Friday, February 4, 2011

Domino Pizza Hansome Deliverer Voting Campaign Rigged By 2-Channellers

It was January 14th when Domino Pizza Japan started three weeks customers-involved web campaign “Ikemen Domino 25 Contest“.

The word “Ikemen” is a Japanese slang which means a good-looking man, believed to be generated about 10 years ago from “Iketeru”(cool) + “Men”(Japanese ‘face’ and English ‘man/men’). The contest is asking visitors to vote their favorite good-looking guy from 25 Domino Pizza delivery boys.

“Vote and encourage the one, whom you think Domino Pizza will be even more delicious, if he cook and deliver to you!” was the catch.

Soon after the launch, 2-channel users found that there was a guy who seem a little bit unique, the entry No. 15,

The right photo is his mufti. His favorite pizza is quatro giant.

2-channellers commented, “He must be the nicest guy.”, “I feel a sense of affinity only with him.”, “It is easy to imagine his eating pizza.”, “I sense pizza on him.”, etc.

# “Pizza”(precisely “Piza” in Japanese) is also a 2-channel jargon that describes a chubby person.

Worse thing was, the vote script did not have any protection against duplicate submission. Quickly he collected about one million votes from 2-channel supporters.

Days later, another guy, No. 11 got a million votes in one night. Then those net people started rumoring that the all campaign was set up and Domino Pizza already made a new commercial film with the No. 11 guy, though an official twitter account denied it.

Then, the official announced the cancellation of the whole contest due to “a flaw on voting system”.

Domino Pizza Contest Withdrawn

The similar mass voting happened in November on a popular character contest over soccer anime Inazuma Eleven [J]. Net users voted sub characters to occupy top 5. [J] The organizing anime maker had offered to make new illustrations for top 3 characters as prizes for fans. In this case, after the contest ends, the organizer announced to expand the prizes for all of the top 10 characters, including non-rigged popular characters under 6th rank, which chagrined some upvoters [J].

In 2001, 2-channellers did the same thing against Time Magazine’s “Person of the Year”. At online vote, a Japanese talent Masashi Tashiro was put up at the top until insiders noticed.

The face of Tashiro on the magazine cover was photoshopped by participator

Link to full article

Seesmic Raises USD 4M

Headquartered in the US, social network tools and platform aggregator, Seesmic has raised a third round of investment of USD 4M (SGD 5.1M) from Salesforce and Softbank Group. This brings the total amount of funds raised to USD 16M (SGD 20.4M) and sees Salesforce and Softbank join existing investors Atomico, Omidyar Network (by the founder of eBay) and Wellington Partners. Seesmic has an office of four in Singapore that does development work. Press release below.

SAN FRANCISCO – Feb 1, 2011 – Seesmic, the leading maker of applications that monitor social networks across mobile devices, today announced a $4 million investment from salesforce.com, inc. and a Softbank Group company managed by Softbank Holdings Inc.

Seesmic helps companies monitor, engage and build their brands across social networks and mobile devices. The Seesmic Desktop provides a single console that lets companies view and respond, in real time, to comments being made about their brands in Twitter, Facebook and other social networks. Seesmic Desktop works with Apple’s iPhone and Macintosh computers, smartphones running Google’s Android or Windows Phone 7 mobile operating systems, Research in Motion’s Blackberry and on personal computers.

Salesforce.com, the enterprise cloud computing (http://www.salesforce.com/cloudcomputing/) company, and Softbank group join previous investors Atomico, Omidyar Network and Wellington Partners. Seesmic has received a total of $16 million, including the most-recent investment round.

Seesmic and Salesforce.com have worked closely for more than six months to create a seamless integration between Seesmic Desktop and Salesforce Chatter, the industry’s first enterprise social collaboration app and platform. Leveraging the social features popularized by Facebook and Twitter — such as profiles, status updates and real-time feeds — Chatter lets employees “follow” documents, people, business processes and application data. The result is a new level of productivity that crosses departments and organizational barriers. By integrating with Chatter, Seesmic Desktop will enable salesforce.com users to immediately see comments that customers have posted on Facebook and Twitter.

“Salesforce.com has become a valued partner as we work together to bridge external and enterprise social communication with Chatter. These investments will enable us to reach more enterprise customers” said Loic Le Meur, CEO, Seesmic.


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How Japanese Over Thirty Feel NEC’s Joint Venture With Lenovo

A week ago, China’s Lenovo and Japan’s top-shared PC vendor NEC announced to merge their PC business and to establish a joint venture company.

Lenovo and NEC say they will create a joint venture to form the largest PC business in Japan.

The new entity, NEC Lenovo Group Japan, brings together Japan’s top PC company with China’s Lenovo, one of the biggest PC makers in the world.

Under the deal, Lenovo will own 51 percent of the joint venture, and NEC Corp. will hold 49 percent.

Businessweek

The news itself was widely covered on Chinese and English media, so I won’t repeat details here.

Coverage on Japanese media are even bigger. The reason is that NEC’s PC business has special meanings to Japanese personal computer users who began their computer lives in 80′s to early ’90s.

NEC dominated Japanese PC market in BASIC and MS-DOS era. First by PC-8001/8801, 8-bit computer which should match with Commodore 64 in West,

pc-8001

then by PC-9801, 16 bit personal computer series established its kingdom, defended domestic market against badly-localized PC/AT and its compatibles.

NEC PC-9801UV2

They had, like IBM compatibles, Microsoft BASIC and DOS. At the end of PC-9801, when PC/AT became to be able to handle Japanese text in software level, they even had MS-Windows for PC-9801.

After Windows 95, they could not keep selling their original personal computers, however, were able to let their loyal customers switch to PC/AT-based “NEC”. They are not “dominant” anymore but are competing top share in Japan.

NEC’s PC-9801 was one of the first looser against global de facto on Japanese personal computing, which is followed by Ichitaro (against MS-Word), Kiri (MS-Access), Hanako (Illustrator), Just Windows (MS-Windows), Oyayubi Shift (Qwerty and Japanese input method environment), ODiN/Senrigan (Yahoo!), goo (Google) and Mixi (could be Facebook, in the long run).

So, like IBM sold its PC business to Lenovo, this news is symbolic for Japanese.


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Toyota’s Marketing Arm To Hold Social App Contest And Cheer Motor Industry

(photo by Chiho Komoriya)

Toyota Marketing Japan(TMJ)[J], a 100% subsidiary of Toyota Motor Corporation, announced it would have a contest on ideas of new apps integrating social network platforms which especially intend to make people interested in motor vehicles, in association with NHN Japan, GREE, DeNA, Mixi and Yahoo.  Presidents of those companies will serve as the judges of the contest.

The contest, Toyota Social App Award, accepts the ideas of new apps for PCs, featurephone and smartphone handsets. However, no stand-alone apps nor console games are allowed.  All applications are due April 28.   Award results will be announced in late May.  A million yen will be presented to the top award winner.

Mr. Hiroshi Takada, the president of TMJ, says, “Young people started getting less interested in motor vehicles ten years ago, but we couldn’t stop it.  Social apps can attract people by connecting them online. We expect the apps help people share the joy of motor vehicles. We are working in the motor industry, which prevents us from inventing something new transcending our imagination. We’re looking forward to great ideas from everyone.  We hope this contest may contribute to bringing good trends to motor, game and social app industries.”

Via: CNET Japan[J]


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The Mystery of Pricing [And Successful Business]

The more experience I gain running businesses, the more fascinated and puzzled I become with the mystery called PRICE.

What is Price? How is it determined?

Solve the mystery if you can, with the following clues:

P = Perception

When the ‘Zodiac Grill’ – a very sophisticated restaurant launched at the Taj Mahal Hotel in Mumbai, the menu did not have prices. Guests were free to order what they wanted, and then leave behind a price for the meal as they deemed fit. There were no eyebrows raised if guests left behind $1 as long as they thought that was the value of the meal they had enjoyed.

As it turned out, The Zodiac Grill received more revenue for meals served than they had estimated. Guests had enjoyed the ambience, the food and the service and had rewarded the restaurant with a price based on their ‘perception’ rather than what would have been printed on the menu.

The Zodiac Grill today has a fully priced menu and the launch experiment helped the hotel management tremendously to ‘price’ the service appropriately.

I see an interesting pricing model being followed by the digital enthusiasts who make free ‘plug-ins’ for large publishing platforms like WordPress.org. Subscribers of the wordpress.org platform are free to download all these fantastic plug-ins and then are prompted to ‘donate’ a few dollars to the developers if they feel like it. I am sure that the sum of donations received, generates more money for the developers than they would have earned if they were to price each plug in.

If you are a new start up or a business entrepreneur, try and gauge the prices of your product and services based on what your customers perceive it to be worth. It may be the best way to discover your true value.

R – Revenue Build

Many businesses I know have certain revenue targets in their business plans. They aspire to be say a $10 million Topline Company by the 3rd year of starting up. Pricing then begins to work backwards and they price their products and services accordingly.

Is this the way to build and price your services? I have a contrarian point of view. This approach may damage the value creation.

For the sake of giving an example, let’s assume that you have a Magical Goose that will start  laying eggs very soon.

  • If you decide to sell the eggs even before they are laid to discover later that your Goose is slower than normal in laying eggs, you may land up killing the Goose while trying to force it to lay eggs. To illustrate, MySpace was spoilt early on by Google when they received guaranteed revenue commitments from Google who exclusively took over selling ads on MySpace. Past the first year, Google figured that this was a loss making deal for them (they made less revenue from MySpace ads than what they had guaranteed to pay MySpace) and did not renew their agreement. But by then, MySpace had got addicted to ‘revenue’ toplines and went ahead and ruined their site by spraying ugly ads all over the site and aggressively selling them. MySpace, as I remember looked like a website that had only ugly ad hoardings all over and this quickly drove away lots of their users. The lure of only generating revenue ruined MySpace forever.
  • On the other hand, if you determine the price of eggs before they are laid, you may land up selling ‘golden’ eggs at the price of ‘normal’ eggs. Facebook managed this beautifully – they took their own sweet time to just to understand their ‘Magical Goose’ and what it was really going to be valuable for. It’s amazing to see how slowly and elegantly they have sold ads (so they priced their golden eggs appropriately) and more so, introduced non obtrusive revenue streams like ‘facebook credits’ – a la creating value from the feathers of the Magical goose in addition to the eggs it lays!

Revenues are important but should not become the death noose of your business as it begins to rev up.

I – Insights

What do people pay for? If you can really examine the finer detail of what consumers really want to reward you for, then pricing can really be made to work for you in a far more profitable way than you could imagine.

Examples are aplenty. It’s well known that kids buy McDonalds ‘happy’ meals for the toys, and more often then not, their parents then eat the ‘happy’ meals. In India, brands splurge on MTV just for the association with an iconic youth channel more than the actual media reach it delivers. Chinese customers are happy to pay much more for a Gucci bag made in Italy than an identical Gucci bag made in Korea. So, in the case of McDonalds, MTV & Gucci, beyond their core offering, it’s intangible value drivers based on their consumer insights that is also being aggressively priced.

When we sell ‘Advergames’ (branded games), we calculate the time spent by consumers playing the game and hence interacting with the brand. So assume that 200,000 unique players play a brand game for 3 minutes, we have delivered 600,000 minutes of engagement to the brand. Next, we compare how expensive buying 600,000 advertising minutes would be on television and then price our offering very competitively. In this case we have an insight about how our customers (brand owners) VALUE media – not by impressions but by engagement.

 

Advergames deliver engagement not impressions

Insight – ‘Advergames’ deliver engagement not impressions

When I made socks in my father’s Company, I began walking around in European Clothing stores to discover what kind of socks I should be selling to them. During this process, I stumbled upon an amazing insight – the price of Baby Socks for new borns (as young as 3 months) were the same as the price of Men’s socks as large as shoe size 12! When I dived deeper, I realized that it was mothers who buy socks and they were equally attached emotionally to their newborn child as they were to their husbands and hence didn’t differentiate the price of baby socks vs. men’s socks.  Now, baby socks weigh 10% of Men’s socks and hence are 90% more profitable to make. We started our export business making Baby Socks!

Try and go beyond the obvious reasons why consumers are buying your products and services. The real price you can charge them may be hidden in that insight.

C – Costs

You cannot escape measuring costs and then making sure that it’s more than covered for when you start pricing your goods and services. But wouldn’t that make a business just another usual small time business?

If Zynga – the Company behind Cityville and Farmville would have added its costs of servers and salaries and then divided it by the number of players it served, it would have logically priced the game service as a monthly subscription. Instead, they offered all their games as free to play and sold only in-game virtual items. In the a few months, millions of gamers bought virtual gifts for their friends (beer on Poker tables) and pink tractors for their farms! They compensated Zynga multiple times over to what they could have otherwise paid for as a monthly service.

To drive home this point – when you buy seeds in Farmville, you pay for a virtual item that is nothing but an image on your screen. You pay for the electricity to fire up that image on your screen and even for your Internet broadband connection to play Farmville. For Zynga, the money of the Pink Tractor has almost no cost and is an almost hundred percent profit!

So understand costs, but don’t adopt ‘only’ the costs plus formulae to make money. You may well be missing the Pink Tractor hidden in the mud.

E – Endearment

I think this is the most amazing dimension of Pricing. Apple for instance has mastered ‘endearment’ pricing.  Consumers like me just have to buy Apple products the moment they become available because I simply LOVE Apple. When my Macbook costs 100% more than a similar laptop, I don’t even think twice before buying it.  If an iPad costs $499, it costs $499. I don’t go out and look for comparisons and then decide to buy it or not. The same applies to Fashion brands and the likes. For example, why do you pay $1499 for a black Armani Jacket when you could buy a very similar looking Jacket from Gap at $199?

I don’t think consumers compare prices of brands they are attached to and just pay what they are asked to. As we all know, when you are in love, ‘price’ comes second.

If you can make your consumers fall head over heels and blindly in love with you then you can charge them anything. That’s the ultimate nirvana of Pricing.

[Guest article by Alok Kejriwal, Founder of Games2Win. Reproduced from Alok’s blog]


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[Snapdeal Story] “Grabbon Acquisition Was The Turning Point For Our Business”

This is the third and last part of Snapdeal story. In the first part, Kunal Bahl (Cofounder of Jaspers Marketing, the parent company of Snapdeal) talked about life prior to starting Jaspers, challenges faced in creating the ‘couponing’ category among retailers etc.

“The first instinct for us was not to build a website, rather the first instinct was to ‘how do we make money this month?’.

Second part mostly covered the early stage story – i.e. experiments/failures, Series A and expansion plans.

“Snapdeal was launched within 10 days 8 days [Snapdeal.in]. Looked quite ugly. We just wanted to get it out. We had no expectation in the initial days.”

The third part discusses the growth story, industry outlook and a lot more.




Watch the other two episodes:





Incidentally, Snapdeal celebrates its first anniversary today!

For Reference: Group Buying Site SnapDeal Buys Bangalore Based Grabbon


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Get Pune Bus Information on Your Mobile [Sans GPRS]

Google earlier launched Transit service in Pune, but the main drawback of the service is that you need GPRS connectivity to access Google maps – hence limiting the service to only those who have an active GPRS connectivity on their mobile.

Mumbai based M4Mum (earlier expanded to Bangalore) has launched their Pune app (link) that works without GPRS connectivity – i.e. a simplified downloadable app.

App Features

  • No need to send and spend on SMS.
  • No GPRS/Mobile Internet.
  • User friendly  [Search bus within 10 key strokes! In less than 10 seconds].
  • J2ME compatible [Works on Mobile Phone of Rs. 3000/!)

M4Mum has partnered with New Indictrans Technologies, which is the technical partner for Pune Bus Guide and is involved in digitization and marking of PMPML schedule of map.

Big Google or the M4Mum Startup? Well, Google has the reach, the privilege of being the default mapping service, but it appeals only to those who have mobile Internet. While m4mum’s product has a mass appeal, but less (or zero) marketing budget.

Who wins in the long run? If you are from Pune, do give the app a download and share your feedback.

Like we asked earlier (when Google launched the service),

With Google launching these services in India, what do you think will be the strategy of startups like M4Mum?

Lets reverse the question and ask:

With M4Mum launching this service (which works without GPRS/SMS), what do you think will be the strategy of biggies like Google?

Discuss.


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Indians Still The Most Confident Consumers; To spend On Technology But Wary About Food Inflation [Report]

Nielsen has released its consumer confidence report for 4th quarter of 2010 and the scene only looks worse for the developed nations. Consumer confidence fell in 25 of 52 countries QoQ. India maintains its lead with a marginal rise in index from last quarter. This is a good sign for us as this means that the economy is fast moving out of the slowdown. But global economic conditions have made Indians wary about the future and there is some restraint in spending habits.

Key Takeaways:

  • 30% Indians think that the country is still in an economic recession ( 3% lower than last quarter). 55% of these believe that we will see brighter days by the end of 2011.
  • Nine out of ten Indians are optimistic about their job prospects in the next twelve months.
  • 84% are optimistic about their personal finances. Highest worldwide.
  • 44% think that this isn’t the right time to buy necessary goods. This is 3% higher than Q3 2010.
  • Savings and Stock/Mutual fund investment are the top priority with the spare cash.
  • Spending on technology products as the third most preferred disposition of spare cash.
  • Interest in buying clothes/movies/holidays has dropped marginally.

Even though we are the most confident global consumers, we are still wary of going out and spending. Inflation of food prices is the top most concern for Indians. More than 72% Indians claim to have changed there spending habits to cope up with the household expenses.

How have you changed your spending habits? Saying no to pizzas and movies anyone?


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Bring Structure to Learning With KnowledgeWheels Visualization Tool [efficient use of HTML5]

Mumbai based e-learning startup SurroundSchool (earlier coverage) has revamped the product and launched a new visualization tool called KnowledgeWheels.

KnowledgeWheels is a visualization tool and a content delivery engine that makes it easier to define a complex subject by drawing all the related sub-subjects around it in a circular structure (more like Google’s Wonder Wheel?). Each related sub-subject can be another complex KnowledgeWheel in itself. The details on sub topics can then be fetched from content sites like Wikipedia, YouTube etc.

KnowledgeWheel

KnowledgeWheel

SurroundSchool sticks to its basic idea of giving subject wise structured learning from content already available on the web. We earlier did complain about below average UI and that is what KnowledgeWheels brings, a better interface with help of SVG components of HTML5. Maintains the sleekness of the UI, yet not compromising on interactivity. Though few hiccups are there but overall good leap for version 2. The team will be enhancing the product for porting to iPad and other handheld devices.

Prima facie the concept looks promising and does have potential to make it big but the approach of keeping it under closed walls of login brings in a lot of friction. The passer by crowd will never take the pain of logging in before to try. Also there is very little discovery as no SEO is possible. If social upliftment is the mission behind this, as the founder mentions, then the tool would see better adoption with a Wikipedia like open platform, where everyone could contribute 1 node of the KnowledgeWheel.

The startup expects to make self-sustainable revenue by helping institutes and teachers to demo their sample content for a small fee.

Let us know what you think of KnowledgeWheels? Do try it, it’s worth the time.


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