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David Jackson
407 Comments
Subprime: Not All Bad News About Smaller Banks [Housing Tracker]
Gold Hammered, Oil Slicked: Is This the End of the Resource Boom?
The Latest Changes to SeekingAlpha.com
The Latest Changes to SeekingAlpha.com
Out of the alternative names that have been suggested in the comments here, is there one that stands out to anyone?
The Latest Changes to SeekingAlpha.com
We'd be really interested to hear from you: how do you access the site? Do you use text-to-audio software, and if so, how well does it run on Seeking Alpha?
The Latest Changes to SeekingAlpha.com
For that reason, we put Housing & Real Estate in The Big Picture, but Homebuilders in Stocks & Sectors.
I think you're right about the importance of financials: they're a key driver of this market.
The Latest Changes to SeekingAlpha.com
The Latest Changes to SeekingAlpha.com
Hedge Fund Manager's Notebook: Why Hummers Are Greener Than Hybrids, and Tech & Homebuilders May Be a Buy
Hedge Fund Manager's Notebook: The Power of Dividends
Do you have any suggestions for alternative titles?
What's Changed on the Seeking Alpha Website?
seekingalpha.com/artic...
Currency ETFs and ETNs
Market Vectors Double Long Euro ETN (URR)
Market Vectors Double Short Euro ETN (DRR)
What's Changed on the Seeking Alpha Website?
It was a real surprise to find out how many people there are who, as you put it, 'have no problem sifting through the 100+ articles that you put online in the early a.m. hours'.
One tech guy in Aruba? I wish we could manage with that (it would be a lot cheaper!). We have a fantastically talented team of 16 tech people, including design, CSS and programmers. Over the next year, you should see some interesting new things as a result...
BTW, on a personal note, I particularly appreciated the care and thoughtfulness you put into your comments here. Thank you.
What's Changed on the Seeking Alpha Website?
I'd resolved in my earlier replies to your comments to listen to your feedback and not use this as an opportunity to tell you the rationale behind some of the current and upcoming changes. But it now strikes me that those who commented here might welcome more explanation. Here goes.
The core navigation challenge we're facing is that the number of articles we publish each day continues to rise sharply over time. Despite the fact that we reject a large number of articles, we've seen a dramatic increase in the number of articles submitted to us, including by hedge fund managers and others who aren't publishing elsewhere. Excluding conference call transcripts, we're now publishing 150-200 articles each weekday, and we expect the number to continue to rise.
How do you make that volume of articles navigable? We publish many articles before the market opens, so while there's a constant flow of new articles during the day, there's a substantial mass of new articles first thing in the morning. That poses two challenges: (1) Many (most?) users don't want to browse through pages of unsorted headlines, and as a result many people told us that the old home page was 'overwhelming' or 'unmanageable'. (2) Contributing authors don't get exposure on our home page because their headline rolls off the home page before the market opens, or even if it's published later in the day, it's quickly superceded by newer headlines. As a result of these two challenges, we realized that a simple reverse chronological list of articles will become more and more unsatisfactory for many of our readers as the number of articles we publish continues to grow.
To help people find what's useful for them, we have to offer a great browsing experience and also more personalization. Personalization is the easy part: watchlists. The big decision there was to allow readers to track authors as well as stocks, and to make it really easy to add stocks and authors to your watchlist as you browse the site.
Getting "browsing" right is harder. The stats tell us that the current navigation in the top bar dropdowns isn't working. So we've designed a set of dashboards that allow you to see a large number of headlines grouped by themes. Very soon, you'll see us replace the top bar drop-down navigation with clickable links to these dashboards, from which it's really easy to find the individual themes, sectors or topics in more depth. The Sector Dashboard is the first of these dashboards. But don't despair if you don't browse by sector -- there are others that offer different views that we'll show you soon.
An important result of these dashbaords is that headlines stay in view for much longer, instead of rolling off the home page as soon as new articles come along.
Your feedback has been enormously helpful in a few ways. First, you've said loud and clear that even if we dramatically improve the overall navigation with a series of dashboards, you *still* want a reverse chronological view. So we're providing a clear link to that from the home page. Second, we'd assumed that to make the dashboards as scan-able as possible, we should omit author names; but you've told us again that author names really matter. So we're restoring them. And third, you've told us that the home page doesn't feel alive enough without the constant bubbling of new headlines in real time.
Thank you again for your help, input and patience.
David
What's Changed on the Seeking Alpha Website?
There are some wierd theories floating round here: our goal is simply to build the best possible service for our readers. We're not trying to "get you" to do anything (and certainly not to register or give us information for our own purposes). We want to give the different groups what's best for them.
According to what you've written, you don't have a group of stocks or portfolio that you track, you're not interested in following particular authors, you're not interested in news about the market, and you don't want any sort of filtering or sorting of articles. That makes you an important group of readers for us, but a minority.
We got extensive feedback on the old home page, and found that as the volume of articles we publish rises, a large group of readers were alienated by the feeling that the old home page was "overwhelming.&qu... They wanted more help identifying the most topical or best articles. That, for example, is why we've given greater prominence to "Most Popular" on the new home page.
Similarly, an extremely large group wants to be able to track our articles on stocks or authors they follow in a watchlist or with email alerts. To provide that most effectively, we need to be able to store their choices, and that means requiring registration.
The good news is that we can cater to every group. We'll provide a home page for you guys that shows you a stream of articles with author names in reverse chronological order. That stream can be entirely unfiltered and can show author names as it did before.
Because this was the functionality that we removed, it's not surprising that this is the focus of all the comments here. And that's exactly why we invited feedback: our testing and analysis of our site stats can show what's best for the majority of our users, but can miss the needs of an important groups.
That's why your feedback is helpful and important, and allows us to provide what you'd like.