Tag Archives: Jay Adelson

Former Digg CEO Jay Adelson Launches A New Revision3 Program Called “Ask Jay”


Revision3 co-founder and former Digg CEO Jay Adelson is a seasoned business veteran. He has launched a new podcast under the Revision3 brand called Ask Jay where he gives start-up tips. You can submit questions to Jay Adelson at askjay@revision3.com. Adelson is currently the CEO of SimpleGeo.
[blackbirdpie url="http://twitter.com/#!/jayadelson/status/100972172280995841"]

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Former Digg CEO Jay Adelson Joins SimpleGeo As Chief Executive


After a hiatus from working as a tech executive, former Digg CEO Jay Adelson has joined SimpleGeo as the new CEO. Founding CEO Matt Galligan will become the Chief Strategy Officer of the company. SimpleGeo raised about $10 million in venture capital and it allows companies to add location features to geo-location applications. He will be working with former Digg employees Joe Stump and Jeffrey Kalmikoff at the company. [TechCrunch]

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Digg Cutting 10% Of Their Staff


Social bookmarking service Digg.com will be cutting 10% of their staff. The company has a little over 70 employees as of right now. About a month ago Jay Adelson stepped down from the CEO position and was replaced by founder Kevin Rose. Below is an e-mail that Rose sent out to employees:

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Digg CEO Jay Adelson Steps Down, Possibly Out Of Conflict


Digg.com receives about 37 million unique visitors per month making it a top 20 website [Compete.com]. Jay Adelson has been the CEO of Digg.com for years, but the original concept was created by Kevin Rose. Eventually this became a conflict and so Adelson announced that he is stepping down from the company. “One of us will leave the company,” said Kevin Rose in a conversation with Michael Arrington.

Kevin Rose has not been seen regularly around the office “in about a year” according to a Digg source. Keval Desai was managing the product mostly. Desai joined Digg from Google last November.

Kevin Rose will be filling in Jay Adelson’s role as the CEO of the company that he had built from the ground up. One of Rose’s frustrations includes the fact that the company has no iPad strategy, but many other media companies have already jumped on board. [TechCrunch]

Below are the official statements made by Kevin Rose and Jay Adelson:
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3Crowd Technologies Receives Funding From Storm, Greenwich, Kevin Rose, and Jay Adelson

3Crowd Technologies announced that they have funding from Storm Ventures, Greenwich Technology Associates, Kevin Rose (Digg.com founder), and Jay Adelson (Digg.com CEO). 3Crowd was founded by Barrett Lyon, co-founder and former CTO of BitGravity. 3Crowd is in stealth mode, but the company claims to change crowdsourcing. The funding amount is in the form of a convertible note and it is unknown how much is involved.

Kevin Rose and Jay Adelson were customers of BitGravity for Revision3.com which is how the two know Lyon. Revision3 is a video service that Kevin Rose and Jay Adelson founded together that hosts shows such as DiggNation and The Totally Rad Show.

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Rose Admits DiggBar Is Similar To StumbleUpon, Homepage Still Lacks Diversity

kevin-rose
Once upon a time it was every blogger’s dream to see one of their posts make it to the Digg.com homepage.  That is up until other social media websites started making Digg.com irrelevant such as Reddit, Mixx, StumbleUpon, etc.  I’ve seen the benefits of becoming popular on StumbleUpon a few times and have al seen the benefits of becoming popular on Digg several times.

Personally I prefer becoming popular on StumbleUpon since the traffic slows down after a few days, but it never goes away.  Even after becoming popular on StumbleUpon several months ago, you’ll still get thousands of hits every month from StumbleUpon.  Digg popularity just stays for a couple days and the traffic just goes away.

Late last month, I wrote about how Digg was secretly developing a web toolbar of their own to emulate the success of StumbleUpon and TinyURL.  In an interview with Wired, Digg executives Kevin Rose and Jay Adelson acknowledged the development of the DiggBar. When Wired asked Rose to explain the DiggBar, here is how he responded:

It’s not out yet, but it’s coming soon. Basically, it’s a small, framed bar, it’s not software you install.

It turns Digg into a short URL provider, so now all of our links will be, for example digg.com/8357. When you go to one of these shortened URLs, it draws a really thin bar across the top.

You get the full destination site underneath it, but you also get this thin bar at the top that allows you to Digg it, to see the hot comments on that story, to see related content to the article you’re viewing beneath it. There’s also a “random” button that gives you Stumble Upon-type functionality that takes you to random sites around the web.

If you want to create a Diggbar, just go into your browser’s address bar. Leave the full URL in there for the site you’re currently browsing, and just type “digg.com/” in front of that and hit Enter. We take that entire URL, process it, turn it into a short URL, then bring you back to the page with the Diggbar and the full original site beneath it.

You get redirected to the short URL, so you can grab it and copy it. We also have icons on the Diggbar to post to Facebook and Twitter. It’s just a great way to spread our content to the most popular microblogging services.

I think that this toolbar would actually be a value-add to Digg.com if only they could solve the bias that they have towards certain websites.  In the middle of last month I did a 7-day study on which sites appear the most on Digg.com’s technology section.  It turned out that 8 websites control over 30% of Digg’s technology section.

Soshable.com did a similar study yesterday.  It turns out that they found out that 46% of the Digg front page is controlled by 50 websites.  Below is a list of the top 30 “whitelisted” sites that become popular on Digg on a regular basis.

“In many ways, Digg has become the personal RSS feed for sites like TorrentFreak, xkcd, and Cracked as the vast majority of submissions from these and other sites will hit the front page regardless of the submitter,” stated the Soshable editor that put together the study.
30-digg
As every day passes I become less interested in Digg and more interested in StumbleUpon.  What are your thoughts?  Leave a comment.

[via Wired]

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