is just part of the industry trend. Still, at the same time our notion what we think we can do with superphones will continue to be pushed.

The bottom line for us, who professionally read tech blogs, is that we may have another year or even two of futile iPhone speculation ahead of us:

“It’s also possible that Apple sticks with another iteration of the current 4S platform for another year, before adding in a “perfect” LTE option in 2013. My prediction from June 2010 was that Apple support LTE was most likely in 2012 or 2013 (I’m glad I dodged the bullet on the 5% 2011 chance). An October 2012 launch would make sense - and would also fit in with future timelines of both Qualcomm and Intel (and possibly others like nVidia).”

I cringe at the thought of that.

Strong Opinions @marksbirch: More Ridiculously Annoying Startup Memes

I share many of Mark’s takes. 

marksbirch:

I read the tech press not for information, but for comic relief. In fact, they should use Comic Sans font on their blogs just to emphasize the point. The sheer inanity of it all led me to post last month the top ten most annoying memes in the startup scene, but I clearly could have gone on….

One of the best pieces of advice I ever got, back when I was 23 and newly out of school, is this: look around and figure out who you want to be on your team. Figure out the people around you that you want to work with for the rest of your life. Figure out the people who are smart & awesome, who share your values, who get things done — and maybe most important, who you like to be with and who you want to help win. And treat them right, always. Look for ways to help, to work together, to learn. Because in 20 years you’ll all be in amazing places doing amazing things.

My passion is to help creative people, be it for example software engineers or designers, succeed. I love product management in early stage mobile and digital startups: from concept, execution to scaling the business.

This blog is a place for some of my hmms and some of my ahas.

I am a Co-Founder at app store search company Xyologic and the
dots'n'spaces collective of technology professionals. I am a Co-Chair at MobileBeat, a VentureBeat conference. I live in Berlin. Contact me via Matthaeus at hmmaha.com or @matthausk on Twitter.