Friday, February 18, 2011

Hey, here comes the WiiPad


wiipad-android

Nintendo has entered the tablet battle field with a WiiPad? Oh, not really. Or you might have figured it out yourself, it’s again another market trick played by those Shanzhai players from Shenzhen who have been good at doing this for a long time. The word ‘Wii’ in the name really have the attraction to have you stop by and have a look. So, let’s examine it. From the design it can’t be more ordinary, with a 7-inches 800*480 resistive touchsreen, nothing is related to Wii. What it has inside include a ARM11 based TCC8902 chip, 256 MB RAM, 4GB storage, a 3200mAh battery, with Android 2.1 OS. One thing worth mentioning here is that it support WCDMA 3G connectivity. The price? not clear, it’s just said it will more be than 1000 Yuan ($148 USD)  because of the 3G module.

[Source:shanzhaiben]

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Android App Market Growth Outpaces iOS, App Prices Move Upwards [Report]

Android App market is growing at a phenomenal rate and while its too early to talk about monetization opportunities for apps in Android, it’s expected that given this rate, Android market will have more apps than Apple store by 2012.

  • The number of apps available on the Android Market increased by approximately 127% since August 2010, while the Apple App Store grew at a relative rate of 44%.
  • If each market continues to grow at the same rate, the Android Market will have more apps than the Apple App Store by mid-2012.
  • Android Market developers typically release more apps than Apple App Store developers. On average the Android Market has 6.2 apps per developer and the Apple App Store has 4.8 apps per developer.

The Apple App Store attracted nearly 24k developers between August 2010 and February 2011, whereas the Android Market attracted just over 4k developers in the same time periodchart

App Economy: The Android Market is Maturing with Growth in Paid Apps

  • The Android Market’s prevalence of paid apps increased from 22% in August 2010 to 34% in February 2011, whereas the proportion of paid apps in the Apple App Store decreased slightly during the same period, going from 71% to 66%.
  • Android Market price points have increased: the proportion of paid Android Market apps costing $0.99 or less decreased from 61% in August 2010 to 37% in February 2011.
  • In terms of advertising within apps, the Google AdMob SDK is integrated into more free apps in both the Android Market and the Apple App Store than any other ad platform, though iAd is quickly gaining traction in the Apple App Store.

App Pricing

In the Android Market, prices have shifted upwards whereas in the Apple App Store, prices have remained relatively steady.

  • More than 95% of paid apps in the Android Market cost less than $10, though the prevalence of apps priced greater than $10 has significantly increased during the past 6 months.
  • While most Android Market apps are priced at $2.99 or less (73%), the $0.99 or less price point has seen a major decrease.
  • The largest areas of growth in the Android Market are in apps priced between $1-$9.99, with both the $1-$2.99 and $3-$9.99 segments seeing significant growth.

chart (1)

Privacy @Apps

28% of free apps in the Android Market and 34% of free apps in the Apple App Store have the capability to access location. As expected, iOS Apps leads the race when it comes to accessing contact information (7.5% of free apps in the Android Market and 11% of free apps in the Apple App Store have the capability to access contacts). [Via/Report link]

By end of 2011, expect to see ‘The Third Ecosystem’ (i.e. Microkia or Noksoft, what’er you want to call it) start gaining mindshare, though monetization is still the most important piece for app developers and that’s where Apple has a huge leverage.

What’s your opinion?

Recommended Read: Explained: Google’s In-App vs. Apple’s In-App Subscription Policy | Mobile Internet Trends for 2011–SoLoMo [Social, Local & Mobile].

[Reproduced from Appnomy].


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Marketing Blunders you must avoid [Hint: Advertising is NOT Marketing]

Marketing is one of most treacherous of all the business disciplines I know.

Check out 5 of the most dangerous marketing blunders businessmen and entrepreneurs make:

Blunder 1 – Believing that ‘Advertising is marketing’!

In the year 2000, I was running an ‘adver-gaming’ Company called contests2win.com and was sitting in the Nestle office in Delhi, waiting to meet the Kit Kat (wafer chocolate) marketing manager. I could see through the glass doors that he was being subjected to a rather animated presentation by a group of well-groomed and fashionably dressed team of young people.

Post the exit of the fashion brigade, Mr. Kit Kat beckoned me in and was looking very glum.

‘What bothers you?’ I asked him.

‘Alok!’, he replied, ‘these pretty young things who just walked out have shattered me. They are from Indya.com and they presented me their current year’s advertising budget and marketing plans. What unnerved me is that this unheard of website’s advertising budget is larger than my Kit Kat revenue in India!! Is the world now only going to browse the web and stop eating chocolates?’ he glumly asked me.

I was stunned but not surprised. In the year 2000, a tsunami of websites had unleashed themselves in the world, and with massive Venture Capital funding they were on a brand-building (read advertising) spending splurge like never ever seen before.

They had fallen into the classic trap of believing that ‘Advertising is marketing’.

Indya.com for instance was funded by Rupert Murdoch and had created history by buying a fully branded ‘skin’ on Times of India – India’s largest newspaper, for its Sunday edition. They had paid a criminal price to just get noticed. Also, they had TV ads, hoardings and the works. The tragedy of this campaign is that drivers, housemaids and vegetable sellers began asking when Indya.com was releasing – they thought it was a movie; being illiterate and never having heard of the Internet before.

Mistakes have a habit of being punished. The year 2001 was the year of dot com funerals. 99% of dot coms went bust because their so called ‘marketing’ had burnt out their start up funds without creating any revenues streams for their business. Their P&L statement had only costs and no revenues! Some Venture capitalists who backed these over zealous entrepreneurs went bust themselves – all burnt by believing that marketing was as easy as just buying some hoardings!

Now, consider 2011. Think of all the big dot coms we all are addicted to – facebook, twitter, foursquare, linkedin – have you seen hoardings or TV spots or full page newspaper ads of these brands inviting you to visit their sites?

These new age Internet giants are basking in the success of a very simple yet often ignored fact – that your product is your marketing! And on the Internet, a good product not just gets repeat consumers but also spreads like wild fire by viral word of mouth, making your consumers your marketing managers.

There are some people who ask me – Yahoo grew without advertising. But why does it advertise now? Simple – to grow the Internet category – to capture what is not ‘naturally’ or generically coming to them. To explain, in India, for instance, in a country of 1 billion people and only 40 million users, Naukri.com (a jobs portal) needs to educate Indians to use the Internet so as to then visit Naukri.com!

So, the big boys actually grow the category of the Internet while also trying to drive traffic to their site. Remember however, that their P&L can support such expensive customer acquisition – a luxury that start ups don’t enjoy!

Let me sum this up by what I heard the CEO of Moshi Monsters (a very large virtual world for kids) say: ‘Marketing is that highly inflammable fuel you pour over a burning fire to really make it larger. It is has no use when you haven’t even started your fire. In fact it can prevent a fire from starting.’

Shop Window of a premium European Home Store - In Marketing, everything goes!

Blunder 2 – Misunderstanding the power of PR

Imagine you enter a party and as you soon as you approach a large group, your friend arrives and very admirably introduces you as the hot new entrepreneur with loads of ideas and a person to watch out for. You begin dimly blushing and deflecting his praise.

Now imagine you enter the party and approach the same large group. You begin to speak very loudly, thump your chest, probably take off your shirt, make all kinds of noises and announce that you are so great that even God is feeling envious of you.

The first instance is PR, the second instance is advertising. Imagine the ‘marketing’ impact of either case.

In the business world, journalists and impact writers need to be your ‘friend’ by believing you and your business before they write about you – praising you in front of their friends or readers.

In my opinion, a strong PR position takes at least 3 years to build up after which you are on a roll.

However, most entrepreneurs either expect PR to work the next day (maybe they are used to buying ads that appear when you want them to) or just refuse to engage in this very time consuming and slow to perform marketing practice.

I subtly tell people whom I meet for the first time to ‘google me’. I know what pops out is 12 years of sincere PR effort.

Blunder 3 – Being lazy to do ‘Piggyback Marketing’.

When I launched contests2win.com, I really got lucky. I managed to convince MTV’s VJs in India to scream ‘log onto contests2win.com to win x and y prizes’ on the MTV channel all day long. MTV was keen to create online contests – I swapped my service for free mentions on TV.

I was piggy back riding them to a trip to the moon!

Piggyback marketing is hard work. It involves pavement pounding to find a gigantic and huge partner (compared to your size) who gifts you a winning lottery ticket in exchange for your unique product or service.

Why would anyone do so?

It’ a cross hair between circumstances and immediacy. Discovery Kids (USA), for instance, is keen to partner with high quality kids’ content providers and even share revenue on that content being hosted on that site. Now, buying ad space on Discovery media properties can drive start ups broke. But if you have content and they like it, you are on one massive piggyback! (I say this with experience – our kids’ property chimpoo.com features on Discovery and Viacom USA).

Foursquare has leveraged large brand relationships and has received massive & complimentary media promotions thanks to their unique offering of real time, location based service that just delights brands!

Work hard to find partners who can lift your Company’s profile and visibility via partnerships. Break your back to make the deal work. If, you finally do manage to get associated with them, that will be a ‘real marketing’ victory.

Blunder 4 – Just not attempting ‘Hijack Marketing’.

Do you have the guts to go to an industry conference or convention, sit in the back rows and then announce your name and Company and ask a question (intelligent please) in every session?

You will be effectively ‘hijacking’ a high profile industry event and getting quickly noticed amongst trade, press and potential customers.

Last year, at the flash gaming conference in San Francisco (organized every year by Mochi Media), there was an entire panel dedicated to ‘high quality games’. At the end of the session, I stood up and said ‘I am a successful games company that makes medium quality games, in large quantities. I believe in the Cartoons model of decent quality with lots of content vs. the Hollywood model of few movies that cost trillions. I don’t believe your hypothesis. And I have comScore numbers to back me’. The panelists broke into a fight with me, but the silver lining was that for the entire week, wherever I went (it was game developers week), I would meet people who said ‘Hmm…you’re the dude who questioned quality vs. quantity…. Good question’…

It’s not about being disruptive. It’s about going to events and conferences where the center of gravity of your business is and making your self get noticed.

I believe that this is high impact, albeit non-scalable marketing that has its own unique role to play.

Blunder 5 – Forgetting ‘personal’ marketing.

Just look at Richard Branson and how he clowns himself personally to create awareness of the various businesses he launches. In India, no one has perfected this better than Narayan Murthy of Infosys. Tales about how he believes in simple living, wears ordinary clothes, gives his driver millions of dollars of Infosys shares, etc. etc. are now folklore. But they all finally reflect on his Company – Infosys. All the successful Presidents of the USA have had massive personalities – all cultivated and projected for the benefit of their Country!

Individuals can take a much larger and direct role in communicating messages than a ‘non living’ Company. Use your personal charisma, intelligence and passion to communicate what your business and Company stand for. So many CEOs I know don’t blog or tweet or update their facebook and linkedin profile. New age, start-up entrepreneurs are lazy and defend lack of social marketing for being busy with ‘too much work’. That’s really being naive.

Marketing is a lot of hard work that involves lots of creativity, attentiveness, ears to the rails, personal intervention and backbreaking business development. The last thing involved is buying some expensive, ineffective ads.

What’s your opinion?

[Guest article by Alok Kejriwal, founder of Games2Win. The article has been reproduced from Alok’s blog]


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Radiohead’s Japanese Tweet Gathers Crowd At Shibuya Crossing

At 17th night, British band Radiohead’s official Twitter account tweeted in Japanese just with,

渋谷 ハチ公広場 金曜日 18時59分

“Shibuya Hachiko-square, Friday 18:59″

# The tweet seems removed now.

It was quickly and widely retweeted among Japanese rock fans, made them expect a band’s surprise Japan visit and live performance at Shibuya crossing, one of the busiest pedestrian crossing around the world.

The Japanese promoter agency Hostess Entertainment announced early in the Friday morning that there are no plan of live performance. Although they planned something smaller in Shibuya, and the strange Japanese tweet was for that, the company gave up running that event as it was too much buzzed over Twitter.

Even though they told there are no events at the night in Shibuya, many people who might not know it visited the crossing road, made the place even busier.

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via RO Rock [J]


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HostelSearch.in – Check Videos, Photos, Facilities Before Checking Into a Hostel

How many times do bachelors move home every year? And every new job in a new city means new place to live and hours of precious time wasted going block to block looking for a decent place. Well, not anymore.

HostelSearch.in is a hostel and PG search engine targeted towards towards students and entry level professionals. There has been effort in making the site go beyond usual listings based classifieds. Features like search by distance from particular landmark, search by rent range, search on map, sorting by popularity, rent, name, ratings and also availability status. All this does give the site an edge over the larger competitors. The site is rich in data with rent of the hostel, pictures of the hostel, video of the hostels, facilities provided, room description with its photographs, reviews, location on map and online booking as well. Generally the kind of details one would find for hotel booking.

The startup does solve  a major pain point and the move beyond the usual classifieds site is promising. A little more UI cleanup and attention to SEO can make it click.

Here’s what the 22 yr old founder has to say:

1. How do you collect data?
We have a team of marketing and sales executives who goes to hostels/PG and collect data from them.

2. What is the revenue model?
Apart from the advertisements we take some listing charges from the hostel/PG owners. The listing charges are nominal which starts from Rs. 999/ annum for the complete details.

4. How do you tend to compete with large sites like sulekha, JD etc.

  • Our USP is the detailed information that we give. JD or sulekha doesn’t give the informations like Pictures, Videos, Facilities etc. and the cost we are taking from the property owners is also comparatively lower than JD or sulekha premium listing.
  • We also don’t take any brokerage charges from the owners or the users. Sulekha sometimes hides the contact numbers.
  • We also make sure that the information given on our website are updated. The mobile numbers, phone numbers , facilities are updated when there are any changes to them. A team is dedicated for this purpose only.
  • We would soon be targeting not only hostels but any rental property like Paying guest, studio apartment, service apartment , rooms etc.

Do give HostelSearch a dekho and let us know what you think.


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Developer Preview of Google Chrome Web Store Now Available in India

Google has finally opened up the developer preview of the Chrome web store to India (and 14 more countries).

Starting today, when you upload an app via the developer dashboard, you’ll have the option of selecting from the following sixteen countries to list your app: Argentina, Australia, Brazil, Canada, France, Germany, India, Italy, Japan, Mexico, Netherlands, Poland, Portugal, Spain, United Kingdom and the United States. If you are using Chrome Web Store Payments to charge for your app, you will also be able to set the app price for each country although if you’re not based in the United States you will not be able to complete your merchant account sign up just yet (this will be enabled soon). [official blog]

It’s important to note that these apps will not yet be published to countries outside the United States. This will happen when the Chrome Web Store opens to consumers in these countries later this year. What you see is developer preview ahead of the consumer release so you have enough time to prepare your apps for international users.


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A Nokia failure may mean growth for Finnish startups

Last week’s big news at least in Europe, if not else where as well, was naturally the announcement of the Nokia – Microsoft alliance regarding smart phones.

The change is huge, most probably the largest Nokia has gone through in 15-20 years. Then again, as Jorma Ollila, the chairman of the company, stated in Finland a few days ago: ”Finland never understood Nokia’s big changes”.

Ollila was of course referring to the changes Nokia went through in early ’90s in focusing only on building mobile phones instead of the array of home electronics it used to cater to consumers.

However, the world’s very much different in many ways compared to how it used to be in the ’90s. The Berlin Wall had just come down, showing the lack of offering and financial hardship the East had had to suffer. Today’s world is very much universal compared to that of 20 years ago. Communication travels faster, national borders have little effect on consumers and most significantly – companies certainly aren’t enjoying the same respect they enjoyed some 20 years ago.

Coming back to this day, the Nokia-Microsoft alliance is something the technology industry hasn’t really witnessed in a while – if at all. There’s a lot of chances things will go wrong, but the issue to remember is – there isn’t reward without risk. And Nokia is at a point where it needs to accept more risk in the face of larger potential reward.

Finland’s startup ecosystem

Since the partnership itself has been covered in numerous news sites and outlets to all possible extents – I’ll take a slightly different view into all this trying to answer the question; what will this mean for the startup ecosystem that we too in ArcticStartup embrace and promote to our fullest?

Before we dive in though, a little something about the Finnish technology scene. Many companies in Finland are direct and indirect contractors to Nokia, making the country of Finland somewhat a contractor to Nokia – relying on its employment possibilities and ability to generate wealth. Now that Nokia’s stability is in question, people are wondering about the thousands of people who might be put out of work as Nokia focuses on something else?

What many people forget is that we need to embrace change and look at new situations in positive light. Sure it’s not very nice to be unemployed, but other opportunities will arise. Needless to say, those who are prepared for them will be able to better take advantage of them.

Nokia layoffs?

Let’s play a mind game here. Let’s, for the sake of argument, state that Nokia would have to downsize its organization by about 3,000 people. This is a big number in a country like Finland (Editor’s note: Finand’s total is 5.3 million). If these people have software engineering backgrounds – there are huge opportunities for them outside Nokia.

One of the huge opportunities available includes a potential talent grab by other technology companies (that don’t directly contract to Nokia). Google, for one, has already publicly stated they’re interested in Nokia’s talent. I’m sure other companies as well will seriously look into establishing R&D centers in Finland, even if they might be small.

A few years ago, as Nokia went through one of its larger downsizing rounds, it got rid of hundreds of employees and gave them exit packages. In many cases, if they had worked at Nokia for years, people received 12 months pay as a “bonus” for leaving voluntarily. This helped create many new IT/consumer internet companies in Finland as they now had the much needed early-stage financing that is usually lacking in Northern Europe.

The future for Finnish tech

Being the optimist that I am, while realising that there will be incredible hardship among certain individuals and families in the future to come, I believe this will be the biggest opportunity for Finland to diversify its high technology entrepreneurship ecosystem.

While many larger companies work with Nokia, this isn’t the case with the startup scene in Finland. Many startups have, perhaps rightly so, realised that it’s not healthy to cater to a mere few giants, because if they do decide to change course – there will be trouble. Thus the direct effects (of Nokia layoffs) to the growth entrepreneurship scene are only positive.

As a nation, Finland will certainly have to work hard to overcome the massive change that possible Nokia layoffs will have. However, an event like this is yet again a great reminder to us all, entrepreneurs and employees, Finnish or not, that we really need to embrace and prepare for change.

Change is always a huge opportunity in itself. Some will lose, some will win, but those who embrace and prepare for it – will most likely come out as winners.

Antti Vilpponen is the CEO and co-founder of ArcticStartup, Northern Europe’s largest online media covering technology growth entrepreneurship. The site is run and operated from Finland.

[Photo from Erkka P]



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