Category Archives: Uncategorized

Purdafash… user contributed sting operations & exposes

Armed with an explosive name, Purdafash is aiming to become in the citizen journalism space, what Tehelka.com is to mainstream media. Started by people with smart academic credentials– an IIM Calcutta graduate, an IIT Kharagpur engineer and a graduate student in journalism, Purdafash is the aiming to become the epicenter on the web for sharing or reading tell-all stories. These could be political, social, or personal in nature, but where the focus is on rallying public opinion for a just cause. Purdafash is not a non-profit venture; it’s founders describe it as a social-entrepreneurship initiative. They want to give a voice to the common masses in Indian, whose problems may not be deemed newsworthy by the conventional media.

Their revenue model is advertising based; in future, they plan to have a revenue sharing deal with people uploading stories for selling it to mainstream media, with that person getting a majority share of the deal.



So how does this work?
Registered users can upload accounts of problems they are facing accompanied by videos, pictures etc. Others can read these stories and reach out to the contributors in case they can help. In case the story strikes a chord with the masses, Purdafash will attempt to bring it to the notice of the mainstream media, who otherwise might not be aware of it. This is their editorial policy where they have laid out the ground rules for what kind of content is accepted by them, and the kind of moderation they might do.

Check out some samples stories – this video of how autorickshaw meters are tampered in Delhi, this video for an expose of the conspiracy behind the death of an advocate in Allahabad and this one about the Union Carbide gas victims in Bhopal.

FlockPod… social on-the-spot intercation on the webpage

Flockpod is a very useful idea. It defines itself as a social interaction pod – i.e. a small place on any webpage where people get together and interact on-the-spot.. It functions like an Ajax lightbox, but is Flash based. The idea behind FlockPod is to provide a space on any webpage itself (without having to navigate elsewhere) for users to collaborate and interact right on-the-spot, to share ideas, opinions, questions or even debate. FlockPod comes from a Pune based sofwtare company called Harbinger Knowledge.

To integrate Flockpod into your website, you need to apply for an account, which is free upto 5 users in a pod. Beyond this, you need to pay by writing to their sales team. You do not need to install any software, just insert the icon in your webpage. Users visiting the webpage can bring up the pod by clicking the icon. The system works on standard browsers – IE, Firefox & Safari. Every Flockpod has a name and users can be a member of one or more Flockpods. Users can be members of multiple Flockpods and you can switch between the different pods that you are a member of. The different tasks that you can do in a FlockPod are called Flocktivities and five Flocktivities are currently supported- debate, spot poll, link sets, FAQ & tagcloud. Screeshots below… (to see a FlockPod in action go here)

FlockPod is a neat idea- it is refreshingly new and does something that can actually help users. However there are a few factors that might hinder its widespread adoption. Firstly, it suffers from feature overload- there are just too many buttons, controls etc on the interface, as a result what is actually useful is lost in the overloaded UI. If I had to build this, I’d slash the number of features by half. Secondly, I think that FlockPod’s business model is completely aligned in a B2B direction (e.g. send email to sales team for increasing the number of subscribers) whereas the service looks primarily B2C. Those two segments have completely different usage drivers. And lastly, I think there is just too much jargon floating around their application – Pod, FlockPod, Flocktivity (this one is actually a tongue twister!), FlockSign etc. Every new word poses a cognitive challenge for users to understand its meaning and decipher its usage. I think they would be much better off using words in plain, simple English. Just some food for thought for the Flockpod team….