It’s been a big month for news about personalized news (and February isn’t even half over). You’d think a startup like DailyMe with several years invested in building and evolving its Newstogram platform for dynamic personalization would want to keep the space to itself, but we’re excited that so many others are deciding to enter the fray. It validates the importance of delivering personally relevant news experiences to each user in a digital world and it demonstrates the power of participating in our network approach vs. the cost and effort of building a standalone system yourself.

Among the latest to announce or launch personalized news products:

The New York Times quietly rolled out a page of “Articles Recommended for You.” So far, I haven’t seen any promotion of it on the main site, just news coverage of it. If you visit the page, you’ll need to log in, view several articles and wait a day for recommendations to appear. My experience has been that most of the recommendations are on target with my interests, but today’s top pick was “Museum and Gallery Listings” even though my interests displayed on the right were all technology, business and sports related, with not a hint of arts. Perhaps that’s why it’s still kept low key.

The Washington Post let out some details of a new site called Trove, though it’s still in private beta and supposedly won’t launch until next month. Coverage in The Wall Street Journal noted: “Media executives say the holy grail of online news is a service that tailors the experience to each reader as effectively as sites like Amazon and Pandora do for books and music.” It also noted that “news is more difficult than other products to gear to individual preferences.” I couldn’t agree more. The project reportedly has a development team of 20 people and the company is investing $5 million to $10 million. The article didn’t say if that includes the cost of its purchase iCurrent last year.

A bit more vaporware-ish (launch targeted at “first half of the year”) is the Yahoo! announcement of “Livestand.” The project is described as a publishing platform for mobile devices that will be offered to other publishers as well as present Yahoo! content. Like other efforts, Yahoo! also claims it will be personalized based on the kinds of content you consume, much as the Yahoo! home page is tailored to each user’s interests. While this might work well for Yahoo! content, I’ll be interested to see if other publishers want their articles mixed into a personalized blend of news from different sources or if they prefer to keep their content within a walled garden.

The NYT and Post seem intrigued enough by personalized news that they are hedging their bets on their own efforts and investing in other similar projects. Both are investors in Ongo, a paid iPad app that is both customizable (user must create topics of interest) and ad-free. The Times also spun off a social-stream-based personalization project called News.Me into Betaworks, which is building it out for release soon.

And its not just the big players who are expanding their personalized offerings. My6Sense, which already has a neat iPhone app that tailors your RSS and social feeds using “digital intuition,” announced a Chrome browser extension that uses a similar approach to prioritize your Twitter stream.

If I wake up tomorrow to even more announcements of personalized news products, I guess I won’t think it’s Ground Hog Day all over.

From @neilbudde’s recent blog post over on Newstogram.com
Well shucks, guys–it seems to be just a bunch of words and topics I’ve mentioned in Tweets over the last few years, connected by lines. Doesn’t really convince me that you understand that much about me and what I want to read.

—from Liz Gannes’ article about Gravity’s plans to personalize any content site

Liz’s reaction to Gravity’s interest graph for her was similar to my own experience when using Gravity’s Twinterest application. It is definitely possible to infer someone’s interests from their Twitter account by analyzing their posts and who they follow. However the way Gravity is doing it—-seemingly ignoring sentiment and frequency, and without a ‘whitelist’ of interests—-is not leading to good results so far. 

The company that can get inside my head and deliver tailored recommendations or know what I want without being too stalkerish can walk away with a lot of money.
There will always be a place for mass marketing, but in the next three- to five-years, a website that isn’t tailored to a specific user’s interest will be an anachronism

—Facebook COO Sheryl Sandberg, speaking to Arianna Huffington at an Advertising Week event earlier this week (Full report at PaidContent).

I totally agree with Sandberg’s premise. I also think her timing is probably about right. While the technology to deliver a site that is tailored to a user’s interests already exists (whether through Facebook’s Instant Personalization or DailyMe’s Newstogram solution), publishers seem to be taking a ‘slowly, slowly’ approach to letting personalization power a significant part of their sites.

Neil Budde on the personalized news ‘nut’

My colleague Neil Budde wrote a great post on the Newstogram blog today.

It’s so good I decided to reblog the entire post below, but you should still head over to the Newstogram blog if you want to join the discussion.

We’ve cracked the nut and it’s not even close to 2015

“Delivering news digitally in a personalized manner is a nut many a startup – as well as many established Internet companies and publishers – are desperately trying to crack.”

That’s the way TechCrunch began an article this week about another company entering the personalized news arena. Earlier in the week, we learned that The Washington Post Co. had purchased personalized news venture iCurrent. A week or so earlier, Google News rolled out some modest customization features.

Clearly, the field of personalized news is getting hot. Which makes us glad that DailyMe and our Newstogram platform have a three-year headstart and a unique approach. We’re not desperately trying to crack the nut, we have the nut cracked and are rolling Newstogram out on a range of news and information sites.

Personalization of news has been kicked around for a while. MIT Media Lab founder Nicholas Negroponte described a virtual daily newspaper customized for an individual’s tastes in his 1995 book, “Being Digital.” He called it The Daily Me, a term we later adopted for our company, though he has nothing to do with DailyMe Inc.

In a commentary written for The Wall Street Journal last December, Google CEO Eric Schmidt described a device for news that “knows who I am, what I like, and what I have already read. So while I get all the news and comment, I also see stories tailored for my interests.” In his article, Schmidt imagined such a device being available in 2015.

In our view, 2015 is already here.

Newstogram already is serving up personalized news to users of sites like Variety.com and Impre.com and through several modules on DailyMe.com. Our approach of tracking and analyzing the content users consume and using the resulting individual interest profiles to make recommendations has outperformed other approaches in tests and we continue to improve and refine our algorithms.

We welcome the additional interest in news personalization, because it only serves to highlight our position as the leader in the field.

Publishers are increasingly investing in technologies to either replace — or at least support — the work of editors.
MediaPost’s Gavin O’Malley reporting on the Washington Post’s acquisition of personalized news aggregation site iCurrent (“Washington Post Gets Personal With iCurrent Acquisition”).
When you are done, you’ll see News for You, a stream of articles automatically tailored for your interests.

The promise of the ‘new and improved’ Google News (see the video here)

It still seems like a lot of set-up work to me but I love that Google is making personalization such a prominent part of the Google News experience.

The bottom line is that tailoring content based on the interests I’ve exhibited on your site is top-notch personalization that demonstrates class.

via Morgan Stewart’s Dear [Insert First Name Here] on MediaPost

A few weeks old but I totally agree with the sentiment…. adding a name to an email doesn’t make it personalized or relevant (since pretty much every spammer does that these days), the way to make emails valuable to people is to make content relevant to their interests.

The right approach to the content business is to KNOW YOUR AUDIENCE, or the people that come to your site, and create a product for THEM. AOL’s approach is clearly not centered on this. I guess it could be argued that it’ll drive up page views and therefore, revenue but that’s not likely to last as the industry becomes more analytics savvy. Today, a million uniques with zero session times, high bounce rate and no repeat visitors isn’t seen as a sign of a lack of audience but in the not too distant future it will.
…from a post today by Daily Patricia after AOL announced another new strategy.
Google now appears to be going full throttle on personalization, choosing it as the way forward to improve relevance and usefulness.