Wednesday, March 9, 2011

Cleartrip Quietly Takes Off Train Ticket Booking From the Site

Cleartrip launched train ticket booking in September of 2008 and it seems the service has been quietly taken off. The link cleartrip.com/trains navigates back to the homepage and there hasn’t been any word from Cleartrip on this yet (not even on the discussion forum).

Though in earlier discussions on Cleartrip’s forum, the company has cited technical issues with IRCTC site and there are quite a few complaints regarding inability to cancel tickets, search not working as-expected etc.

And this isn’t an issue just with Cleartrip, it seems other ticketing sites too are facing this issue.

This pegs an important question for companies which rely on IRCTC infrastructure (which always is running against the machine) and need for maybe an alternative, as was mentioned by Railway minister in the budget session.

As far as Cleartrip is concerned, I believe it’s very important for a service provider to notify users of a service being taken off (Is there anything called ‘Art of Dying’?). The easiest way to lose trust is to flip the switch and pretend as if nothing has ever happened.

What’s your take?

PS: We have asked Cleartrip regarding this issue and will update once we hear back from us.

Hat tip: @vikashkumar


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How Do You Say Baidu in Hindi?

India startups don't measure up to China's Baidu, Alibaba or Tencent yet, but the promise remains as its venture tech ecosystem continues to build out. It may take five years, but don't count India out of the Asian venture equation.
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Bijostagram – Shows Only Beautiful Girls From Instagram

Bijostagram (bijo = beautiful lady in Japanese) is a new Instagram mashup from Japan to pick up only photos with beautiful girls. You open the page, then it refreshes periodically.

The site was backed by a algorithm to detect beautiful girls photo only, developed by the creator hirotmb, and the frontend Javascript is supported by @amachang.

We introduced another Instagram mashup for cats photo, Nekostagram last week. According to Einstein’s no Denwabangou blog [J], there are many of similar category-specific Instagram photo viewer sites appearing by Japanese web developers.

Beergram – beers’ photo viewer by @tavii

Usastagram – rabbits(usagi) photos only by @Satoshi_Maeda

Hamstagram – hamsters only – by @Satoshi_Maeda

Currystagram – curry only!! by @Satoshi_Maeda

jLeaguram – J League(Japan pro soccer league) only – by @ymzkmct

Inustagram – dogs(inu) only by @ruedap

Irostagram – show photos by colors(iro) by @redsnow_

Some seem to use tags on photos, others use some algorithms to list up photos.


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Infibeam Goes For Deal A Day Model – Launches MagicBox

Saying e-commerce in India is heating up now sounds like an understatement. From new launches to re-launches to TVCs every thing possible is now happening in Indian ecommerce space. With the business model of daily deals catching max attention even the older players now seem to be trying their hands at it.

Infibeam has launched a Daily Deal section called Magic Box. Magic Box will carry 1 product everyday put on sale at midnight. The product will be heavily discounted and will be available only for that day.

Magic Box products would carry heavy discounts from their list prices but would be limited in stock. For all those who miss out on the Magic Box deal, they can request Infibeam to inform them as soon as they get available next. Also, for shoppers that have missed out on Magic Box products, Infibeam offers Hot deals on similar products; with attractive discounts.

The idea certainly seems to promote trial usage of the portal. Though with the type of listing that it currently has it seems difficult to create mass market appeal. Although in US market the Woot model is working good, given the diversity in Indian crowd it somehow is difficult to get everyone excited about a common brand or product.

Also, if you compare it to Naaptol that promotes deals on newspapers etc. like a pure daily deal the choice of product really matters. Daily deal concept with “chinese” products (spy pen, baby laptop, Ephone et al. ) that seem very appealing to have and provoke a purchase decision “right now” may be the key to crack this model.

What do you think of this model? Too Noisy?


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Business Model for Deal Aggregators? Should Not Be Aggregation of Deals

[We recently asked a question: Is There a Business Model in Deal Aggregation Space? and while we looked at what deal aggregators are up to in India, here is a guest article by PJ on what could be the business model behind deal aggregators for Indian market.]

Movie 300 – One of the most inspiring scenes, when King Leonidas asks his army – Spartans, what is your profession? (video ).

Post the series of daily deal sites that have come up in India (or across the world) – there are many deal aggregation services that have been launched. There are on going debates – is there a business model for deal aggregation services?

Group Bargain Deals

Special Group Bargain Deal ;)

While daily deals and coupon services are growing in India and else where – many users/customers of daily deals services as well as critiques of this business models have complained that people usually end up buying things that they do not want or would not have purchased otherwise. Which is little illogical because you buy it for the deep discount – and you buy it by your choice.

My example – I am a regular eCommerce transactor – at least 10-12 product/books (non-travel) transactions per year. However I am yet to buy a deal/coupon as most services are offering deals that are not relevant to me or not close to my location. As a consumer, here is my take – I will not be interested in a coupon that gives me Rs 200 off at a restaurant in Andheri (Mumbai). The economics does not work for me, total travel time of 4 hours, commuting cost between Rs. 100 to 500 depending on mode of travel and accessibility of the service provider.

There are two primary needs of consumers in this space that are not yet solved completely:

  • Relevance of the Deals
  • Location of the Deal

While this is the problem that most daily deals and coupon services are themselves trying to address – the aggregators can do a better job at this for following reasons:

  • Most deal sites are limited to anywhere between 1 to 5 deals at any given time. That limits their reach to about 5-10 suburbs in a city like Mumbai (Mumbai + Navi Mumbai + Thane) or Delhi (Delhi + Gurgaon + Noida)
  • A deal aggregator can get such 5 deals from 5 different websites – and will have 25 deals to showcase and in most cases the span of reach will be wider – about 20-30 suburbs (which covers 40-50% of Mumbai)

The above statement is very logical, however deal aggregators now have to think beyond just aggregation and focus on distribution of such deals to relevant audience – relevancy by deals and location. At least in India, it may not be the daily deal websites that can take this business hyper-local but definitely the deal aggregators can if they wish to.

If deal websites are focusing on – Deals in Mumbai; aggregators should focus on Deals in Andheri, Bandra, Chembur, Colaba, Ghatkopar and more!

My two cents – Business model for Deal Aggregators should not be aggregation of deals. That is a simple job and that is minimum expected out of them. Your business model should be Distribution – distribution of deals, thats where they start testing their capabilities and adding value to the ecosystem!

What’s your opinion?

[Reproduced from PJ's blog.]


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Digital Marketing & Analytics Startup, Sokrati Raises Series A from Inventus Capital

Sokrati, a Digital Marketing & Analytics Platform built by 3 ex-Amazon founders, has secured Series A funding from Inventus Capital Partners.

Founded in January 2009, the team has built an intelligent, automated & scalable Paid Search & Social Media Marketing technology – with a special niche for Advertisers in e-Commerce, Travel and Classifieds space. It delivers & optimizes over 15 million impressions per day within the Paid Search Marketing channel.

Post this investment, John Dougery & Samir Kumar will join Sokrati’s Board of Directors.

The funds will be utilized to expand the reach internationally and build a unified, scalable & intelligent Online Marketing platform for Advertisers & Agencies.


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Hello Kitty Twitter App For iOS

It’s official. Bandai Namco has just released Hello Kitty themed Twitter client under the license of Sanrio.

With basic Twitter client functionality, you may select two themes, “Kitty White” and “Kity and Love Teddy”.

The app also has puzzle game

It is available on iTunes app store with $2.99. English, French and Japanese menus are provided. You tweet on behalf of the no-mouth cat.

via Bandai Namco Games [J]


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Nokia E7 Available for Pre-Order, Priced at 35K [Pricing Strategy Gone Wrong?]

Nokia knows the pulse of Indian market..well, atleast they used to. But with recent goofups (read:Nokia’s Digital Marketing Strategy in India – Flawed? Confused?), one really wonders if Nokia really knows the pulse or is in echo-chamber state.

Look at the price of Nokia E7 in India – Rs. 35,019/! Is E7 really worth it?

Nokia E7 Specification

Like we said earlier, Nokia E7 is one of the slimmest business phone from Nokia and boasts of impressive specs – 8 MP camera, deep integration with social utilities like Facebook, Twitter, YouTube etc., smooth user experience, 16GB of on-board flash memory, secure access to email, calendar, contacts and tasks through Microsoft Exchange server, the device measures 123.7 x 62.4 x 13.6mm and weighs 176g and the battery is rated for up to five hours talk-time over WCDMA (more over GSM) and 430 hours standby.

Given that Nokia E7 runs on Symbian ^3 (which is now a franchise platform), do you think it makes sense to even launch a device for Rs. 35,000? I’d any day argue that  Samsung Galaxy S is still a much better device and that comes for a price, which is worth the beauty.

Moreover, Nokia N8 too was launched for ~Rs. 27K or so and the prices were slashed by 3K within few weeks of the launch. So expect E7 prices to follow the same route (so why be the early adopter?).

Aside, as I mentioned couple of times earlier, the digital strategy of Nokia is super flawed. There is no mention of launch date, so what does a pre-order mean in the times when Steve Jobs exactly announces the launch date of any new device (read: One Damn GTM Lesson that Nokia and Blackberries of the world can learn from Apple iPhone 4 Launch). Why can’t Nokia take a leaf out of Apple’s GTM/launch strategy and do a thorough job, atleast for once?

What’s your take on E7 pricing? Are you pre-ordering one?


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