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Transcript
Page 1: The Business of APIs 2009 - Active Network

Intro

Opening Active Data Jeremy Thomas Director of Product Development, Active.com

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About Active.com

Circa 1998: La Jolla, CA

Map provided by Google Maps

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About Active.com

1020 Prospect Street

Map provided by Google Maps

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About Active.com

Circa 1999…

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About Active.com

Circa 2000…

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About Active.com

Then we upgraded (circa 2003)…

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About Active.com

And again (circa 2007)…

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About Active.com

Which brings us to today

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The Chiefs

Active is run by these guys:

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Acquisitions

And they’ve acquired a few companies over the years:

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About Active.com

2009: North America, China Australia, UK

Map provided by Google Maps

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Data

Together we are called , and we produce a lot of data. –  Events –  Event Reviews –  Classes –  Training Plans –  Registrant Details –  Leagues –  Memberships –  High school Sports Rankings –  Race Results –  Campsites –  Hunting/Fishing licensing

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More Data

•  Over 500,000 events are added to active.com annually.

•  We process over 40,000,000 transactions per year (event registrations, hunting/fishing license purchases, etc.).

•  We rank 99% of high school football and lacrosse teams in the United States

•  We rank in Comescore’s top 10 sports properties.

•  We serve over 1,000,000,000 page views/year.

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Closed Data

Most of this data was protected and closed.

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Open Data

But we needed it to be more open.

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Why Open Data?

Prime Directive: Build the World’s Largest Directory of Things to Do

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Why Open Data?

Cross-silo communication

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Why Open Data?

Integration with Business Partners.

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Internal Campaign

To do this, I had to talk to this guy about our options.

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Internal Campaign

And he was convinced by:

•  the “head” and “shoulder” argument (borrowed from Oren Michaels), not the Longtail Argument

•  Easier Divisional Integration

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Internal Campaign

So we worked with Mashery to setup an API Gateway.

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Open for Businesses

We opened the API to business partners. I tweeted the fact that we were working on an API, and…

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Programmableweb.com

The community became interested. Somebody put us on programmableweb.com (it wasn’t me).

http://www.programmableweb.com/api/active

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Developer Community

And they tweeted about the possibilities.

http://twitter.com/dtyler21/status/790344865

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Developer Community

They wanted to build: – race calendars – mountain biking websites –  iPhone event search apps – high school sports ranking widgets –  tennis tournament finders –  things to do near you widgets – campground finders

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Developer Community

So what do we do with these developers who are interested in our data?

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Community

Talk this guy, ,into opening the door to a few of them to see what happens.

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Community

We screen every API key request.

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Open for Developers

•  With no formal marketing, we have over 130 Registered API users since March, 2009.

•  Developer-originated traffic is a bonus, but will have material impact (5-10% increase in pageviews) in 2010 through: –  Increased publicity through social media. –  API-focused B2B relationships through targeted

content distribution. –  Stronger API portfolio including easy to consume

widgets. –  Self-sustaining API community.

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Active.com API

Thanks!

Jeremy Thomas Director of Product Development, Active.com

twitter.com/jgrahamthomas community.active.com/blogs/productdev

Several photos came from istockphoto.com, and the maps on slide 2 and 3 are from Google. Old screenshots came from archive.org.


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