Office 2.0 Blog

3 Posts tagged with the presdo tag

Agenda Heat Map

Posted by Ismael Chang Ghalimi Sep 3, 2008

Now that all the pieces of the puzzle are starting to connect with each other, some pretty cool mashups can be built. Here is one courtesy of Eric Ly from Presdo, based on an idea originally suggested by one of our friends at Google: an Agenda Heat Map, showing the popularity of sessions based on actual user scheduling. As attendees to the Office 2.0 Conference are adding sessions to their Google Calendar, Presdo is fetching the data (anonymously), and feeding it to a Google Spreadsheet, which cells' colors are based on the number of attendees scheduled to attend any particular session. It's interesting to see that out of 400 attendees who received an account on Google Apps on Monday, more than 50 were already using it by Tuesday. We wil publish a revised heat map later tonight. In the meantime, sessions having less than 10 scheduled attendees should really start pimping themselves through blog posts on the conference's website...

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Presdo is Magic

Posted by Ismael Chang Ghalimi Sep 2, 2008

I met Eric Ly, founder of Presdo, two and a half years ago. At the time, he was co-founder and founding CTO at LinkedIn. Over lunch, I told him where I'd like the LinkedIn platform to go. He listened, agreed with the direction, but remained noncommittal. Six months later, I met him again, this time for breakfast. He had left LinkedIn, and was working on a new idea, losely related to meeting scheduling. I asked him to be on the short list of people he would show his first prototype to. Five months ago, we met for breakfast again, and he gave me a first demo. I was the first to blog about it, which almost cost him an article on TechCrunch (I'm really glad he still got one). The application was great, and was only missing a direct link to Google Calendar. Today, this has been fixed.

 

Over the past week or so, Eric and his team worked around the clock to develop the scheduling system we are using to schedule demos and meetings during the Office 2.0 Conference. This thing is amazing. As a registered attendee, you select the company you want to schedule a meeting with (say OBM), click on the schedule meeting link, and Presdo automatically suggests three candidate times, based on your availability and the other party's availability, both fetched from Google Calendar in real time. If you don't like any of the suggestions, you simply click on the "See more times" link, and you'll get another three, until you find a suitable one. Once you're happy with it, you click on the "Schedule It!" button, and Presdo will automatically add an event on your calendar and the one of your party. That's it. Pure magic!

 

The reason why I like Presdo is that it does not assume that you will use it as default calendar. Instead, it works with the calendar you are already using, be it Outlook, Google Calendar, or anything else it's been integrated with. All it does is scheduling, but it does it really, really well, in less clicks than any other application we've looked at. It's also pretty smart at suggesting suitable times for meetings, based on a lot of constraints that can be added when using the standard application (not the custom one we're using for the conference). Now, make no mistake: the system only works as well as the parties' calendars are up to date. So here is my request to you faithful Office 2.0 convert: please logon to your office20.com Google Apps account, add all the sessions you're planning to attend, and mark as "Busy" all the time slots during which you will not be available. Then, schedule as many meetings as you can in order to get the most out of your participation to what promises to be the best Office 2.0 Conference ever.

 

Eric & Team: thank you so much! What you built is truly amazing.

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Close to 400 Google Apps accounts on the office20.com domain name have now been created and shared with their owners. To do so, we synchronized our RegOnline attendee database with our Salesforce.com instance, exported an attendee list from Salesforce.com into a .csv file, imported the file in Google Spreadsheet, randomly generated temporary passwords using the RANDBETWEEN() function, exported the updated attendee list into another .csv file, and created the accounts in Google Apps using the bulk upload function (very handy). Once all the accounts had been created, we created security tokens for each and every one of them to be used by the Presdo scheduling application.

 

The final step was to send an email to every attendee with their login and password. To do so, we enlisted the help of Raju Vegesna and his team at Zoho, and built a little application with Zoho Creator. It worked, and tonight Google Apps can claim a few more happy users. Many thanks to all involved — this part of our Office 2.0 Setup is working like a charm!

 

If you're attending the Office 2.0 Conference, please use this office20.com Google Apps account to do as much as possible during the event, from sending emails to scheduling meetings (instructions coming soon). This is an integral part of our experiment, and the more active participants we get, the better. Also, if you cannot make it to San Francisco but would like to participate in the experiment nonetheless, please send an email to registration@office20.com for a free Google Apps account on the office20.com domain name.

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