Shelby.tv/blog

Month

June 2013

4 posts

Shelby.TV — Sit back, relax, and just watch.

Your web video experience is exhausting. Clicking in and out of YouTube, across your social web, discovering great videos among disparate Tweets and scattered Facebook updates. It takes time and energy — we believe we can make that easier for you.

We’re very excited to announce that as of today, your video experience is both simpler and smarter with the latest update to Shelby TV. 

Shelby TV now delivers you a single stream of video, tailored to your interests, influenced by your friends.

So, What’s Really New Here?

In addition to rolling out a new and improved landing page on Friday, we’ve made some more changes in this simpler, more streamlined Shelby, including:

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Simplified Sharing

  • Sharing video has never been easier. Share a video in your stream with followers on Shelby or to your Facebook and Twitter friends with just one click. Just click the Share button and add a comment and you can easily share the video to multiple networks from one place.  We’ve also added a shortlink field in case you feel like sending a video to a friend in an IM or an email.

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The Right Recommendations

  • Each video you watch, like, and share will sharpen our ability to deliver the videos that you want to see, when you want to see them. Your Shelby stream will get better every time you use it.

New “Community” Stream

  • Discover what Shelby’s community of awesome curators are sharing in one place. It’s constantly updated, so every time you sign into Shelby you’ll see the latest videos trending in our community.

New “Me” Section

  • See your your shares, likes and the list of people you follow in the redesigned “me” section. We’ve updated the section so you can quickly and easily find the content and friends you’re looking for.

And Yes, There’s More

The promise of Shelby has always been about delivering a simpler, better video experience. We’re doubling down on efforts to surface some of the great technology we’ve built to make your Shelby stream more intelligent. Stay tuned — and in the meantime, please do let us know what you think!

Happy Watching,

Edon

-in community-

Jun 18, 20139 notes
Shelby TV Storms WWDC — Here's What We're Hoping For

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With Apple’s WWDC starting within the hour, the Shelby team is so excited to have three of our own out there. 

Speculation has been high on what Apple will announce, and the blog 9to5Mac has even released what they believe to be the newly designed icons for iOS 7. 

But as always, Apple has stayed true to its promise for total secrecy. 

Curious to know what what are our attendees expect to see? Keep reading — and be sure to follow @Shelby to get the full scoop as we see it on-the-ground. 

 

Reece P, CEO and Apple Fanboy 

What are you expecting from WWDC this year? 

This year, by the grace of a faulty ticketing system, I find myself with a ticket to WWDC. My expectations are pretty high for the event itself, given that Keren has been endlessly raving about it since the first day I met her! That being said, the rumor mill is flabbergasted this year as most don’t know what’s coming our way … with that in mind, I think we might see some revs to the Apple TV software that open up, or at least hint at, opening up an app ecosystem … and I would jump out of my seat if I’m right!

What’s the one feature you really want to see launched at WWDC? 

See above … I put money on it!

Heard any cool rumors ahead of the event worth sharing? 

I heard Dan is going to rush the stage at Tim Cook’s keynote on Monday morning.

 

Dan S, CTO and Proud iOS Builder 

What’s the one feature you really want to see launched at WWDC? 

​I want an app ecosystem for developers on Apple TV. I don’t care if it remains a hobby. Let us take it to the next level. 

Beyond that, I’d like to see lots of XCode improvements. Fix IB. Make project file merges suck less. Let me run simulator for 7 days without clang errors. ​ REMEMBER MY DEFAULTS WHEN CREATING NEW FILES. Simplify core data merges.  Et cetera.  

Heard any cool rumors ahead of the event worth sharing? 

Heard Apple is buying lots of 4k displays. That’s fun. Also know that Johnny Ive is running shit, which excites me very much :-]​

Any messages you plan on delivering to the senior folks at Apple this week? 

I will hug Tim. He’s doing a fine job. Folks need to relax a bit. He’s not Steve. Doesn’t mean he’s a fail. 

 

Keren P, iOS Ninja 

What are you looking forward to at WWDC this year? 

The Keynote, the sessions, the labs, meeting developers from all over the world and of course, a kickass iOS7.

What’s the one feature you really want to see launched at WWDC? 

A better integration of Core Data and iCloud.

Anything else you’re looking forward to? 

Of course being one of the few women in attendance, its always fun watching the guys stand in line for the bathroom while the women’s bathroom is empty nearly all the time.  

 

(Image courtesy of Apple)

Jun 10, 20134 notes
4 Things We Learned About The Video Ad Industry This Week

Yeah, Apple TV and YouTube are important — especially when looking at the consumer-facing ecosystem of web video.

But do you know what else is important?

Advertising. More specifically, the future of the advertising industry and how its coping with and dictating the structural shifts taking place in the world of video and TV.  

This week, Reece and I attended the VideoNuze Video Ad Summit here in NYC, which was a great opportunity to reflect on and think about some big shifts in the advertising landscape.  

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So, what did we learn?

  • High prices for TV advertising are actually hurting the web video advertising business. Group M’s Michael Bologna underscored the fact that TV advertisers are essentially paying the same or more for less return in TV (since ratings are falling). They’re mitigating this with some spend in online video advertising, but overall they’re left with less available dollars since they’re using more of their budget for TV.  In this way, TV’s high prices are actually slowing the move to a better monetized video ad ecosystem. Crazy, right?
  • Tablets and video interactivity are changing the video ad landscape, but it’s going to take a while. When asked about what the biggest change in the advertising landscape will be over the next 5 years, panelists indicated that the shift to tablet and increase in interactivity of video will be leading the charge. Almost all of the panelists thought that big change in the video advertising industry would take even longer than 5 years, though, largely due to the current incentive structures.
  • The traditional video ad industry (TV) is significantly complicated by the addition of web video advertising and multiple devices. Advertisers care a lot about who they are reaching specifically. Traditionally, it’s been easy to define the “who” by looking at households. Now, in an ecosystem where consumers often have multiple devices and methods of accessing content, it’s often hard for advertisers to know who they are reaching within the household and whether they are over-exposing or underexposing people to any given ad. To solve this, the ad industry needs better standardization and transparency between the TV and web worlds, both of which will take some time.
  • YouTube is betting big on skippable ads. YouTube exec Kathryn Friedrich talked about why Google is using skippable ads: though Google has a lot of data on who watches video, they consider a skippable ad to be the most targeted type of ad. In this model, 100% of people who watch the ad wanted to see the ad. As a result, the skippable ad format forces advertisers to create compelling content and tell better stories in their ads.

So what does this all mean for a consumer video experience?

At the end of the day, advertising is a necessary part of the world of video content. Think about it: even though many people pay for cable TV, they still see ads alongside the content. It’s important to acknowledge that advertising will continue to play an important part in shaping the future of the industry. The good news is that consumer needs are increasingly being considered and that will likely lead to a better advertising experience for everyone involved.

/chris 

Jun 6, 20134 notes
Long live YouTube. Or not?

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YouTube dominates in video hosting, but that won’t be the case forever. Competition will emerge from both likely and unlikely players. And that’s a GOOD thing.

Is the demise of YouTube closer than we think?

Crazy question. Let me back up.

YouTube is an amazing platform. Certainly the most impactful platform in online video to date. So much of our world is shared via YouTube videos - at this point, 100 hours of video are uploaded to YouTube per minute! Its growth, in terms of content and viewership, is second to none…

But NO ONE, even YouTube, can keep that up forever.

Already, we are seeing signs of attrition on YouTube, as guys like Jason Calacanis leave the platform for better opportunity elsewhere. In a takedown post he penned on Sunday, Jason goes into the depth of why YouTube is amazing … and why he turned down YouTube’s funding for the greater opportunity of striking out on his own.

Jason is not the first, but his departure is a strong indicator for anyone in the video ecosystem and it became a double whammy when a rumor surfaced that outright video-hosting competition will soon emerge from the likes of Maker Studios, which has built its entire business to date ON YouTube. 

So … What might the future hold? 

Competition is coming.

  • My prediction is that we’ll see a blend of different types of competitors. Some existing (Vimeo, Blip), some climbing the ladder of the disruptive innovation model (Maker, Machinima, et al), and some completely new.

Competition will come from all sides.

  • How could anyone compete with YouTube you ask? Yes - video is expensive to host and stream, but data continues to get cheaper by the second. More importantly, a new competitor doesn’t have to compete with ALL of YouTube. If Machinima, Maker, Fullscreen or any one of them break free, taking their talent and channels with them, they could focus all of their effort on building a new platform - JUST FOR THEIR AUDIENCE - with all the bells and whistles they’ve always wanted, and never had, with YouTube. Just imagine how much the audience would love it?! (Guess what? We’ve seen this story before). Finally, and most importantly, there IS at least one competitor with deep enough pockets to play this game at scale, and that’s Facebook. Yup. I think Facebook is getting sick of watching YouTube videos be so dominant in their News Feed, meanwhile video ad CPMs are the best ad rates on the web and they want a piece of that pie.

Competition is great for video and viewers alike.

  • Really. It is. With YouTube dominating this space, commanding ~50% of any revenues right off the bat, it’s nearly impossible for content creators to make a real business. Competition doesn’t necessarily fix all of these things, but new entrants mean new ideas, and teams put to the test will have to come up with innovative business solutions to accompany their great tech. And more importantly, it’s better for the consumer -  the person who just wants to see great video, and wants an easy way to do it.

From my perspective, this could all be great for the ecosystem, even necessary for a balanced, healthy existence, but it’s not going to happen overnight and it’s certainly not going to follow any particular script that we’ve seen before.

All us little guys can do is embrace the chaos and change of the industry, while creating our own value for you viewers at home.

/reece

(image courtesy of Flickr, Rego - d4u.hu)

Jun 5, 20134 notes

May 2013

4 posts

D11 - Apple’s iTV Coming Soon, but Tim Cook’s Silence is Deafening

[by Reece]

Like many of us who are obsessively tracking the TV/video industry, I took the time to watch Tim Cook’s interview with Kara Swisher and Walt Mossberg yesterday at D11. In particular, the conversation starting at ~10 minutes when Swisher shoots at Cook with “Let’s talk about television…” It’s worth watching, but it leaves me wondering, is Cook’s reticence accidentally setting expectations for Apple TV way too high?

Cook’s response to Swisher, as has been Apple’s canned response for a long time, was that it’s still a hobby, his exact line being “We’re still playing in TV through Apple TV.” But he then goes on to illustrate all the demand (+13M devices sold - almost half in the last year), as well as everything Apple has learned from the Apple TV as an MVP, and finally says “There are lots of things about the TV experience that can be better… we answered some of those, clearly not all of those, and we’re going to continue to make that better.”

From that, and all the other rumors, we know Apple’s going to do more than just “play” in this space. They’re going to come in guns blazing, aimed at full disruption… 

…But what does that actually look like? 

In the preamble to this discussion, Cook says “We have some incredible plans… we have incredible ideas…” but when Swisher and Mossberg press him on what. those. ideas. are… he just stonewalls with “I don’t want to go into detail…”

Point is, Steve Jobs had a charisma and story around him that made you think “oh man… whatever Jobs delivers is going to be great.” Cook, on the other hand, doesn’t have that same natural gift (and it’s honestly ridiculous for Apple fans to expect it), but by dodging questions the way he does, I really fear that he’s setting expectations too high for himself, and for the future iTV. 

The most he said was that the TV experience hasn’t been brought up to speed with this decade, which is mostly true as far as selecting channels/programming guides etc., but that’s really not enough. The market demands a serious wow-factor in this next product. Xbox One is going after fancy features, but like I’ve said, the real win is a robust developer ecosystem.

If anything, Cook needs to start planting the seeds of a real vision for the eventual iTV… Hell, he doesn’t even need to plant them, he just needs to let the world know that he has the vision! Cable subscriptions disrupted! Digital hearth of the modern home! Whatever it is… tease it out a bit like Jobs used to. Who cares if it’s misleading? Just get an idea out there, otherwise the rumor mill will keep churning out expectations and hype-fatigue that Apple can’t meet.

May 30, 20133 notes
#apple #apple tv #tv #shelby #shelbytv #tech #television
Top 10 Most Viewed Web Video Sites

YouTube, Facebook and VEVO are the top 3 most viewed video sites on the web, according to the video rankings released by comScore yesterday. The full list, below: 

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According to their monthly rankings, overall video views are down this month, with 181.9 million unique viewers watching 28.8 billion videos, compared to 182.5 million viewers watching 39.3 billion videos in March. 

But comScore doesn’t track mobile or connected TV views in its rankings, and the decline could indicate a shift by viewers from desktop to mobile. 

Where do you consume your video — desktop, mobile/tablet, connected TV, or good old broadcast? 

May 23, 20131 note
Xbox One: Evolutionary, Not Revolutionary for Video

Yesterday, Microsoft finally demo’d their new “game center,” The Xbox One. It comes complete with HDMI Pass-thru for cable and satellite; Blu-ray player for HD movies, a trending content section of videos your friends are watching; capacity to Skype while watching TV, movies, and videos; tons of memory to store all your movies, TV shows, and music; and slick voice/gesture controls to navigate through your movies and TV shows without the remote… All in all, an amazing way to experience all of your favorite… games, err… videos, movies, and TV.

That’s right, Microsoft recognized that people spend more total time watching video than playing games on their current box and designed Xbox One to cater directly to this habit. The result is a full on “entertainment center.” Sure, you can play games on it too, but that’s not the point. 

From its industrial design - shaped like a cable box - to its UX - the ability to “pin” favorite shows to your home screen - this is a big move by Microsoft to own the digital hearth of the modern home… that means, going beyond hard-core gamers and making the Xbox One all about TV and entertainment. 

Don’t believe me? Just watch the highlights of the keynote.

Clearly, Microsoft’s commander’s intent is to own the digital living room. As everyone in the space knows, it’s an all-out war for your TV between the likes of Samsung, Google, Amazon, Roku, Boxee, the cable operators, and oh yeah, that fruit company.

But this update by Microsoft isn’t as revolutionary as it seems. Yes, the tech itself is a step forward and the social integrations will be interesting, but it’s not that disruptive to the actual video industry. It still requires a cable subscription and the VOD experience just isn’t there. Really, it’s evolutionary… an upgrade to their tech with (classically) lots of features to fill out the tech specs on the back of the box.

The real win in this space will be a disruptive move for consumers on their cable subscription AND/OR a robust app ecosystem that allows smart, creative developers to build the next generation experiences for these amazing devices. Look no further than the iOS developer ecosystem to see what I mean.

At the end of the day, I’m still excited about the Xbox One. I’m not a gamer, but any move to make my TV more powerful, more alive, and (ironically) more human,** is a good one in my mind. While it’s still lacking the developer ecosystem I’d like to see, it’s another step in the right direction of making TV suck less.

That being said, I am still betting on Apple to open up an app ecosystem - whether it’s on their current device or on a giant 60 inch screen - and when they do, it’s going to be awesome. 

What do you think?

 

Links:

Wired: Xbox One Revealed

Xbox One

Videonuze: Pretty Face but No Fundamental TV Disruption

 

** Yes. Voice navigation > crappy remote control on scale of humanness and Skype integration will be interesting for sure.

May 22, 20136 notes
#xboxone #xbox #TV #warfortv #shelbytv
Wondering What We've Been Up To?

It’s been a while since we’ve said much here, but I can assure it’s not for lack of activity. We’ve been busy building the new infrastructure of Shelby TV — your hub for videos that matter to you, your friends, and the world around you.

But with spring in full swing, there are a few things worth mentioning, so here’s what’s been up!

Starting today, we’re sharing new videos you’ll love on Twitter, Facebook, and Google+. 

Fueling these updates is our most recent addition to the team: Edon Ophir, who comes to us by way of Waze and FashionTV. Edon is great — passionate and thoughtful — and is here to serve as your Community Manager. Any and all questions, concerns, or suggestions, Edon is your guy.

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Also joining the team is James Aviaz, our resident Australian and Marketing Specialist, who joins us from Songtrust, by way of Uber. I’ve known James for a while personally, I love his passion for great online content, and I am super excited to work with him as he focuses on refining the Shelby TV story and how to tell that to the world.

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So, what more can you expect from us in the months to come?

Firstly, video that matters to you. Shelby TV is still the best way to build your personal channel of video, but occasionally we’ll share some of the standout vids. For instance, have you seen “This Is Water“ yet? If not, do yourself a favor and watch now.

Secondly, we spend a lot of time thinking about the video ecosystem and its rapid changes. If you’re interested in the future of TV, stay tuned to this space.

Finally, and most importantly, we’ll keep you posted on Shelby TV itself. Product updates, sneak peeks at new features, and opportunities to make a direct impact on Shelby TV. After all, it’s you who powers Shelby TV and the future of video.

Happy Viewing,

Reece

Twitter | Facebook | Google+

May 17, 201310 notes

April 2013

1 post

House of Cards: The Content Wars Are A Game of Thrones

chriskurdziel:

House of Cards has gotten a ton of attention lately for a few reasons:

  • It’s an awesome show (though I haven’t seen it yet)
  • All episodes were delivered at the same time (to satisfy binge viewers)
  • It’s another major step for Netflix in delivering unique content to keep viewers locked into their model

Why is this model smart?

Content providers can use exclusive content to be valuable & differentiate themselves from competitors. Netflix has already done this with Lilyhammer.  They’ve also continued tapping into ”binge viewing” behavior in an organized way.  Although it’s unclear what the biggest benefits of that behavior will be quite yet, they’re learning something valuable by being a first mover here.

People want access to content without restrictions and aside from being the only place to access it, Netflix’s distribution models is working for consumers with a “watch where you want, when you want” mindset.

What are the downsides of this model?

It’s really expensive and only works for top-quality content. Because its so expensive to do it this way (and therefore the costs of failure are high), it only works for top caliber content and therefore isn’t something that will be the only way things are done. It’s why “pilots” exist in TV - see if the audience likes it and then sink more money into it. Episodic content that follows this model also has a benefit of giving viewers a reason to come back to a service. In that sense I think we’ll see these models mix.

Piracy is still going to be a big issue. If you don’t subscribe to Netflix or the service, there’s no way to get the content except pirating it. That’s part of the reason Game of Thrones was pirated a ton (and consequently was so successful). Many of the dynamics in this post on the music industry could also apply to video content. We still haven’t seen a producer of content fully embrace the piracy engine to positive effect yet.

What does this all mean for the people playing this “game of thrones” in the content landscape?

The implications of all of this are good for startups - Americans watch over 5 hours a day of content and not all of it is that “top notch” stuff like House of Cards or Game of Thrones. Startups don’t need to unseat that “top value” content quite yet - they can let this game of thrones happen and focus more on the Torso of TV (read Suster’s post if you haven’t) and create a ton of value around providing meaningful context and discovery for the rest of the video landscape.

Apr 2, 20133 notes
#TV #startups #houseofcards #gameofthrones

March 2013

3 posts

Announcing ChipsAhoy.tv and the The Sweetest Bracket!

As we announced a little while ago, we’ve been working with Chips Ahoy! as a part of Mondelez International’s Mobile Futures program. It’s been super fun to work with the team behind a brand we’ve loved since we were kids, and it’s even better to see that brand dive into working with startups and video in totally new ways. Today we’re excited to announce that Chips Ahoy! now has their very own .TV network just in time for the Sweet Sixteen: ChipsAhoy.tv.

When we were brainstorming ideas for this project with the Chips Ahoy! team, we knew March Madness was coming up and that our favorite thing to do with cookies was “dunk,” but it turns out that sister Mondelez brand, Oreo, has a bit of a “dunkopoly” on the that term. Lauren from the Chips Ahoy! team sent us a ton of Chips Ahoy! cookies, we fell in love with the really sweet Chewy Gooey Chocofudge and The Sweetest Bracket was born!

Chips Ahoy! tapped a few of the hot basketball campuses across the nation and asked the question “What makes your bracket the Sweetest Bracket?”  Some of the students’ answers are pretty fun - we’re excited to show off the results on ChipsAhoy.tv. Check out one of our favorite videos here:

Think you’ve got your own Sweetest Bracket? Record a video, upload it to YouTube and tweet a link to it at @Shelby with #sweetestbracket to star on ChipsAhoy.tv!  While you’re browsing ChipsAhoy.tv you can also scroll down and check out other relevant March Madness content powered by the social web.

Mar 28, 20135 notes
#partnerships #Shelby #mobile futures #.tv
Mar 5, 20131 note
#goats #goat #projectgoats #SXSW
Mar 4, 20135 notes

February 2013

1 post

Announcing FredWilson.tv and Shelby.tv/Experience

Last night at the NYTM, Dan, Henry, and I got on stage to launch some cool products that demonstrate how we envision the future of video, both of which put individuals in control of their experience.

FredWilson.tv

When we first told Fred about Shelby.tv, he immediately asked if someday he could have FredWilson.tv. So we are really excited to finally launch FredWilson.tv. His .tv is a public URL for anyone to see, it’s powered by Shelby, and it pulls all the video he shares on AVC.com, as well as shares to Tumblr and Twitter, into one leanback “TV” experience. If you want to learn about entrepreneurship, venture capital, or startups in general, FredWilson.tv is a great channel to watch. 

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Fred wrote more about it on his blog this morning which I encourage you to read as well. Thanks Fred. Psyched to finally deliver FredWilson.tv!

Shelby.tv/experience

Once we started working on .tv’s, we realized we had the ability to create a TV experience out of any webpage with video.** So Henry built a great proof of concept at Shelby.tv/experience. Here are a couple great examples.

The Periodic Table of Videos is a great blog full of video, but the viewing experience is crap. See it for yourself here: http://periodicvideos.blogspot.com/ Now, go to Experience and hit “Launch” to see how Shelby gives you a “TV” experience for all that great content.

Before:

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After: 

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Here’s another example, this time from the awesome community at Reddit. Here, a bunch of Redditors are sharing favorite videos from Hulu. It looks like this. 

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Throw that into Shelby.tv/Experience and you’ve got a seamless, lean-back channel of great video. 

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This is just a proof of concept, but Shelby.tv/Experience is a great demonstration of how we think about video and where we’re going with Shelby. Try out http://Shelby.tv/experience and http://fredwilson.tv and let us know what you think.

**Technical disclaimer: “Experience” currently only works with static pages, not dynamically loaded pages like YouTube. 

Feb 6, 20137 notes
#.tv #getyour.tv #fredwilson #NYTM

January 2013

5 posts

What it means to "Be human" at Shelby

Yesterday, I tweeted out the following and I wanted to take a minute to expand on the impact of our written values on cultural fit when hiring, as well as the value mentioned, “Be human.”

pro tip: when hiring, having clear core values allows you to quickly assess inbound candidates for cultural fit. @shelby #1 = “Be Human”

January 27, 2013

Our core values - there are eight of them - help define the way we work and live. If you hung out with us for a little while, you’d probably overhear us saying things like “JFBI” or “Be human.” Those are just the sticky little idioms we use day to day, but behind each one is more depth and understanding of a particular value.

They help us stick to our beliefs. They act as guiding lights when making tough decisions. They make it easy to assess potential partners, or in this case, a potential teammates. 

My tweet yesterday, referred to any of the numerous inbound emails I get from job-seekers who are just spraying and praying with their resume. You know what they look like: “To whom it may concern” “Dear hiring manager” “Hey!”… They take no time to get to know or demonstrate knowledge of the person they’re emailing (me), nor our company. This approach essentially begins the relationship as a transaction, and Shelby’s the ATM. Unfortunately, we don’t have time for people who view their career as a “job” or worse, “just a paycheck.”

The best candidates, the people who stand out from the crowd, the people who belong on this team, are the ones who naturally embrace “being human.” Here’s how we define “Be human” at Shelby:

We are all people, with real lives, real passions, and real needs. We are not just “employees” and our users are not just “eyeballs.” So, trust and empathy shine in everything we do - be it the way we listen, the way we pitch, or the way we build.

It sounds so silly sometimes - “You guys need to write down a note to act like a human being?” - but think about how many interactions you have in a given day that are completely inhuman - the lifeless retail transactions, shooting the messenger at customer service, the animalistic race of a commute by car or subway…

By writing it down like this, it cements a human approach in the company culture so that we constantly remember it and hopefully never stray from it as so many companies do with growth. And since growth is what’s expected of us - accelerated growth in particular - it is powerful for us to have a belief system in place through which we can make decisions about who else will join us in building this great and lasting company.

Jan 28, 20139 notes
#startups #behuman #corevalues
Jan 23, 20133 notes
#shelby #team #shelbysummit2013
Shelby Summit 2013

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  • 8 Shelby’ers. 
  • 7 direct hits with snowballs. 
  • 6 pots of coffee. 
  • 5 beds. 
  • 4 meetings. 
  • 3 interns. 
  • 2 days. 
  • 1 hot tub. 
  • 0 connectivity.

The Shelby Summit 2013.

Last week, we held the first annual Shelby Summit — a two day event in which we took the entire team* up North a couple hours to a house in the woods with no wifi/phone service. We revisited our core values, laid out our strategy for 2013, set big goals, both personally and professionally, and had a lot of laughs along the way.

Planning the Summit came together quickly, as Dan and I realized that January is already off to a flying start and if we didn’t take a minute to slow down, it’ll be the second quarter before we knew it. Luckily, our team is small enough that we execute fast and our man Frasher is an ace on AirB’nB, so we found a big old house that was off the grid and booked it.

Prior to leaving, I asked the team to do two things. 

  1. Spend time thinking about goals for 2013. Professionally and personally.
  2. Submit ingredients needed to prepare a course with your partner (both assigned by Dan and I) for our team dinner Thursday night. More on this later.

Most of the team got to the house Wednesday night (the rest came up Thursday AM), and I kicked off the day with some opening remarks, ground rules, and the goal of the Summit: “Get everyone at Shelby aligned and excited for 2013, with clear goals as a product, company, brand, and as individuals.”

We then jumped into a discussion of our core values that we wrote together this past summer. For any startups considering this type of exercise, I highly recommend putting in the time early on, then revisiting them months later to see what holds up and what doesn’t. Based upon our discussion, one core value subsumed another, others evolved to better reflect who we are, but otherwise our values held strong and have directly impacted the way we work since writing them down. Further, having this discussion at the start of the Summit gave us a vocabulary with which to address everything else. 

After a quick lunch, we headed out for a hike around the Ashokan Reservoir. We lucked out with beautiful weather, and had some fun tossing snowballs around.

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The main dish of our Summit was next, with a few hours spent diving deep into our plans for the upcoming year. While Dan and I have a great direction for this, it’s imperative that everyone understands the challenges ahead and commits to the goals we all set as a company. This led to some amazing feedback for us as founders, and I am extremely fortunate to work with this team - passionate people who want to raise the bar. (I know all startups might talk this talk, but this team walks the walk).

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Now for some serious laughs. To prepare dinner, Dan and I assigned everyone to an odd-ball couple - people who don’t work together much or are generally opposites in personality - and gave each team responsibility for a course. No one was to collaborate, so it was a true pot-luck. 

  • Cocktail: “Old Fashioned” by Reece and Frasher
  • Appetizers: Prosciutto Mac’n’Cheese Cupcakes, Salad (dressing not homemade) Gorgonzola/Honey and Fontina Prosciutto Crostinis by Chris and Vincent
  • Main: Grilled meats. Lots of ‘em. Spicy Grilled Mushroom/Eggplant (Henry and Mike)
  • Sides: Salad with Homemade Poppy Seed Dressingand Candied Almonds(!) and Roast Potato & Pepper Hash by Josh and Ian
  • Dessert: Gluten-Free Dark Chocolate and Sea Salt Oatmeal Cookies by Dan and Brendan

image

All I can say, is this team can cook. Lots of pride went into the preparations and everyone enjoyed it, especially Chris and Vincent’s appetizers. [It’s also worth noting that I haven’t laughed that hard, for that long, in a while. My face hurt from laughing so much. This team is hilarious].

We cleaned up our act and hung by the fire for a couple of great games that will remain nameless (so as not to give away the keys to winning for future hires), before settling down for a discussion about goal setting. This involved explaining the S.M.A.R.T framework “Specific, Measurable, Agreed upon, Realistic, Timely” which we then all applied to our individual goals together the next morning. 

Having everyone share their goals out loud was a perfect capstone for the Summit. We now all know what it is we want to achieve as individuals, and how that will make us better as a company now, and in the future. I won’t list out our personal or company goals here, but if you stay tuned, they should be apparent in everything we do this year.

Here’s to our team and to 2013. Let’s do this!

image

[Sometimes selfies are hard to do.]

*One teammate couldn’t make it due to some vacation time planned well in advance. He was with us in spirit.

Jan 14, 201314 notes
#team #shelby #shelby.tv #startups #shelbysummit #shelbysummit2013
Announcing #OnThisDay

At Shelby, we are working diligently to provide the best way for you to find and watch video. A big part of that is making your search for content not only relevant, but usable. 

When you do a search for a video, do you get video in return? No. Instead, you are given web pages with lists of links. Shelby is here to give you the seamless video experience that you want through our very own Shelby Search. 

In an initiative we call #OnThisDay, we will share the search results for specific events that happened “on this day” in history in a stream of video on Shelby for anyone to watch.

For example, #OnThisDay in 1643, Isaac Newton was born. To celebrate our homeboy’s birthday, we are dedicating our debut search query to Isaac and his contributions to physics.

image

Check it out for yourself, and feel free to try a search of your own. Who knows what you’ll find next!

Jan 4, 20134 notes
#onthisday
Chips Ahoy!

Can you say “coooookie?”

We are excited to announce that we are teaming up with one of the world’s most beloved brands - Chips Ahoy! - as part of the Mobile Futures Program run by Mondelez.   

image

Quick bit about Mobile Futures: Mondelez is partnering their major brands with startup companies to create and launch mobile pilots in just 90 days and Shelby is one of a handful of startups selected out of over 120 applicants. 

That means Shelby will be working closely with Chips Ahoy! to engage fans with their brand through social video discovery. The impressive part of the program is the speed with which Mondelez is moving and the entrepreneurial spirit they are fostering. That kind of momentum and energy is fantastic and will make this pilot a lot of fun.

It is great to see their team is also pumped. “The Chips Ahoy! team is thrilled to begin working with Shelby.tv as we look to enhance how we engage with our consumers through mobile and particularly social TV.” said Senior Brand Manager, Leslie Walker [via PR Newswire].

Stay tuned for some awesome Chips Ahoy! action on Shelby!

Jan 3, 20136 notes
#cookies!

December 2012

3 posts

Meet Ian

image

Another new guy at Shelby? You bet! Welcome Ian Perry to the team. He may be the rookie, but he’s no stranger to startups. Read on, check him out on Shelby - iperry.shelby.tv - and follow @iperry.

Hey, my name is Ian. I’m a senior at Cornell University studying information science and entrepreneurship. I’m the Foursquare campus ambassador at Cornell and I work with groups and departments across campus, such as University Communications, to help them integrate Foursquare into their social media plans. This past semester, I started the Cornell Social Media Club with the goal of helping students harness the power of social media in both their social and professional lives. I’m from the Philadelphia area, and in my spare time, I enjoy watching soccer, playing FIFA, skiing, and golfing.

I’ve worked with a few startups in the past, and am very excited to be at Shelby for the winter. I’m pumped to be part of such an awesome team that is reshaping television. To be part of something that is changing an entire industry is a unique and exciting opportunity. Everyone at Shelby is very passionate about what they do and comes from a different background, which makes for a really exciting environment and great company culture. The team is building an amazing product, and I look forward to helping the product grow. Shelby is unlike anywhere I’ve worked in the past, and I’m really definitely going to make the most of the opportunity to work here. While at Shelby, I’ll be working with two other awesome interns, Brendan and Frasher, to help bring Shelby to universities. It’s a great project, and I’m looking forward to learning as much as I can along the way.

I’m also looking forward to being part of the New York City tech startup scene. It’s such an exciting time to be here, and I plan on taking full advantage of all that the city has to offer. I’m especially looking forward to attending my first NY Tech Meetup and a class at General Assembly. I’ve never lived in a big city before, and I know that this winter will help me get a better idea of where I want to live after graduation.

Dec 21, 20125 notes
#team Shelby
Meet Frasher

image

We’re excited to officially welcome Frasher Ulaj to the team. Frasher’s been helping out remotely for a while, but it’s nice to have him in house full-time for the winter break. We asked Frasher to introduce himself. Read on, check him out on Shelby frash.shelby.tv and follow @frash.

I’m Frasher, a Junior at Babson College. Over the past few months, I’ve been hanging around the Shelby team working on some research figuring out what is going on the “video space” and the “future of television.”  Most of what I’ve found is that the time has come for viewers to control what to watch. It’s why Netflix and Hulu have been succeeding for the most part.

With people having varying schedules from one person to the next, the uniform “TV schedule” isn’t as effective as it used to be. And it’s important to keep in mind the power of video. The way we consume stories through videos connects us stronger than through other mediums. Think about the videos of the crisis in Syria you watched and how those affected you. Seeing is different from hearing or reading. It means more. Shelby enhances this experience by adding a personal connection, too (If you’re unfamiliar, Shelby takes the videos your friends share across Facebook, Twitter and Tumblr, and creates a personalized stream based on who shares what).

Now that Shelby.tv is in a beta, it’s time to get this thing out there. And I’ve signed up to work with Brendan and Ian to make sure people, sports teams, major brands, and anybody in between uses Shelby to consume, explore and share video. Get ready, because Shelby.tv team is reinventing video.

Reinvent video? That’s impossible and irrational!

But really, it’s perfectly possible. Many television shows are seeing short lived series lives. Television advertising spending has levelled off and even fallen in some cases. Now is the time to look forward and change the way that people interact with video.

After being part of several conversations with Reece and the Shelby team, it’s clear that this team sees this as more than a goal, but a mission. As a college kid unsure of his future, looking at my e-mail and seeing an article to the team that points to the changing of the video industry has me look forward to the unkown. The way this team is committed to changing the viewing habits of people excites me to join a team that’s taking on such a mission. With passion and excitement in everyday work comes success.

Over the next few months, Brendan, Ian and myself will begin to get Shelby out there and create a community. Sure, most will just say “if it’s a good product, it’ll catch on.” And that statement may hold some truth, but Shelby.tv has several tools that hold so much power and potential (ranging from hashtag rolls to a video radar). We are going to work with people to introduce the whole Shelby.tv ARSENAL! These tools will provide a wholesome and engaging video experience. Soon, we’ll all be taking advantage.

“Reinventing video.” It sounds like a crazy goal. But, I am excited to be part of it. Like Steve Jobs said, “The people who are crazy enough to think they can change the world, are the ones who do.” 

Dec 20, 20123 notes
#team Shelby
Dec 19, 20129 notes

November 2012

2 posts

#Election2012 Video Now Live at election2012.shelby.tv!

It’s Election Day!

This past few weeks, we’ve seen a bunch of great video about the election shared on Shelby. Today, we’ve taken all this coverage and wrapped it up into our new Elections roll at election2012.shelby.tv.

You’ll find video from the left, right, and everywhere in between. Whether you’re interested in healthy discourse or some good ol’ political satire, we think it’s worth watching. The coolest thing about it is that it’s entirely powered by community and constantly being updated throughout the day as more and more people are sharing and watching video.  

Check it out at election2012.shelby.tv and please don’t forget to exercise your right to vote today! 

image

—

via @chris.shelby.tv

Nov 6, 20124 notes
#election 2012 #voting #shelby #tech
#Sandy Coverage and Relief

To all of our Shelby viewers and fans

What a week it was in NYC. We hope you are safe and well. For those affected by the hurricane, we send you our best wishes towards a speedy recovery.

This past week, Shelby viewers shared some incredible video of the storm, the aftermath, and the inspiring relief efforts. It’s pretty eye-opening to see.

So, we created a Hashtag Roll of video for #Sandy. It aggregates all the videos about Sandy that have been shared by viewers this past week. It also offers an easy way to help - we include a link to donate to Red Cross disaster relief right within Shelby.

We’re donating and we hope you do, too. 

Sincerely, 

Team Shelby

Nov 5, 20126 notes
#hurricanesandy #RedCross #shelbytv

October 2012

3 posts

Introducing NerdFitness.tv!

We’re so excited to be working with our friend Steve Kamb at Nerd Fitness to produce NerdFitness.tv!

Check out Steve’s post below for more details…

It’s an exciting time to be a Nerd Fitness Rebel!

Our goal at Nerd Fitness is to eliminate every potential excuse you might have for not getting healthy.  We’ve covered how to eat right, how to work out, how to be more productive, how to walk, run, and hike, how to do a push up, how to do your first pull up…but we still get one issue above all others:

“I just can’t seem to get motivated!”

I hear ya.  Some days, you just don’t want to get out of bed.  Other days you come home from work and that couch looks MIGHTY cozy.  Another round of Halo or Modern Warfare 3 sounds way more enjoyable than exercising.

Which is why we’ve created our own freaking TV channel!

NerdFitness.TV is born!

A few weeks back while traveling through New York City with my boy James Clear, I had a chance to sit down with my friends Reece and Chris atShelby.TV

They’ve created an awesome video platform that lets people watch and curate their own channel of the best video they find all around the web (content from YouTube, Hulu, ESPN, Vimeo, etc.).  It also gets smart about content you like and don’t like, showing you the stuff you need to see and getting you back to the real world so you can keep kicking ass.

The SECOND I saw what they were building, a light bulb went off in my head: “We need to have a Nerd Fitness TV channel with an epic motivational videos playing ALL the time.”

The guys at Shelby agreed, and thus – Nerd Fitness TV was born 

When you visit NerdFitness.TV, you’ll see my personally selected list of motivational videos that will make you want to run through walls, do a million push ups, walk to Mordor, and exercise around the world.

Anytime you are EVER in need of motivation – visit NerdFitness.TV, watch a video or two, and then go have the workout of your life.  It’s guaranteed to add ten pounds to your squat and make your Spartan war cry 15% more epic.

The Next Steps

This is just the beginning.  We’re fortunate to be one of the first sites to partner with Shelby, so there are a handful of features that they’re in the process of implementing.

Over the next few months, you’ll see NerdFitness.TV evolve  in a few different ways.  I can’t hint too much about what’s coming, but I promise it will be cool. 

If you’re interested in getting and curating your own channel on Shelby, you can request an invite at http://Shelby.tv or email nerdfitness@shelby.tv for an invite.

If you happen to struggle with motivation, today you no longer have any excuses.  NerdFitness.TV – you’re welcome, Rebellion!

Leave a comment with your personal favorite motivational video or any features you’d love to see added to NerdFitness.TV, and the NF team and I will select the best ones to add to the channel!

And don’t forget, we’re just getting started.  

Nerd Fitness TV is going to rule. Hard.

-Steve


Oct 29, 20126 notes
#getyour.tv #shelby #shelbytv #futureOfTV #nerdfitness
Shelby Genius

artsabintsev:

Hi everyone,

I’ve been jamming away on multiple projects since joining Shelby.tv in April. One of these projects, Shelby Genius, was just released. 

In a nutshell, Genius can be thought of as a ‘Pandora for Video’. You type in a query, and Genius returns videos that are popular right now and related to your query (we have tons of data and algorithms that determine these pieces of information). 

Notable features in Genius: 

  • Continuous playback: Once a video ends, the next one starts
  • Don’t like the video you chose? Tap the screen and click the previous/next buttons to load a new video
  • AirPlay Support: Hook it up to your Apple TV, and stream TV shows, clips, music videos, movies, straight to your big screen
  • Remote Control Playback: After choosing a movie, double tap on the home button, swipe to the right in the task menu at the bottom of the phone and use the controls there to play/pause, and load the next/previous videos
  • Share the video: Twitter, Facebook and Email.

An iPad and iPhone 5 version will be out real soon! Also, checkout some more awesome posts about Shelby Genius.

  • Tech Crunch
  • Shelby Blog
  • Shelby Dev Blog
Oct 3, 20122 notes
Introducing Shelby Genius on iOS

Shelby Genius is available today in the iOS App Store! Download it here.

While in the midst of building the next generation of Shelby, we learned that YouTube would no longer be a core app in iOS6. We knew YouTube would inevitably fill that void with their own app, but we had an idea that was too fun to pass up, so our iOS dev Arthur hacked it together in a couple weeks. Using a piece of the Shelby platform that hasn’t yet seen the light of day, we’re pretty excited to announce Shelby Genius.

Shelby Genius is search + serendipity. On iOS, we built Genius to be a very simple app. It supports searches across YouTube, Vimeo and Dailymotion and returns a list of results that serendipitously includes results from Shelby’s video graph.  

image

We have to admit it’s pretty fun searching for random stuff (see our list above), and seeing what Genius thinks, but we’re even more excited about some of the tech under the hood. In particular, the Genius app supports background streaming to AirPlay and continuous playback of video.

What does this mean to the average user? Run a Genius search for your favorite band, start playing video and send it to your AppleTV via airplay. Now start using another app on your phone - you’ll notice that Genius video keeps playing on your TV in the background. When the video is done, the next video in the results will start playing.

Though it’s just the result of a quick hack, we’re excited to ship it and potentially use more of Genius in other places within Shelby.

You can download it here and let us know what Genius searches you love!

Oct 2, 20126 notes
#ShelbyTV #iOS #iOS6 #shelby #video

September 2012

1 post

Rewarding Work

[original post by danspinosa here]

What makes you kick ass on a project?  I mean, really f*****g blow the doors off.  It’s motivation.  No tricks needed.  When you’re doing rewarding work and have intrinsic motivation, you will blow it out of the water.  Scott Adams wrote an interesting post on the subject…

http://dilbert.com/blog/entry/rewarding_work/

…which I forwarded on to my team.

At Shelby, we’re not building the first personal computers or machines that can restart a human heart.  We work with video, a medium the average American spends > 33 hours/week watching.

But before video, printed word, or even spoken language we were a social species, sharing our collective knowledge around the fire.  As individuals with great technological capabilities, incredible quality of life, and so many freedoms, we owe a great deal to the rest of our species, particularly those who came before us.  Because we are social we have excelled.

The way our species tells stories is changing - for better or for worse - and we have an opportunity to lead that change.  There is no doubt that at Shelby, we can change the world.  Every single thing that each of us do will be a part of that legacy.  From an entire app, like [not yet released], to the finer features that users will only see once, like onboarding or choosing an avatar, our actions will imbue our products, our community, and our company with excellence and pride in craftsmanship.

Onward.

Sep 28, 20128 notes
#shelbytv #work #startups

August 2012

3 posts

Tisch, TechStars, and What's Next?

I first met David Tisch two years ago under the premise that he is an up and coming angel investor who liked sports. At the time, I was pitching our first company HomeField - a video platform for coaches, athletes, and fans. 

Going in, I thought this is a no-brainer. Coming out, however, I had a very different thought… “TechStars is coming to NYC? …and we should apply?”

Despite feeling that we were too late-stage (we weren’t), we applied and I started emailing Tisch… And I quickly realized that he never sleeps, that answering emails from young companies at odd hours of the night was a crucially important first step in proving that he could make a dent in the universe with TechStars NYC, that he knows the history of every startup ever, and that Tisch has a passion for entrepreneurship that was rare.

Months later, we were one of Tisch’s chosen 11 for the first class. I later learned that we were numerically ranked lower than that and Tisch made a judgment call that was hugely important to us.

From the start, Tisch was extremely hard on us. He told us when we sucked… and to be fair, we did. He was critical to a point of no return, but it was because he cared deeply about us - as founders, as a company, and as TechStars - and this helped us successfully raise capital, grow our team, and start down our path to building a great company.

Since then, we have seen three stellar classes of TechStars in NYC and I am proud to be a part of a vibrant, growing, ecosystem of excellent people and companies.

So given today’s news that Tisch is transitioning away from his role as MD at TechStars, I’ve got a few thoughts.

  1. Firstly, thank you to Tisch, not just for accepting us and helping us, not for being a great mentor and friend, but for what you’ve accomplished with TechStars as a whole in the past two years.
  2. TechStars will be fine. The model is strong and the community is stronger.
  3. Who will fill Tisch’s shoes at TechStars? I honestly have no idea. I only hope they bring the same passion, knowledge, and special sauce that NYC deserves.
  4. What will Tisch do? No idea there either. He’s a prolific angel investor with epic deal-flow, he’s a product fanatic who obsesses over the details, and he’s a literal walking encyclopedia of startup knowledge. Who knows what he can do with his skill set and network, but I know I’ll be paying attention.

Aug 17, 20128 notes
#techstars #david tisch
I'm interested in finding out more about your "video card"... how did you come up with it? How's it different than what's on YouTube?

Thanks for the question! Our video card is centered around the idea that the best video experience for our users is also the most personal experience. This means the video card should have information about who is enjoying a video and how they’re interacting with it it, rather than more impersonal information like number of views or a stream of comments from people you don’t know.

Aug 10, 2012
#video card #shelby #design
Aug 9, 20122 notes
#boulder #demo day #entrepreneurship #techstars #verbalizeit #rollsale #tsdemoday #digitalocean #27perry #dealangel #roximity #birdbox #salesloft #mobiplug #pivotdesk #ubooly

July 2012

6 posts

A Second Round of Funding

“Your people are your most important asset.”

“Business is about people.”

“Invest in people.”

We’ve all heard it 1000 times. With that in mind, we only want to work with great people, be it our team, our partners, or our investors.

At Shelby, our investors — Rich Levandov and Brady Bohrmann of Avalon Ventures, along with a great group of angels — have been exactly the right guys to have on our side, which is why we are very happy to announce that we have closed a second round of funding with them totaling $2.2M.

While much of what we have accomplished is not yet public-facing, we have made a ton of technical progress in the past year and this round allows us to stay focused and continue to build upon our vision for video discovery.

We could not be more excited about the team we have put together, the product we are developing, and the opportunity ahead of us. For now, we will still expect nothing, earn everything, and get back to building… 

Jul 31, 201213 notes
#funding #avalon ventures #shelby.tv
First Comes The Dream

chriskurdziel:

Last Thursday night I had the incredible opportunity to see Neil DeGrasse Tyson speak at the Hayden planetarium here in New York about brining STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering & Math) to more people and making it a deeper part of our culture. The theme of the event was “First Comes the Dream.” 



One of my favorite comments of the night was when Neil remarked:

“the extent to which entertainment reaches for the lowest mental acuity is an indication we are not reaching high enough.”  

I agree completely.

Neil went on to advocate for pop culture as an effective tool to bring people into real education and I got to thinking about how this dovetails pretty nicely with some of our goals at Shelby.  

We strongly believe in the power of the internet to surface content that does reach high enough (in part because discovery driven by the user). While a video of a wolf playing with a bear might just be written off as cute to some, it can also act as inspiration for those that want to understand more than they see in the video. When such a video is presented in a collection of video about nature and science, it acts as an entry point that then engages the viewer in something more meaningful for the rest of their viewing session.  In addition, the experience of Internet video is not just about the content itself - it’s also about the community and discussion that happens around this video and engages people even more (I’m looking at you, Reddit).

Read more…

Jul 24, 20124 notes
#neil degrasse tyson #space #chris kurdziel #first comes the dream #hayden planetarium #american museum of natural history
Why We Burned The Boats

reecepacheco:

As legend has it, when the explorer Cortes landed in Mexico he ordered his crew to burn the boats that brought them there. This left the men with no choice but to march ahead into the unknown.

Recently, we announced that we planned to shut down the current version of Shelby that we’d launched late last fall.

We burned our boat.

The decision wasn’t easy, but it felt right, and it still does. 

In a startup, you have limited time, limited resources, and consequently little room for error. We realized a long time ago that the current model we built wasn’t the optimal solution for the long run, so we started building a new version that could scale with our growth and provide more value to our users.

Some people have asked us why we didn’t just wait until we had the new product ready and while there are a ton of reasons, it really boils down to this… 

  • #3 Money - When you process as much data as we do, it isn’t cheap. Running a second set of servers to process the same data just wasn’t worth it.
  • #2 Time - We want to get this new version of Shelby out the door as quickly as possible, that means we should be spending as much of our time on it as we can… not maintaining legacy product/features.
  • #1 Focus - The startup illuminati often speak of “focus.” We are now a company without a product in the market. If that doesn’t focus a team on one thing and one thing only, then I don’t know what does.

And as far as whether or not we made the right decision… it doesn’t matter. We’re in this for the long haul and the only thing we can do now is build a great product. Forward, we march… 

Jul 23, 201218 notes
#reece pacheco #shelby.tv #burn the boats #art of war
Jul 20, 20122 notes
#video card #shelby.tv #vincent iadevaia #dribbble
We're shutting down Shelby (kinda)

by Reece

Over the weekend, we’ll be shutting down Shelby to make room for an entirely new version that improves upon our vision of being your home for video. 

Why?

While Shelby seems like a very simple product, there’s actually a ton of back-end processing that we must monitor and maintain. So it would be unfair to you, our users, if Shelby suffered as a result of our focus on the new product.

And we are super excited about what we’re building. To be clear, this isn’t just an update. This is an entirely new build, freshly coded from the ground up.

image

So what’s the big deal about this new version?

We started Shelby with a big first goal — to make sense of the fragmented web video space. We knew it wouldn’t happen overnight and looking back, a lot has happened since our first launch last year. 

We’ve tripled the size of our team, processed millions of videos, broken databases, created our own link shortener, and built a powerful data graph. All of this work enables us to start delivering on our promise to be your home for video and we’re hoping to address the concerns you’ve had. We’ve listened intently to your feedback, and without giving anything away, here are a few things to look forward to:

  • Speed. Shelby’s faster every step of the way.
  • Discovery. Better processing power means more videos.
  • Community. More ways to connect, share, and curate.

How will I know when the new Shelby is ready?

Leave your email address at gt.shelby.tv and and use the priority code WANT to be notified as soon as Shelby’s ready.

What will happen in the meantime?

Shelby will go dark over the weekend. The Chrome Extension, iOS apps, bookmarklet, and weekly emails will also be shut off soon. (If it’s important to you that we migrate your Likes and Watch Later videos to new Shelby, please write to ellisisland@shelby.tv.)

We really appreciate your patience. If you have any questions, feel free to reach out to us @Shelby or on email. 

Jul 12, 201214 notes
#shelby #shelby.tv #shelby gt
A Guide to Surviving the iOS Blackout -or- Stop Panicking, Jeez

While we finish rebuilding Shelby from the ground up, the iOS app is going dark. We haven’t made this decision lightly, and we believe it’s the right one. You need not fear! We’ll get through this, together.

How will I ever survive?

  1. Don’t panic. The red-faced-breathing-into-a-paper-bag look doesn’t become you.
  2. Leave the Shelby app installed. You won’t have to uninstall/reinstall anything. When the new build is ready, we’ll deploy it as an update.
  3. Request early access. Leave your email at gt.shelby.tv with the code “WANT”. This will let us know you’re eager to see what’s new, and we’ll prioritize your invitation.

Why don’t you just leave the current version running?

Running one version while building another is actually quite taxing given all of the back-end processing that we have to monitor and maintain. Furthermore, this is no small update. We’ve reimagined everything.

image

What’s so great about “new” Shelby?

We take user feedback very seriously, and the new version of Shelby is the result of the fantastic comments and recommendations we’ve been receiving over the past year. We want the exciting new features to be a surprise, but you can expect:

  • Speed. Playback is faster than ever.
  • Discovery. Better processing power means more videos.
  • Community. More ways to connect, share, and curate.

Can I still watch Shelby on the web?

When the iOS apps go dark, so will the web app. The Chrome Extension, bookmarklet, and weekly emails will also be shut off. (If it’s important to you that we migrate your Likes and Watch Later videos to new Shelby, please write to ellisisland@shelby.tv.)

We really appreciate your patience. If you have any questions, feel free to reach out to us @Shelby or on email.

Jul 2, 20121 note
#shelby #shelby.tv #shelby gt #ios #app

June 2012

8 posts

iOS app may experience crashes

We have discovered a new bug which causes the iOS app to close immediately after login. We are currently working to crush this bug, and hope to have this resolved soon. To all of you who were affected, thank you for your patience.

To all of you who took the time to submit detailed bug reports, we are forever grateful. 

UPDATE: Issue has been resolved.

Jun 29, 2012
#iOS #app #Shelby.tv #bug
E[nstitute] on Indiegogo

by reece

My partner Dan and I recently had our first phone calls with the inaugural batch of applicants to E[nstitute] and I have to say, there are some very impressive young minds in the program.

These are future founders who want to ‘learn by doing’. Some have been to school, some are looking to drop out, but all are mentally preparing to jump into risk-taking, to get off their ‘track’, and to balance failure with success.

How will they do this? By pairing with entrepreneurs to learn directly from the people building the next great businesses here in NYC. Essentially, “E[nstitute] is redefining higher education by turning startups and small businesses into classrooms.”

So to help support the first class of 15 students starting this fall, E[nstitute] recently launched a crowd funding campaign to help get them started.

If you believe in changing education, in creating great companies, and most importantly, in investing in bright young people who want to change the world, please consider a contribution. Here is a link to the fundraising page http://indiegogo.com/enstitute.

Jun 27, 20123 notes
#indiegogo #enstitute #entrepreneurship #entrepreneurs #mentorship #education #startups
More buttons, more problems

by Mark

I’m not sure who Sony is taking design cues from, but it sure ain’t Apple.

Given Apple’s success with the iPhone, iPod, and iPad, it almost seems that the popularity of 21st century electronics is inversely proportional to the number of buttons the device has on it.

image

But Sony’s recent “Google TV, Take 2” device goes in completely the opposite direction. Sony’s remote for the new device sports over 25 physical buttons on the front and sides, over 60 QWERTY-style keys on the back, *and* a frontside touchscreen to boot.

So, button lovers, rejoice! Your smart TV product is here. 

(I wonder if Steve Jobs liked black mock turtlenecks so much because they, too, were buttonless…)

Jun 27, 2012
#sony #apple #iphone #ipod #ipad #tv #google tv #remote control #smart tv
A Note To Tomorrow's TechStars Presenters

 reecepacheco:

Tomorrow, 13 companies will take the stage at Webster Hall to show the world what they’ve been working on the last few months during TechStars. I’ve been back to TechStars a bunch recently, and I can say that this class has been pushing their limits to work hard on showing their vision the best they can.

I know what they’re going through, because I’ve been through it (back when Tisch was admittedly a little more caustic) and it’s not easy. Whether you’re conscious of it or not, there’s pressure from TechStars, from investors, from corp dev, from family, from friends, from cofounders… not to mention the pressure you put on yourself.

So you bust your ass. You work all night. You focus on one thing and one thing only: nailing your demo. 

By the time I got to demo week, all I wanted to do was get it over with. I knew my stuff. I just wanted to play.

But something funny happened on my way to the stage that day.

I realized how awesome it was that I was about to get on stage before a crowd of people for which I have tremendous respect and admiration, and I remember being so grateful for that moment.

Tisch makes fun of me for it, but when I stepped on stage I took a moment to say thanks, and note how awesome it was to see the incredible turnout, the excitement not just for TechStars, but for entrepreneurship, and it completely grounded me in the moment. The audience was rooting for me. They wanted me, and all of the founders on stage, to succeed. They wanted to see great companies and great demos.

It was in that breath of gratitude, that realization of support, that I was then able to deliver my pitch… and in the blink of an eye it was over.

And I immediately wanted to do it again.

So if I can give one piece of advice to the founders getting on stage tomorrow (and really, any person going into a big presentation)… appreciate that you’re about to be heard. Have fun, be thankful for the opportunity, and know that you have the audience’s support.

At the very least, tomorrow I’ll be hollering from the rafters for ya. 

Good luck everyone! 

Jun 13, 20129 notes
#demo day #techstars
Jun 8, 20123 notes
#paley center #tv #shazam
Play
Jun 6, 20126 notes
#wistia
The Ultimate Trololo Roll → trololo.shelby.tv

We’ve been trololo’ing all day (in elevators, at delis, during meetings…), so we thought it best to make the ultimate trololo roll. 

Enjoy » http://trololo.shelby.tv/

(GT users, you can help make this roll the best ever! Go to shl.by/3n and click “Join”. You’ll be able to add your favorite trololo clips/parodies/remixes and comment on the ones we’ve already added!)

Don’t know WTF we’re talking about?

Jun 4, 20122 notes
#trololo #Eduard Khil #gif #shelby gt #shelby.tv
Jun 4, 20128 notes
#trololo #Eduard Khil #meme #rip

May 2012

7 posts

'Seinfeld' Season One Premiered 22 Years Ago Today

via Gothamist:

The plot of “The Stake Out” was based on a real life incident of Larry David, as he discusses in the clip below. The episode also features the formation of George Costanza’s greatest pseudonym/fake personality, architect Art Vandelay:

Nine years later, NBC was offering Seinfeld over $100 million to do a season 10 of the show, but he decided to bow out: Seinfeld told Littlefield, “‘I don’t have a life, I’m not married, I don’t have kids.’ We gave it everything we had, he was tempted, but in the end it was a quality of life decision.” There was a disastrous finale, and three years ago, a second pseudo-finale during Curb Your Enthusiasm season 7:

May 31, 2012
#seinfeld #anniversary #larry david #curb your enthusiasm
Hi there. Found you after googling 'instapaper for video'. How do I delete a video from my list? Also, there doesn't seem to be a 'share' button in the iPhone app so I can email a video link to a friend.

Well hello!

Since you’ve mentioned the iPhone, I’m going to respond to how that app works. 

You can remove a video from your Favorites or from Watch Later by taping the corresponding purple icon. It should appear as you’re watching the video. (In the case of the example below, you would tap the heart.) When the icon turns white, you’ll know that video has been removed from where you saved it. 

image

From this view, you can also share the video you’re watching. Tap the icon that looks like a small notepad and pen. Then choose either “Social” or “Email.”

If you have further questions, feel free to email me: lauren[at]shelby[dot]tv.

May 23, 2012

Lauren:

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Last week (aka Internet Week New York), I had the pleasure of speaking on a panel at Likeable Media’s LikeableU conference. I was joined by Bing Chou of QuickLeft, Kelly Rice of Kinvey, Dan Herman of ChatID, and #bestpanelever moderator Clare Tischer of Techstars. We all had very different stories to tell, and mine was (naturally) about goats. 

I offered Project G.O.A.T.S. as a case study on how to pull off a buzz building campaign/stunt with a lean startup philosophy. In our case, the most successful aspect of the project was renting real goats and letting them hang out with us on the streets of Austin during SXSW. After returning to New York, we discussed where we had been successful, and where there was room for improvement, and distilled our thoughts into little nuggets of advice I’m now pleased to share with you:

  • Pretend your budget is $0 and be as creative as possible. Then, increase your budget as needed.
  • Make sure what you’re doing is inline with your brand promise. Start by asking, what do we promise our users/clients as a company, product, and brand? What hasn’t been done before? What can only our brand do?
  • Listen to your audience. If, in the middle of a campaign, they’re indicating a desire for more X or less Y, be prepared to deliver.
  • Create an experience people not only want to tell their friends about (in a public way, such as on Twitter), but HAVE to tell their friends about. If you’ve actually done something cool, your brand evangelists will make themselves known. You don’t gain a meaningful following by shouting at people to “LIKE us on Facebook!” Remember, ideas are worthless, execution is everything. 

Thanks to Likeable Media for inviting me to participate, and especially to my fellow (wonderful) panelists and now-BFFs. 

image

May 21, 20124 notes
#marketing #project goats #likeable media
Slow Down to Speed Up

reecepacheco:

Last Friday, our team piled into a couple cars and drove up to Minnewaska State Park Preserve for the start of a company day off for everyone.

While Dan and I had scheduled this well in advance, we didn’t have much of a “plan” for our Shelby road trip. I simply stuffed my backpack with lunch supplies and we set off into the woods.

image

No trust falls. No drum circles. No purposeful ‘team building’ exercises… We were just together… enjoying our own company, enjoying the outdoors, and doing something other than building Shelby ‘the product.’

But we were building Shelby ‘the company.’

As a company, we work well together. Respectfully, intelligently, creatively. There are no fights and no one is burning out.

So why the ‘day off?’

image

A few things that Dan and I have learned while building two startups and multiple products:

  1. Endurance is important. You can’t sprint all the time.
  2. It’s better to avoid burnout, than to burnout and try to recover.
  3. Loosely structured time together allows for great understanding and empathy to form, as well as creativity to flow.

Furthermore, one bonus lesson really stuck out to me throughout the day…

image

When hiking, it’s easy to fall into deep focus on each step of the trail. A loose rock here, a log there, a puddle there… and if you go too fast without looking up, before you know it, you’ve gone down the wrong trail or worse, gotten off the trail completely. If you don’t course-correct quickly, you then find yourself in a bad way, or at best, you have to backtrack eating up precious time.

So, while hiking through the woods as a big loose group, we consistently stopped to check our location, made sure everyone knew what trail to follow, and then set out at our pace together.

We slowed down, to speed up.

This is true for startups, too. We focus intensely on our product. We get an idea and we want to sprint after it. We’re builders, so we build… and while it is a great and necessary skill to build rapidly and iterate, it is imperative not to lose sight of the big picture - the trail map, if you will. This means taking careful, purposeful steps. Taking the right trail. Doing it the right way the first time, so you never have to backtrack.

I didn’t try to hammer this lesson home, but it presented itself and I was glad for it.

But all lessons learned aside, we hiked up into the mountains, breathed in the fresh air, enjoyed the views, avoided some dangerous wildlife (snakes), took some pictures, and had a few minutes of pure golden silence.

Read More…

May 21, 20129 notes
#shelby road trip
Day[0] as Intern[1] at Shelby.tv

As I swung open the door at “Cyberdyne Systems” yesterday morning, I wasn’t sure what to expect. A few months earlier, after chatting with Reece and Chris about a potential internship, I’d been assigned to Project G.O.A.T.S., during which I was tasked with the odd job of finding (yes, seriously) real-live goats for SXSW. Most interns have to do some kind of cold-calling, but have you ever tried to convince local farms and mobile petting zoos that you just need to borrow their goats for the weekend to use as mascots at a giant tech conference? Not as easy as you might think.

So clearly the team at Shelby was crazy right? Well, yes. But is it pure insanity or the kind of directed madness that gets results? You tell me: Top Brands at SXSW

So this team matched the kind of brand awareness reserved for giants like Nike and CNN on a budget that probably cost less than the actual flights to Austin? Count me in.

Fast forward to my first day. I smiled as I passed the signs for Cyberdyne Systems that indicated Shelby headquarters. I was greeted by Reece, who’d lined my desk with a bunch of awesome Shelby gear and welcomed me to the office. It was pretty clear from the start that this office was a straight out of a tech entrepreneur’s dream. There’s a conference room set up with webcams, whiteboards lining the walls, a command center/workspace with tons of monitors, and an astroturf covered ping-pong room with a drum set and an original N64.

I sat down with Reece, who briefed me on the company mission and his “Get sh*t done” philosophy. He said that he wanted me to attend conferences, shadow some of his meetings, and he even put a reading list together for me of some of his favorite books and blog posts, part of which you can find here. It’s almost like he wants me to learn something during my internship. Weird, right?

I spent the rest of the day getting set up and playing with the brand new Shelby GT which, if you haven’t checked it out yet, is awesome. Do yourself a favor and sign up for the beta here. FYI, I’m crashing at Chris’s desk for the time being, right next to my favorite picture of all time:

But with all of the craziness and eccentricities aside, there’s one more thing that’s very clear when you step into the Shelby.tv office: focus. For the majority of the day people are jacked in, headphones on and in complete concentration. Sure there are group meetings, lunches, and rounds of ping pong in between, but I’m guessing it’s this level of focus that got them to where they are today. I’m so excited to be joining the incredibly talented team for the summer and will continue to update you on my progress.

- Zach || intern[1]

May 8, 20127 notes
#intern[1] #zach sherman
May 7, 20121 note
#i[1] #interns
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