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Outbrain Removes Beta Tag - Adds Personalized Ratings
NY-based Outbrain has removed the beta tag from their service and opened it to the World. Outbrain is a service that helps you get ratings on your content. They offer 1-click plugins to TypePad, Blogger and Wordpress with a Javascript option to meet all other blog platforms. The interesting part about Outbrain is that it finds people like you and shows you ratings for the group it places you in (along with the raw score). This would be great for hotel reviews as many times you have no idea who the person is who is writing the review. If you are used to Four Seasons, any Microtel will look like a dump and vice-versa.
Outbrain has relationships with several of the rss feed tools which have integrated the ratings widget directly into the rss feel tool. Outbrain CEO Yaron Galai sent over this description of the personalized ratings feature:
For each visitor, we look at their rating history, find like-minded people automatically, and adjust the rating scores based on that. In other words – you and I might be looking at the same blog post, but each one will see vastly different scores based on each one’s personal rating history. We think this far exceeds the functionality of all other rating widgets that just display the plain average because personal tastes are so important when consuming content (think about it… - if the average methodology used by the other widgets would be applied to, say, Last.FM - we would all be listening to Britney Spears and Hannah Montana all day long just because a ton of kids give it 5’s all day long……….)
We also think that this is the 1st rating widget to give readers a real personal incentive to rate stuff (and rate it honestly), as they get long term value from the personalization. When your ratings have no effect on your future experience with the widget, there is absolutely no incentive to rate (+a nice incentive to abuse it…)
In my interview with Outbrain, one of the suggestions I gave them was to allow a site to not show how many people rated the item, just the rating itself. I still believe this is very necessary for smaller sites because if you read every story with zero ratings (or one), it makes the site look tiny and unappealing.
Ratings and tagging are hot right now. Check out our coverage of Outbrain, JS-Kit and Jiglu, all providers who help you find more content that might appeal to you. Each attacks the ratings process a bit differently.






