The Business of API's - Write Up
On Friday I swung by The Business of API's Conference at The Guardian's offices near King Cross station in London.
Unfortunately some fires were burning back at the office which mean't that I couldn't stay for the entire event, however I caught the first three speakers and Q&A so here are my notes / thoughts from the first half of the afternoon...
First up was Oren Michels, CEO of the event organisers Mashery. Oren took the crowd of about 40 through a whistle stop tour of "A complete history of API's (abridged)". Oren initially spent some time exploring the conceptual business concepts behind API's like opening up your company, and embracing collaborative working with partners.
The first case study was a delve back into business history, looking at US retailer Sears, and how they embraced an expansion opportunity by partnering with logistic's companies & manufacturers to launch their mail order catalogue business.
Moving into the pure play online world, eBay was singled out as an early pioneer in the field. Very early on the management team realised they were great at handling transactions, had developed a trust system based on ratings and feedback, but they were lousy at starting and running the auctions. They began to increasingly expose their internal building blocks to allow 3rd parties to offer a variety of complementary products to assist with the creation and management of eBay auctions. This ecosystem grew organically, until eBay's officially began developer marketing in 2004.
The next important innovation, after the exposure of previously hidden internal capabilities, was taking one of these capabilities and mixing it together with a capability from another company to create a new service, giving birth to the "mash-up".
An early example of an API mash-up was 2005's housingmaps.com. The creator, Paul Rademacher, took real estate data from craigslist and combined it with Google Maps to plot properties for sale on a map. Rademacher achieved this before Google had actually exposed an official mapping API by reverse engineering their code, ultimately earning him a job at Google!
Oren than described the common components or layers of an application:
- Data (e.g. photo's, video, user information)
- Logic (The things that happen & how the data is processed e.g. searching, buying, adding)
- Presentation (The user interface e.g. the web site or mobile app)
Darwin's Finches, 20th Century Business, and APIs: Evolve your Business Model from Apigee on Vimeo.




