One of the best things about the FASTforward conference was seeing how customers have used FAST technology - how theyve applied it to the real world. I sat down last Thursday with CEO Tauseef Bashir of TauMed, a virtual health community, and got a glimpse of how healthcare information is evolving. This time the evolution is being  driven by social media and powerful search technologies.
(Photo | Tauseef Bashir and Jerry Bowles)
According to some recent stats from TauMeds PR firm about 10 million Americans go online each day searching for answers to health questions. And to no ones surprise Health searches are now just as popular as paying bills online, reading blogs, or using the web to find phone numbers and addresses.
With that kind of activity, you can see why theres an information land grab going on. So Is there room for another WebMD? And how do you compete with the 800 lb. gorilla? Bashir says theyll do it by improving the quality of information, how that information is delivered and expanding the sites social networking capabilities. No small task by any stretch.
The beta site, launched in December, is impressive. Its actually more impressive when you see it go head-to-head with WebMD. During his demo, he showed me some of why theres so much buzz around search becoming the new interface. When we searched for MS (multiple sclerosis) in WebMDs v1.0 site and asked to see the Web results, we saw things like Microsoft Corporation and other irrelevant items. Doing the same search in TauMed rendered much more precise results. The other things I liked were the ask a question and HealthShare features. Tauseefs product team uses rich Ajax interfaces to dynamically serve up content, giving the site a clean, interactive feel when searching for data or contributing content for HealthShares.Â
Tauseef,a former FAST employee, is passionate about the companys prospects and knows theyve got a fight in front of them. He says consumers have short attention spans for fruitless searches and irrelevant information and intends to capitalize on it.  The data mining and contextual analysis is the key, he says, to serving up razor-sharp results and creating a memorable user experience. But search aside, I dug a little deeper on the social networking aspects of TauMeds community. Apparently, theyve built their own content management system (CMS) and blog-like capabilities. I couldnt help but notice how their user profile pages mimic blog features, providing very simple and intuitive interfaces and easy onramps to adding user-generated content.Â
The other thing that popped up during the demo was advertisements, mostly from Google. Im OK with that, but what surprised me was the irrelevancy of certain ads. In the midst of deep-diving for additional multiple sclerosis (MS) information, a political ad obtrusively took over half the side rail in TauMeds 3 column-ish layout. Suffice to say, Tuaseef quickly pointed out their product team is in the midst of improving their ad-serving backend. He also added TauMed was an early AdMomentum customer, putting much of the platform under rigorous testing and customization.
But lets face it, as Web 2.0 as TauMed 1.0 is, they still have a numbers problem. Not the financial kind, but traffic. Outside of mass media advertising, youve got a classic case of a company needing some good ol fashioned grassroots and word-of-mouth marketing. Perhaps they should also reach out to other social software providers supplying the resources to companies building intranets, niche communities, and other social-oriented portals. You could even include some of the office 2.0 candidates like ZoHo, CentralDesktop, and others. They too will become more and more dependent on customized content as user bases grow. I guess you could think of it as enabling TauMed to become the de facto health widget.
However it plays out, theyre an interesting company that has a new evangelist. Â
Cross-posted @ The FASTforward Blog