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  • Jeff Bezos’s representative just left the board of a startup that raised $1.4 billion on his name. The first truck has not been built.
  • Snap lost a 400 million dollar AI deal, 20 million dollars a month to the Iran war, and 24 per cent of its stock price. The AR glasses had better work.
  • Volkswagen just became Rivian’s biggest investor. It is not buying trucks. It is buying the software its own engineers could not build.
  • Pinterest just crossed $1 billion in quarterly revenue. The bet that made it work was not social media. It was search.
  • Tesla is selling Chinese-made cars in Canada to escape the tariffs that both China and America imposed on it

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Paracosm shows off impressive crowdsource 3D mapping software used in Google’s Project Tango

Mar03
by Sindy Cator on March 3, 2014 at 10:51 pm
Posted In: Around the Web, Google, Shareables

True innovation in mobile is hard to find nowadays, which is why Google’s Project Tango has received so much attention: bringing 3D motion tracking to a mobile device has immense potential. One way to leverage such technology would be crowdsourced 3D mapping. According to Paracosm, Tango can already do just that:

The Florida-based software startup says it contributed a dense mapping tool to Project Tango that can visualize large-scale environments in real time. In fact, as you can see in the video above, two devices can be used to collaboratively map a house thanks to Paracosm’s algorithm, which it is making available to developers via its Reality API. Now all we need is to get our hands on a few of these devices, and I’ll immediately forget all about my Nexus 5.

See also – Google unveils Project Tango smartphone prototype with revolutionary 3D sensor chip

Image Credit: Google

└ Tags: syndicated
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Shutterstock goes after the enterprise with acquisition of digital asset management service WebDAM

Mar03
by Sindy Cator on March 3, 2014 at 9:48 pm
Posted In: Around the Web, Insider

Shutterstock has reached an agreement to acquire WebDAM, an enterprise-friendly service for managing digital assets.

WebDAM helps marketing and creative teams share access to important project files and images. According to the announcement, the company’s client base has a “significant portion” of large enterprises. Shutterstock could gain better access to enterprise clients by integrating its stock photography service with WebDAM.

➤ Shutterstock to Acquire WebDAM, Leader in Web-Based Digital Asset Management

Disclosure: Shutterstock partners with The Next Web on our Creativity Channel.

Thumbnail credit: jcjgphotography / Shutterstock

└ Tags: syndicated
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Blood, sweat, and tears: How we got from 0 to 500K downloads on a budget

Mar03
by Sindy Cator on March 3, 2014 at 8:57 pm
Posted In: Analysis and Opinion, Around the Web, Design & Dev, Entrepreneur, How-To's, Social Media
Pages: 1 2 3

savings piggy bank 520x245 Blood, sweat, and tears: How we got from 0 to 500K downloads on a budget

Gili Golander is a co-founder and CMO at Bazaart. Bazaart is the most beautiful way to mix your photos into mind-blowing images.


When I started my startup journey two years ago, one word came to my mind whenever I thought about marketing: liars.

You see, coming from a UX background where the focus is on giving people a great product experience, I tended to look at the marketing side of business as something reserved to slick types – characters often played so well by George Clooney.

As time passed and I took on the marketing role for my startup (while everybody else was busy coding), I started to see marketers differently. Today, I think of them as storytellers.

When you’re marketing a startup, you don’t have a fat marketing budget. In fact, more often than not, you have no budget at all – at least when you’re just starting. Your mission is to grow, and for B2C companies it means more users.

How do you approach this daunting task? Here are some tips and tricks that helped me grow the downloads for our app Bazaart from 0 to 500,000 organically, spending very little to no money at all.

Launch into an existing community, or piggyback one

When we launched our MVP, we were taking part in an accelerator program in NYC. This meant that we were on three-month deadline, hoping to show some traction by demo day.

We chose to integrate our product closely with Pinterest, which was the talk of the town in the summer of 2012, and allow our users to do more with their carefully curated photos. Even though our MVP was very limited, the core feature of photo collage editing was already there, so it gave Pinterest users a real value.

We launched a week before demo day and were able to generate a good media buzz (I’ll get more specific later) by piggybacking Pinterest and reach a go-to market that was highly relevant for us at the time. This is how we generated our first wave of downloads and it had cost us nothing at all.

We didn’t invent this approach. Investor Fred Wilson calls it finding “entry points” in his post about marketing and mentions similar examples for Twitter, Tumblr and Quora.

Instagram launched into a community of influential design oriented Twitter users, which allowed it to generate 25K downloads on launch day as it reveal in this excellent video. Find an existing community that’s right for your startup, or piggyback one, launch into it and it’ll make for a great start.

Next:: If you’re gonna go global, plan it from the start

└ Tags: syndicated
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Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella confirms top execs Tony Bates and Tami Reller are leaving the company

Mar03
by Sindy Cator on March 3, 2014 at 8:32 pm
Posted In: Around the Web

04 high 786x305 520x245 Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella confirms top execs Tony Bates and Tami Reller are leaving the company

As rumored, Microsoft is having its first major executive shake-up under new chief executive Satya Nadella.

Tony Bates, former CEO of Skype and most recently executive vice president of business development and evangelism, is the most high-profile departure and will be replaced by Eric Rudder, who is currently executive vice president of advanced strategy, on an interim basis.

Microsoft is also losing Tami Reller, its executive vice president of marketing. In a letter to company employees, Nadella said he wanted a “single leader” to run all of Microsoft’s marketing and has decided to give Chris Capossela the position under the title of chief marketing officer.

“I have talked about the premium we need to place on getting very, very focused on things that we can uniquely do,” Nadella said. “How we articulate our value, how we market our message, how we deliver that value to customers through our advertising and other channels, all have to tie into an overarching strategy.”

Capossela will also continue his work as acting lead of the Consumer Channels Group until Microsoft appoints a successor.

Reller will stay at the company until he has transitioned into the new leadership role. Nadella said she will then take some time off before pursuing new projects outside the company.

Given the new responsibilities for Capossela, Nadella is making other adjustments to his leadership team. Mark Penn, formerly the executive vice president of advertising and strategy, has had the advertising part of his job stripped out – he’ll now just be Microsoft’s chief strategy officer.

“He will be a member of and an advisor to the senior leadership team and will continue to report to me,” Nadella emphasized.

Read Satya Nadella’s email in full here.

└ Tags: microsoft, news, syndicated
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How to execute your app marketing plan effectively

Mar03
by Sindy Cator on March 3, 2014 at 8:18 pm
Posted In: Analysis and Opinion, Around the Web, Entrepreneur, How-To's, Social Media

marketing strategy 520x245 How to execute your app marketing plan effectively

Brian Honigman is a marketing consultant, a professional speaker and a freelance writer. This post originally appeared on the Appcase blog. 


Once you have a killer app marketing strategy in place, it’s now time to execute against that plan.

Execution is often one of the most difficult aspects for businesses, since anyone can have compelling ideas on how to grow a company but making those ideas come to life is a completely different story.

The execution of your app marketing plan often begins before the development of the app, continues through development, when it’s first released in the app store and then continues forward to drive ongoing engagement with you app.

If you’re starting from the very beginning of this journey to execute the marketing plan for your mobile app, it’s best to start focusing on your budget.

Budget to fund marketing programs

From the start, it’s important to set a budget associated with each aspect of your app marketing plan to ensure it can be fully executed.

The budget at your disposal will really craft how the execution is achieved for your marketing campaigns, which will often require your business to alter its approach to some or many parts of your upcoming advertising activations.

For instance, if you’re planning to advertise your mobile app on Facebook it’s important to understand how much each part of your strategy will cost, in order to properly plan for this piece of the overall app marketing puzzle.

Whether it’s a $500 or $50,000 spend per channel, this is a critical step in executing your mobile app marketing strategy. Also, be sure to set aside a budget that allows for your team to add more spend to the aspects of your marketing efforts that are producing results.

Craft your budget for your marketing campaigns based on your market research and continue to build upon your experience with each of these marketing channels from there to better inform how your spend is allocated.

Delegate to team members

Delegation is an important part to an execution since there obviously needs to be a member of your team to actually own each part of the overall app marketing strategy.

Choose roles for yourself and staff members that are best matched with their individual skillsets to ensure each part of your marketing plan is executed properly.

Ask yourself the following questions about each delegation decision:

  • Does this person possess the skills to own this piece of the marketing plan?
  • Will this person need further direction on how to best execute their part?
  • Which member of your team is in need of a challenge?
  • Who has the most interest in executing this type of marketing task?
  • Which team member has the best experience to back their efforts?
  • How much time and workload does your team member have to perform this task successfully?

Create content for campaigns

Once you’ve established a budget and the team members who will own each part of the execution of your strategy, it’s time to create the content that will help fuel all of your marketing efforts.

Most of your content can be developed ahead of time in a content calendar before beginning your advertising campaigns, but some of it will have to be created along the way when it comes to social media and other marketing channels more focused on real-time messaging.

Screenshot 2014 01 06 19.40.22 520x363 How to execute your app marketing plan effectively

Whether you’re creating landing pages, writing blog posts to help boost your search rankings, developing email templates, designing visuals for use on social media or building other content, it must be relevant to the interests of your audience.

For example, this interview with Arjuan Arora, the CEO of ReTargeter, explains the specific preferences and habits of iPad users, specifically shoppers on the device.

When you’re creating content to best match your audience, keep in mind the unique feature sets on the device you’re developing the app for, how users will use these features, the preferences of your audience and their habits on these devices to understand what types of content to create on a regular basis that interest these potential customers.

Distribute your marketing assets

Your app has been approved and published in the app store; it’s now time to turn on your marketing campaigns aimed at driving buzz from the very beginning.

With the use of an extensive marketing calendar, you’ll begin to turn on your Facebook marketing, send out emails to your segmented list, post on relevant social channels like Twitter, LinkedIn or Google+ and begin to distribute your content and messaging to where your audience is most active online.

This is an ongoing process, requiring a lot of time and commitment to make sure each part of the execution is properly delivered to your audience on each channel.

The app ecosystem is a crowded place, which requires a 24-7 approach to marketing in order to achieve your company’s goals of more mobile app revenue, increased downloads and long-term app engagement.

Measure the success of your strategy

Use a mobile app analytics platform like Appcase or Google Analytics to continually track the success of your marketing campaigns overtime. An important part of executing a marketing plan is understanding what parts of your campaign are working and which channels and activations are not delivering results.

By using analytics tools to inform your app marketing success and failures, you’ll be able to quickly stop spending time and money on the initiatives that aren’t working and putting more efforts and execution time in the areas of your marketing plan that are really working.

mobile venn How to execute your app marketing plan effectively

When it comes to what you should know about the measurement of your mobile app, focus on the metrics that help determine whether you’ve reached your goals or not.

For example, if you’re looking to generate more sales from your mobile app, analyze where your conversions are coming from in terms of traffic sources, the frequency of these conversions and the correlation with the average time spent in your app and the number of conversions.

Efficiency is key when it comes to running a business; the same goes for the task of executing the marketing of your mobile app. To remain efficient for the long-term, use the analytics to inform future experiments in marketing to better understand what types of executions work well for your business.

Until you try, there’s no telling which executions will go as smoothly as your marketing plan outlines or will not resonate well with your audience. Constant iteration with your mobile app marketing campaigns is what it takes to stand out and achieve success with your app.

What recommendations do you have for executing an app marketing plan? Share your thoughts and suggestions on executing a mobile marketing plan in the comments below.

Image credit: Shutterstock/Peshkova

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