Cotton Rohrscheib

The Cotton Club Blog & Podcast

  • Home
  • Bio
    • Resume
  • Blog
    • Faith & Family
    • Marketing & Tech
    • Farm & Business
    • Entertainment
    • Health & Wellness
    • Urban Farming
    • Weekend Projects
  • Media
    • Newsletter
    • Photo Galleries
    • Instagram Feed
    • Video Archives
    • Podcasts
    • Music Playlists
  • Books
  • Connect
    • Rohrscheib Capital
    • Disclaimer
    • Privacy Policy
You are here: Home / Marketing & Tech / OpenID Needs Exposure

OpenID Needs Exposure

December 30, 2008 by Cotton Rohrscheib Leave a Comment

While I am a huge fan of Facebook Connect, I also have been rooting for OpenID to gain some traction as well as a universal login sharing solution but it just hasn’t gotten the attention that Facebook Connect has, and for obvious reasons, everyone is already familiar w/ Facebook and it’s one of the most recognizable brands in existence as well as the most trusted social network out there.

I was in a conference this past year in Tulsa and listened to a representative of Microsoft discuss how the MSN Passport or Live ID could be integrated in a very similar fashion on websites.  All through the presentation I kept waiting for him to at least mention OpenID but he never did, and of course Facebook Connect was so new then that no one really gave it any consideration either. 

In just a few short months I have seen several of the websites that I use on an everyday basis start utilizing Facebook Connect, a few more have been using OpenID as well, but I don’t get the impression that OpenID has caught on just yet.  I have pondered this and am just not for sure as to what needs to happen to give the platform more exposure.  Here’s a post I found on Sitepoint this morning:

As we noted in our year-end round up, 2008 was a good year for OpenID on paper, but the emergence of other, corporate backed single sign-on products means icy waters ahead. Specifically, we’ve talked about Facebook Connect and why it might end up the winner because it makes sense to consumers, and comes with social data attached. For developers, Facebook Connect is attractive as well because it comes with a built in marketing channel — user actions on external sites using Connect can be reported back to their friends on Facebook via the news feed.

In order for OpenID to compete on this new playing field, the OpenID Foundation needs to stop dragging their feet and start working on efforts to educate people about what OpenID is. On the technical site, OpenID is more or less a sound protocol — there hasn’t been any foot dragging there, but on the consumer outreach side, they’re getting beat. Badly.

Most people have no clue what OpenID is, even though many of them actually have OpenID-enabled accounts. Everyone who uses Facebook (which is a lot of people), on the other hand, understands what Facebook is and knows what “login with Facebook” means. OpenID needs to work hard to change that in 2009.

Unfortunately, it appears that the people behind OpenID might be asleep at the wheel in some respects. While Facebook is pushing hard to get Connect out there (and Google is doing the same with Friend Connect — which actually includes OpenID), OpenID is, as Nick O’Neill puts it, “organizing the organizers,” referring to the recent OpenID Foundation community board elections that were held last week.

“I used to be a huge advocate of OpenID and I honestly believe that there is still a lot of movement going on. Unfortunately though I think the group is over planning and under executing,” says O’Neill. “While some large organizations (Yahoo! included) are supporting the identity standard, there is still a lack of general consumer education. Without that there is no way OpenID can compete with Facebook Connect and other new standards.”

Fellow blogger Allen Stern shares some of the same concerns about OpenID. “It’s more likely that the average Internet user will understand the Facebook Connect process than the OpenID process. This is why OpenID must focus on marketing and usability more than technical standards at this time,” he writes.

What the OpenID Foundation needs to do is start “getting real.” Getting real is a business philosophy from 37signals, a successful web application software company based in Chicago. Though there’s a lot more to their idea, one of the main themes essentially boils down to this: stop screwing around with all the stuff that doesn’t matter and just wastes time (like politics and meetings), and start doing the stuff that needs to get done (like building your app). Don’t worry about the details until people are already using what you’re selling.

I agree with O’Neill that so far the OpenID Foundation seems to be spending too much time on organizational stuff, and not enough time on actually doing what needs to get done. In a chapter of their book “Getting Real,” 37signals talks about how meetings can kill productivity. “Every minute you avoid spending in a meeting is a minute you can get real work done instead,” they write. From my admittedly outsider’s vantage point, it appears that the people behind OpenID are getting too caught up in the organizational stuff, getting too lost in the details, and not spending enough time on execution.

My perspective, of course, is that of an outsider. I’m not privy to what’s going on behind closed doors, so to speak. So my perception of what’s really going on could be off. But at this point in the game, public perception is what it’s all about.

SitePoint » OpenID Needs to Start Getting Real

Share this post on:

  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Click to share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Click to share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn
  • Click to share on Pinterest (Opens in new window) Pinterest

Related

About Cotton Rohrscheib

The Cotton Club is a monthly podcast hosted by me, Cotton Rohrscheib. I'm a 52 year old entrepreneur w/ ADHD, OCD (and now AARP) that refuses to grow up as I grow old. I have collaborated and invested in hundreds of projects throughout my career in multiple industries such as; technology, healthcare, and agriculture. I also have 25 years experience in the marketing industry as a co-founder of an award-winning advertising agency. I will undoubtedly cover a wide variety of topics on my podcast while sharing some really crazy stories and situations that I've been fortunate to witness firsthand. I also have a book coming out in 2025 titled, "Mistakes were Made"

Please Drop Your Questions or CommentsCancel reply

Let’s Connect

  • Email
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • LinkedIn
  • Twitter

Recent Updates

  • EP:032 – Cotton Rohrscheib & Diana DeHart
  • Challenges & Opportunities Going into 2025
  • Find us at the 2025 Arkansas Women in Agriculture Conference in Hot Springs, Arkansas
  • Be Sure to Checkout FBN’s Farmers First™  Crop Nutrition & Adjuvant Lineup for 2025
  • What we all need in Dark Times…

Blog Categories

  • Blog (419)
  • Entertainment (376)
  • Faith & Family (147)
  • Farm & Business (288)
  • Health & Wellness (33)
  • Marketing & Tech (584)
  • Podcasts (31)
  • Urban Farming (20)
  • Weekend Projects (1)

Listen & Subscribe

Blog Archives

Join the Cotton Club!

 

Content Copyright: 2001-2025
Cotton Rohrscheib | Rohrscheib Capital