Friday, November 19, 2010

MNP – How Would It Work For Users? FAQs.

The first phase on MNP is rolling out on 25th November from the Harayna Circle. This is how Mobile Number portability would work for a normal user.

1. Send the following SMS to 1900 – PORT <Your Mobile Number> – eg. PORT 9123456789

2. You will get an SMS with your unique porting code. This is a unique number that will be maintained along with your mobile number with a third party called  MNP Service Provider (Selected companies for this service- Syniverse Technologies and Telcordia). The unique code has a expiry time. You need to apply to the new preferred operator with that code within the stipulated time.

3. The new operator will communicate with existing operator and ask for permission. If approved the new operator will set a time for porting and communicate this to MNP provider and existing operator.

4. On the set date and time, the current operator will disconnect the number and pass the message to MNP provider.

5. The new operator will now claim that number and MNP would maintain a central database with the new details.

FAQ’s

1. What is the cost of switching an operator through MNP?
The max. charge can be Rs.19. This has to be paid to the new operator. The operator can choose to charge you lesser.

2. Can i change operator multiple times using MNP?
Yes. Though there is a limitation of how frequently you can change the operator. Once switched you cannot change the operator for the next 90 days.

3. Will my mobile number be disconnected during porting?
Yes. During disconnection from old and connecting to new operator you number will be dead for about 2 hours.

4. How much time will the whole process take?
According to rules set by TRAI, it shouldn’t take more than 4 days for the complete process from the time of applying to new operator.

5. Can i carry forward my prepaid balance to the new operator after MNP?
No.

6. Can a postpaid user apply for MNP?
Yes. The old operator will approve only after all dues are cleared.


Link to full article

Cash is King. Long live the King.

This guest post by Alok Kejriwal (Founder of Games2Win) is dedicated to the longest living and unconquered King of all times – ‘Cash’.

Once you invite the King, you can’t cancel later.

In 2001, contests2win.com (my first Internet Company) had pioneered a very interesting concept called ‘Boomerang Marketing’. It involved creating a contest that sent visitors from c2w.com to the client’s website, getting them to register on that site and bringing them back (boomerang) to c2w.com and tell us their new userid on the client’s website. In return, some users (the lucky winners) received handsome prizes. This was probably the first of its kind ‘Cost per Acquisition’ business model on the web. And since c2w was heavily trafficked, this was a very lucrative business for us.

In March of 2001, India.com (a Company floated by mail.com) signed up a massive Boomerang deal with us. Just around that time, the dot com business was beginning to face headwinds, and we offered India.com a deal they couldn’t refuse. We proposed that they pay us the entire campaign money in advance and enjoy a 15% upfront cash discount. The agency of India.com loved the deal and agreed. The order was signed and the Cash came in. Immediately we started the campaign.

A week later, the parent Company of India.com – mail.com got into severe investor trouble in the USA and all their subsidiaries were asked to immediately wind down. The agency called me and said ‘Sorry Alok.  Immediately stop the campaign and refund us the money after deducting what you have delivered’. At our end, we had refused other deals and road-blocked our inventory for this business.

I called up my good friend Pradipto Basu who was a senior officer at Yahoo India at that time and explained the problem. His words are immortally etched in my mind. Pradipto said ‘Alok, once you fill up a car fuel tank, you can’t take the petrol out. All you do is then drive the car’. In other words, once you invite King Cash home, you don’t send him back.

I called up the agency and refused to refund the money, since our damages were also irreversible. They threatened to sue and I said ‘go ahead’. In the end, they agreed to burn the registrations (over an extended period of time), and we kept the Cash at home.

Lesson – get Cash home. Don’t hesitate to drop your margins a bit here and there as long as you get paid in advance or before time.

Cash is King
The Kings of Cash!

The King knows how to recover his dues.

One of my earliest lessons in managing King Cash was learnt in my father’s socks factory when I was seventeen years old.  The factory used to sell all kinds of socks to about 14 dealers all over India. The turnover in the mid 80’s was around 7-8 crores per annum. While we made dress, sports and casual socks, we had a monopoly over school uniform socks. No one made so many sizes and in quantities like we did.

All through the year, the 14 dealers would be lackadaisical about payments. Some would take forever to pay; others would pay in ‘part payment’ (an amazing concept in India). As a young man with lots of Marwari testosterone, I would fume and fret, but my dad always kept smiling.

Around February, all the 14 dealers would descend to our office to place orders for School Socks for late May deliveries (Schools in India start in June and parents shop for kids uniforms by end of May). My dad and his sales team would meticulously book all orders and confirm all the shipping details, etc. In return the dealers would call back home and make forward commitments to their trader resellers and shop keepers and guarantee them their supply of school uniform socks.

On the last day of the dealer meet, our head of sales Vasudev would silently slip into the room where the dealers would be enjoying a tea session with my dad, with 14 sheets of paper and quietly hand each of the dealers their sheet. As they would read their own sheet, their eyes would roll and their hands holding the cups would tremble. The sheet contained a detailed calculation of all their unpaid dues AND a massive interest payment calculation on the delayed payments over the year. At the end of the sheet it would be clearly stipulated, ‘All moneys need to be paid in 7 days, if you want your school supplies’.

All the years that I was there, the dealers would sulk but made sure to send their moneys in before the 7 days deadline because they just could not afford to miss School Socks’ deliveries.

King Cash could be made to wait, but that would cost you deadly.

Lesson – make sure you get your moneys on time. Design defense mechanisms if simple agreements don’t work.  The American middle class has collapsed due to delayed payments by them on their credit cards and has no clue as to how to pay back massively interest laden dues.

Cash Rules.
Dont mess with the King.

The King rules while the kingdom works.

One of the most fascinating lessons I learnt as an accountant was gleaned from the Hindustan Lever Limited’s (HLL) (now Unilever) balance sheet. Year after year, HLL reported a ‘negative’ working capital and made interest earnings on it!

How can Working Capital be negative?

It’s simple. HLL makes very popular consumer products like soaps, shampoos and personal hygiene products. They make these via vendors and suppliers, who are typically paid 90-120 days after their finished goods are supplied to HLL distribution points. HLL immediately puts these goods out in the market and since they are consumer goods, HLL receives cash from consumers BEFORE it needs to pay the vendors! This working Cash is then deposited in hard working bank instruments and made to earn interest! So, HLL not only makes money selling great products to us, but also by earning interest on moneys that consumer pay them before they need to pay vendors!

In the digital media, Google Ad words charges you upfront, but pays publishers later. Similarly, you need to ‘pre pay’ for a SIM Card of telecom operators, while you use the talk time over a period of time.

Lesson – get really, really smart about your cash flows – sometimes that itself can make money for you!

[Reproduced from Alok’s blog.]

Essential reading : Why don’t Companies pay their suppliers on time?


Link to full article

Shopsocial.ly Lets You Share Your Shopping Recommendations

Shopping recommendations from trusted network can work great for the shopper and the shop. ShopSocially is a startup building shopping recommendation engine on top of your social graph. ShopSocially lets you login using FB connect and then talk about your shopping.

As a user you can either ask a question regarding any product or share your review on product that you’ve just purchased. ShopSocially gives you an option of poking your friends for advise and also control who gets to see what. The whole user interface is very intuitive. Once you start, you will automatically find out the next steps. Purchase sharing is also simple, where you can either key in the product name or just share the product link.

ShopSoically is using the game theory with activity based badges to encourage users to contribute. In this case users might contribute even otherwise to queries as the question is coming from a friend. The main challenge could be getting users to share their purchases. ShopSocially is trying to address the issue by getting space in the checkout pages of shopping portals where the users could be encouraged to announce their purchase by the portal itself.

The team at ShopSocially seems strong and experienced. They closed a round of $1.1Mn in series A funding last month.

Give ShopSocially a spin and share your views.


Link to full article

Ovi Store Clocks 3 Million Downloads a Day

Nokia Ovi logo.

Back in the month of April 2010, Ovi Store claimed 1.6 million downloads a day and Nokia now claims 3 million downloads per day with total number of Ovi users exceeding 165 million across more than 190 countries.

And it’s growing, the ovi store is growing at the new rate of 250,000 new users every day. Ninety per cent of visits to the Store lead to an app download – on average each registered visitor downloads 2.6 apps (via).

Very recently, Nokia announced Ovi store’s new Worldwide Fixed-rate operator revenue Share  with 91 operators worldwide and hopefully this revenue share deal will bring in more app developers.

Recommended Read : 70% of iPhone developers are planning to release Android apps | Most Preferred Mobile App Development Platform?

Image via Wikipedia


Link to full article

JotterLab Puts Social Into Teacher-Student Collaboration

JotterLabUsing social media platforms such as Facebook and Twitter to conduct lessons and interact with students sounds very progressive on paper but how can you tell whether they are paying attention to you? If you are a teacher facing this challenge, good news: help is at hand.

Developed by Singapore-based GSA Education Technology Group, JotterLab is a web application that aims to help educators better manage and evaluate their students’ online participation on tools that many of these youngsters are already using.

Managing director Jimmy Tan told SGE that he came up with the idea for JotterLab while working on global products and projects with Google.

JotterLab – a teacher’s new best friend?

Designed to complement Google apps, some of JotterLab’s key highlights include:

Assignment dispatch system: Teachers can now distribute assignments and tasks to students, as well as inform them of deadlines in a database table with just one click. In addition, they’ll also know how many students are present in class after sending out the assignments.

Workbin widget: No need to spend so much time at the photocopying machine anymore. With this feature, users can upload, share and search for files.

Global Announcement Facility: Now students won’t be able to say that they didn’t get the memo. With this feature, announcements are sent to various user channels such as Facebook and Twitter as well as a central task center. Not only that, it allows teachers to track whether students have read them or not.

JotterLab also gives teachers a better understanding of how students learn and interact online, thanks to an in-built analytical engine.

Leveraging on social media tools within a collaborative framework

According to Jimmy, what sets JotterLab apart from the rest of its competitors is that it does not aim to replace any social media platform. Rather, it works with the existing players in the market “to give teachers a better idea of what their students are doing within a collaborative framework.”

Integrating with Google Apps.

Integrating with Facebook and Twitter.

Bootstrapped for 2 years

It took Jimmy and his 7-member team close to two years to develop and refine JotterLab and what may come as a surprise to many is that they did it without the help of any angel investors. However with JotterLab progressing to its next stage of development, he tells us that he is currently in talks with various VCs to secure Series A funding.

Refining the product

A participant of IDA’s iStart programme, an initiative set up to help entrepreneurs and developers grow and expand overseas, Jimmy recently had the opportunity to meet entrepreneurs and VCs such as PBWorks’ David Weekly, Tomorrow Ventures and Crescent Financial in Silicon Valley, an experience that enabled his team to fine-tune the product.

Jimmy says, “One thing I learned was that one’s product has to bring value to the user. In the past, there were certain aspects of JotterLab that were not clear and being in Silicon Valley helped us sharpen its direction, competitive edge and focus point.

Future for JotterLab

Targeted at primary and secondary schools, and junior colleges (K1-12 schools), JotterLab is scheduled for an official launch next April, with a soft launch taking place in January. The latter will kick off with a beta trial involving up to 20 local schools. There is also the possibility of a few overseas institutions taking part in it as well.

Also in the works are plans to introduce JotterLab overseas starting with the US and Europe, followed by schools in Asia, notably those in the region, Korea and eventually, China.

But for now, Jimmy says his current priority is to get the beta trial up and running in Singapore, and to focus on positioning JotterLab in the market and acquiring a customer base.

You can follow JotterLab on its blog and on Twitter.


Link to full article

Alibaba’s big plan for mobile internet

Recently, I have been studying the mobile internet sector in China closely, and I have talked to most of the major players. Many people told me Alibaba is a player I should watch out for.

Although currently Alibaba Group has no substantial mobile business, it has huge ambition in the mobile internet sector, and has been quietly acquiring assets.

One of the key investment they have done so far is Guangzhou based UCWeb. UCWeb is the leading mobile web browser in China. It is the second most popular WAP application in China after Tencent’s QQ. (QQ has about 25% total WAP traffic, according to an internal report from China Mobile. UCWeb has about 6% and another 4% for its mobile video service, Uodoo.) UCWeb has about 60 millions visitor every month.

It has also tried to acquire “91 Assistant” from Fuzhou based NetDragon. “91 Assistant” is one of the most popular iPhone Apps in China. It is a mobile to PC software, which helps you to manage your phone. It also connects to a portal, which has over 20,000 jail broken iPhone Apps. It has over 200,000 daily visitors. However, after a closed to 6-month due-diligent process, the two companies could not reached an agreement. NetDragon found Alibaba’s terms were too harsh. NetDragon is currently raising fund from venture capitalists and it plans to spin out the 200-people mobile team soon.

An industry insider told me, Alibaba’s plan is to build a mobile portal, where everything you can see, either services or products, you can buy and pay by Alipay. The Group’s e-payment solution, Alipay, has dominated the PC internet world in China. Now, it wants to expand to the mobile world. But, so far, some industry players told me Alipay is still not very good for mobile payment.

Anyway, there is still time for Alibaba to gradually build its mobile kingdom. Most industry players think the real mobile internet revolution in China has not started yet. It might take another 2-5 years.


Link to full article