Content VIA Platforms Conference to Feature Execs from Altimeter Group & Storify, All Things D’s Kara Swisher

SIIA today announced keynote speakers for Content VIA Platforms-an all-new event that will address the multiplatform publishing challenges and opportunities facing publishing, media and information companies. Content VIA Platforms will be held May 9-10 at San Francisco’s Palace Hotel.

Publishing content across multiple emerging platforms is one of the biggest challenges facing information and news providers this year. At Content VIA Platforms, industry leaders will provide strategies for companies to maximize their audiences and revenues by utilizing a variety of different platforms, monetization strategies, devices and app distribution models, and more.

Content VIA Platforms will feature a number of mobile, publishing and technology thought leaders and key executives from the information industry. Keynote speakers include:

• Burt Herman, Co-founder, Storify
• Charlene Li, Founder, Altimeter Group
• Chris Silva, Mobile Industry Analyst, Altimeter Group
• Kara Swisher, Co-Producer & Co-Executive Editor, All Things Digital, The Wall Street Journal


Kathy Greenler Sexton is Vice President and General Manager for the SIIA Content Division.

SIIA Announces Partnership with InfoCommerce Group to Produce Information Industry’s Only Data Content Conference

SIIA’s Content Division today announced that it has partnered with InfoCommerce Group (ICG) to produce the annual DataContent Conference. The event, which takes place October 9-10 in Philadelphia, PA, is the only conference devoted solely to producers of commercial data products.

DataContent has become the primary meeting ground for publishers to get in-depth and up-close looks at the new ideas, new business models and innovative new companies that are defining the business of business information. DataContent is distinguished by the quality of attendees, which include large numbers of C-level publishing executives, entrepreneurs, bankers, private equity groups and advisory companies. In partnering with ICG, SIIA will apply its more than 20 years as a leader in the information and content industry to develop new programs and broaden the event’s reach.

Combining our years of experience in information and content with ICG’s tremendous commercial data expertise will make DataContent even more valuable to attendees. We’ll bring new ideas, access to leading executives, and a broad reach among audiences that care about data publishing. The DataContent Conference and ICG’s principals have been serving this industry for over 25 years. The event is a catalyst for new talent entering the industry and has a deep and powerful connection to established players.

The DataContent Conference is focused on data publishing and draws information-based businesses, from established traditional enterprises in various stages of evolution, to cutting-edge technology in search of a viable business model. These businesses come together to learn about the latest industry developments, hear from top speakers, and identify new opportunities with those who can help make them happen. No other conference both offers a deep and highly focused discussion of business information and attracts nearly all of the leading players driving the industry. SIIA and ICG are currently working to develop the program for 2012, and more details will be announced in the near future.


Kathy Greenler Sexton is Vice President and General Manager for the SIIA Content Division.

Go Mobile: SIIA Previews the Newest in Information Industry Mobile Apps

Contributed by Grace Schalkwyk, Gramercy Digital Strategy Advisors

Larry Schwartz, Previews Chair and president of Newstex, outlined the evolution of the Previews program which celebrates its 6th anniversary this year. Started as an experiment, this year it is a core part of the main-stage program at Information Industry Summit with 6 company previews and 6 mobile previews. Next year’s conference will feature the 100th preview.

Dow Jones Investment Banker for iPad
Ian Rosen presented Dow Jones’ new app for investment banking end-users. Dow Jones’ strategy is to combine its content assets with its editorial expertise to create relevance for end-user groups. Its Investment Banker personnel are from the banking industry, and they employ ‘curation, creation, workflow knowledge and tools’ to assemble their service. The layout is similar to the Wall Street Journal app, leveraging users’ familiarity with it. All content is downloadable to be usable offline. It offers news customization as My Topics, and market-specific Collections, such as Energy, that feature Opinion and Strategy. It rounds out the service with Banker Moves, a sort of bankerly Page Six.

Lexis Nexis
Scott Livingston presented Lexis Nexis’s legal news awareness offering, which is in its 5.0 version in the mobile space. It seeks to serve lawyers who are untethering from their offices, providing a searchable, contextual, and exhaustive legal news source on the go. It is tailored to the use cases particular to lawyers, such as the on-commute work flow, the quick-briefing need prior to meeting with a client, and the working-remote workflow. Its components include Breaking News, Legal News focused on legal practice areas, Legal Blogs, Mealeys proprietary short form content, Communities, Twitter, and Video. It permits archival searching and access to full text content. It is available to the public as an in-app purchase. Lexis-Nexis is testing various pricing models including $1.99/month through the App Store.

Pubget for iPad
Pubget is one of those amazing services that so good that it shouldn’t be free, but it is. Recently acquired by the not-for-profit Copyright Clearing Center, it is a search engine for science, technology and medical (STM) articles and peer-reviewed papers and is intended for life science researches and practitioners. It is cloud based service hosted and sold via a freemium model that allows users to legally find and directly retrieve research papers from their sources. It has access to 3 million medical and STM articles and knows where 30 million academic papers live across 30,000 institutions.
Pubget is led by Ryan Jones, a FAST and Microsoft veteran. It is looking for publishers who want their content accessed by Pubget’s system, and enterprises that are interested in employing Pubget’s unique search capability.

Factiva for iPad

Factiva’s new app easily enables people to monitor news across the world, leveraging its new and popular web feature Snapshot. Its consumer-like feel, elegant and simple, reflects the demands of professional consumers for a great user experience. On the go, it gives the capability to spot trends, risks and opportunities. It also gives access to Factiva Search from anywhere. Features include Top News, with headlines, audio, video, trending companies, trending people, and visualization. On individual companies it provides news volume vs. stock price graphs with click-throughs. Other features include Radar, news volume on top trending companies; My Alerts, an RSS feed module; and article views with tagging.

PR Newswire for iPad
PR Newswire’s app is designed for PR professionals and journalists. It offers top headlines for all categories with drilldowns to appropriate sectors. It includes extensive coverage of PR blogs which will expand to 100 blogs over time. It offers in-app search, push notifications, saved searches and numerous other convenience features. It is available free on iTunes.

Nexis News Search
Nexis’s app is free to its customers, and essentially ports the website experience to the iPad. It provides nested search on news content options, with two-year history, date range search, article length search, and numerous other options. Articles can be saved and emailed. Articles highlight the user’s search terms, and other features are available.

Inside Secrets of a Media Investor, Michael Chen, Former President, NBC News Strategic Initiatives Group, and Founder, Peacock Equity Fund

Contributed by Rich Kreisman, Principal Partner, Kreisman Information Consulting, San Francisco.

IIS Jan 2012 NYC-108Sharing wisdom to a group of info industry pros can be a tricky thing – we’re a tough crowd – but that’s exactly what Michael Chen, Former President of NBC News’ Strategic Initiatives Group, and, Founder of NBCUniversal’s Peacock Equity Fund, did to kick off SIIA’s 2012 Information Industry Summit.
Highpoints of Chen’s advice, looking at the world from an information industry investor’s viewpoint:

#5 – See the Future
To win in a confusing and competitive information market, we all need to be futurists. “And, hopefully, you will see the future before everyone else gets into the markets,” Chen said. Citing a range of stats, including tablet sales moving rapidly from 10% of the mobile market to 19% of the market because of greater-than-expected Christmas 2011, he discussed many of the key platform changes anticipated to impact content providers in the future – more smartphones, more Internet-connected TVs and more mobile e-commerce transactions.

#4 – Have a Simple Communications/Public Relations Strategy
Like all of us, investors are busy… very busy, as many of us know who have tried to raise money. Chen’s advice: “In 1 minute or less, you need to describe your product or service, why customers would buy it, what is your ‘edge’, and why is it sustainable.”
Investors like to be able to easily explain their investments, says Chen – to their business colleagues, their personal friends and their families. In order to do so, simplicity and directness is key.

#3 – Do Not Just Be an Innovator; Show Investors You are an Entrepreneur
Chen, who has seen his share of pitches from prospective companies, made this observation: “Innovators create new ideas; entrepreneurs commercialize them and make money”.
In other words, being an entrepreneur involves a lot more than just having a good idea. I saw a lot of heads nodding on that point. Many people in the room must have worked at great startups that lived – and died – on their founding team’s execution abilities.

#2 – Understand the Language of your Investor… Finance
Fascinating to hear Chen tell a room of publishers to listen and learn the language of their audience. Investors are not interested in just hearing the CFO talk about finances, for example, Chen said. They want to have confidence that the entire management team understands where and how money will be spent. Other good points:

  • Do not build hockey stick financial plans to present at investment pitches
  • Have a reasonable base case plan and also a downside case
  • Show frugal management of costs and overhead in the existing business
  • Have an exit strategy plan that you can explain from the start

#1 – Investors Invest in People
Chen spent the most time discussing this point. Simply put, he says, investors will not invest in people they do not have chemistry with. While chemistry is elusive, it can be created by being prepared ahead of investment meetings and understanding an investor’s key drivers.
Chen concluded with an important notion: “Your reputation will precede yourself, making it important to build a personal brand along the way.” How to do that? Throughout your business dealings, focus on the 4 “I’s” – integrity, inclusion, impact and inspiration!

Rich Kreisman is the Principal Partner in Kreisman Information Consulting (KIC), a San Francisco-based consultancy advising publishers on content licensing and distribution strategies.

Ed Tech Industry Summit: Bridging K12 and Postsecondary

Selecting a program focus for the Ed Tech Industry Summit is one of the most valuable, yet most difficult, part of the planning process.

However, given the trends we see occurring within the education institutions and the ed tech companies, this year’s program focus “Bridging K12 and Postsecondary,” was relatively easy.

Closing the Chasm
Historically, there has been a major divide between K-12 and Postsecondary institutions. Years ago, there was little articulation or communication between high schools and colleges. Students in high school chose courses within a college or vocational track, graduated with the required credits and grades, then went off to a two-year or four year school where you started at ground zero with their course requirements.

Nowadays, students are earning college credits while in still high school – either to remain challenged, save money or both. For educational and economic reasons, high schools are becoming more ‘linked’ through:

  • The tremendous growth of Advanced Placement courses and exams, where students can earn college credit while in high school
  • The focus by US Dept of Ed and the current Administration on having high school students “college and career-ready”
  • The development of state and local programs, like:
    1) Jump Start to College and Concurrent Enrollment, where students take courses at their high school AND in nearby 2 year or 4 year institutions in the same semester.
    2) Early College High School where, in one program, the students take courses that meet high school graduation requirements and provide credit for the courses normally taken during the first two years of college.

The Industry Parallel
The vehicles for acceleration, exam credits and dual enrollments have paved the way for ed tech companies to transition their products and services from one market into an adjacent market.

For some companies, it’s:

  • Selling course materials originally designed for postsecondary into the high school market (i.e. changing sales and distribution strategies and sending sales teams into high schools or district administration).
  • Repurposing high school content and context to fit postsecondary course needs (i.e. Transitioning Algebra I and II courses into Developmental Math courses).
  • Discovering that their professional development programs and assets fit faculty needs, whether it be elementary, secondary or postsecondary levels (i.e. providing video PD segments about pedagogy to pre-service as well as practicing teachers or selling “how to” segments for using a software application to faculty at any level).

In conclusion, we are confident that this year’s theme, “Bridging K12 and Postsecondary”, will:

  • help distinguish the program content from previous years.
  • provide a basis for selecting the best speakers and contributors.
  • exemplify a trend in the education institutions and the industry.
  • highlight successful strategies for growing an Ed tech business.

Join us this year on May 6-8 and find bridging strategies that grow your business and customer relationships.

See you in San Francisco!
Karen Billings
VP Education, SIIA
202-789-4487


Karen BillingsKaren Billings is Vice President for the Education Division at SIIA.

SIIA Previews Companies Showcase Innovation at Information Industry Summit

Contributed by Grace Schalkwyk, Gramercy Digital Strategy Advisors

Larry Schwartz, Previews Chair and president of Newstex, outlined the evolution of the Previews program which celebrates its 6th anniversary this year. Started as an experiment, this year it is a core part of the main-stage program at Information Industry Summit with 6 company previews and 6 mobile previews. Next year’s conference will feature the 100th preview.

Crowd Fusion, Brian Alvey, CEO
Crowd Fusion is a publishing platform that combines several popular applications — like blogging, wikis, tagging and workflow management — with some original concepts to solve the pain points of online publishing at scale.

At SIIA 2012 Brian outlined the features of the “publish everywhere platform”. It is a cloud native, multiplatform content management system that allows editors to design once, instantly format the content for all devices, then provide for painless device-specific edits. It is sophisticated software for large-scale publishers to convert from legacy systems to digital- and mobile- first production capability. In the process it offers the opportunity for significant cost savings from more efficient workflow, and superior published product.

Crowd Fusion counts The Daily and Tecca among its customers.
Crowd Fusion’s personnel have come from the publishing industry and understand the criticality of its customers’ current systems. It is able to transition customers’ current workflow in a multi-stage, non-disruptive fashion, avoiding the business-threatening all-at-once changeover that challenges even the bravest managers. It is based in New York and funded by Marc Andreessen, Fuse Capital, and Greycroft Partners.

Narrative Science, Stuart Frankel, CEO
Narrative Science performs the miracle of creating large numbers of standard-format narrative reports in a human voice. In fact, in a unique voice tailored for each publisher. Instantly, without human intervention or the need for editing. In its own description, it is a technology company that transforms data into stories and insights. Their technology application generates news stories, industry reports, headlines, etc. – in fact they can create narratives from almost any data set, be it numbers or text, structured or unstructured.

Their technology was birthed at Northwestern University and combines technical and editorial expertise. It is a proprietary artificial intelligence platform that is horizontally scalable and has broad applicability. Based in Chicago, Narrative Science was seed funded by Battery Ventures.

Reportlinker, Benjamin Carpano, CEO
ReportLinker.com seeks to solve the problem market researchers and businesspeople have of defining their markets and opportunities. It describes itself as a search engine, offering an access to the largest online collection of industry, company and country statistics and reports available worldwide. It crawls 200,000 trusted sources and millions of documents in as many formats to produce usable, consistent, accurate, fielded data to form the basis of business plans, financing pitches, and strategy documents for businesses everywhere. It operates on an affordable subscription model that starts at $79 per month. Based in France, it has strong European experience and is now expanding its US market penetration.

BestVendor, Jeff Giesea, CEO and Founder
BestVendor helps people in businesses make faster, smarter purchasing decisions through social recommendations. In our over-sharing world, we make our lives easier for each other via tips on vacations and health care providers, but less so for the business enablers we use every day — such as accounting software, CRM providers, and productivity tools. BestVendor uses a give-to get system to populate its recommendations. It combines that with information culled from sources such as Twitter mentions and Youtube uploads to advise who is using what products, and the most recent user generated comments on them. Now in beta, the site is in its content building phase. In the future it will provide vendors with product pages, ways for them to engage with users, and the opportunity to purchase keywords.
BestVendor is financed by venture capital investors including Peter Thiel, RRE Ventures, SV Angels and Lerer Ventures. It is based in New York.

Praetorian Group, Robert Dippell, VP Products
Praetorian serves policemen, firemen, EMS people, Homeland Security, and corrections officers to share knowledge on strategies, tactics, best practices, best supplies, technologies, and devices. Beginning with PoliceOne.com in 1999, and continuing with FireRescue1.com and www.EMS1.com, their online properties are visited by more than 2 million first responders and public safety professionals each month — making them the leading online company in the public safety market.

Calling themselves ‘ESPN meets CNET’, they are a knowledge network with best of breed information: industry content such as tactical tips, and product research in the form of buyer’s guides for 400 product categories. They are ad supported, but their model is a recurring subscription advertising model that is both stable and profitable.

Their newsletters have an audience of 245,000 officers in the US and Canada, which are complemented by websites, iPhone apps and social media distribution. They estimate 35% audience penetration to date. They are San Francisco based.

First Stop Health, Patrick Spain, CEOFirst Stop Health seeks to solve the challenge people face when have an unusual, serious, or long-running health problem. But it also a service for people would like help managing and coordinating a family’s worth of health care providers and coverages, including occasional off-hours crises like mysterious hives. It is a patient-centric health concierge service that offers 24/7 tele-access to qualified medical professionals, coupled with a rich resource of proprietary online health information to help users understand their choices. It offers access to a human patient advocate to provide expert advice navigating the health care system. It offers the opportunity for patient-created and controlled electronic medical records. Its freemium model is priced at $250 for individuals and $750 for families, and includes a certain amount of consultation time. First Stop Health is based in Chicago.

More on SIIA Previews:

John Blossom of Shore Communications’ blog post

Executives from News Organizations to Address Economics of Digital Content at Information Industry Summit

At SIIA’s eleventh annual Information Industry Summit, keynotes from NBC, BNA and Strategic News Service will address top tech predictions for 2012, investment strategies, and BNA’s acquisition by Bloomberg.

The two-day event, which kicks off January 24 in New York City, is one of the most important gatherings for executives involved in the creation and distribution of digital content.

Heated competition and market consolidation are two big realities facing the digital content industry in 2012. These two issues will be in focus at this year’s Information Industry Summit.

The following keynote presenters will help senior B2B information executives navigate these and other emerging market trends:

Mark Anderson, CEO, Strategic News Service
“Top Tech Predictions for 2012”
Mark Anderson

Anderson is known for accurately forecasting important shifts in the economic landscape and technology markets. With the theme “Integrate Everything,” he will be making his top technology calls for 2012. Is your company ready?


Michael Chen, Fmr President, NBC News’ Strategic Initiatives Group, & Founder, Peacock Equity Fund
“Inside Secrets of a Media Investor”
Michael Chen

Want to understand how to position your company based on what the market is looking for, and how to talk to VCs, bankers or even strategic investors? Michael Chen will offer his unique perspective based on 20 years of providing financing to companies in need of growth capital.


Paul Wojcik, Chairman, BNA
“Transformation Amidst Market Consolidation”
Peter Wojcik

BNA, which was just acquired by Bloomberg in September 2011, was one of the oldest and largest independent professional information companies in the legal, tax, and regulatory space. Wojcik will discuss how BNA navigated change and transformation, made the hard strategic decisions they needed to, and ultimately decided to join forces with Bloomberg in a move he says “makes perfect strategic sense to change the industry’s competitive landscape.”



Laura Greenback is Communications Director at SIIA.