Tag Archive | "install-the-app"

Google: 40% Of Android Users Accept Google+ Sign-In’s Over-The-Air Install Prompts

Tags: , , , , , , ,


google_plus_developer_logo

Ever since Google launched its new Google+ Sign-In for mobile and the web, the company has been saying that one of the most popular features on the platform is the ability for publishers to direct users to install their native Android apps with a single click during the sign-in process. These over-the-air installs, Google today revealed, have indeed turned out to be a nice way for publishers to direct users to their mobile platforms. About 40% of those who see the prompt, the company told me today, accept and install the app.

Here is what Seth Sternberg, Google’s product manager for the Google+ platform (and former Meebo CEO) had to say:

“When we launched Google+ Sign-In, we wanted to bridge the gap between desktop and mobile by allowing web users to instantly download a site’s Android app with just one click using our over-the-air install feature. Since launch, we’re now finding that 40% of people who are offered to install a website’s mobile app, accept. This is a significant benefit for consumers, who can now easily access their favorite sites on the go, and developers, who are experiencing greater mobile usage.”

The Google+ sign-in feature has obviously been a major focus for the Google+ platform team lately and it seems like the service is seeing some good early traction. Just a few days ago, Google announced that it will feature over 50 Google+ partners it I/O later this week. The Guardian, one of earliest partners for the Google+ sign-in system, for example, said that Google+ sign-ins now account for 41% of social sign-ins on the site.

Article courtesy of TechCrunch

Couples App Avocado Adds A Shared Calendar And Switches To A Freemium, Subscription-Based Business Model

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , ,


Avocado

We’ve been covering couples app Avocado since launch, and in that time, it’s released a couple of neat features, including the ability to add photos to to-do lists and the release of an API that can be used by other couples app makers. But team behind Avocado today is finally adding support for its most requested feature: a shared calendar.

The new calendar feature was built from the ground up and is designed to allow couples to share scheduling, and both receive reminders for events. The feature sends notifications to multiple devices so that users won’t miss important dates. The feature will also be available to developers using the Guacamole API for building similar apps.

In addition, Avocado is also switching to a freemium business model: Instead of charging a nominal fee to install the app, now users will be able to download and start using it for free. But to take advantage of certain features, they can pay a yearly unlimited subscription for $19.99 a year. What will that get you?

Well, users who subscribe to Avocado Unlimited will be able to upload as many photos and lists as they want, while the free version will have limits set on how many its couples can share between them. Those limits will only pertain to things in a couples’ history, so new items won’t be blocked, but older photos and lists will fall off the app.

Co-founder Chris Wetherell wrote in an email that the business model was changed to put a bundle of features together that an up-front pricing model wouldn’t allow for. While paid users stayed longer and had greater engagement with the Avocado app, the team wanted to ensure that users didn’t have to pay for the app before it actually added value to its users lives.

Bonus for users who have already installed the app, or plan to do so soon: The yearly subscription portion of the app won’t go into effect until next year, so anyone who is already using it will be grandfathered in for life.

Avocado is just one of a number of apps seeking to make life easier between couples. There’s also Pair, Cupple, and SimplyUs, among others. The startup was founded by a husband-and-wife team of Wetherell and Jenna Bilotta — both former Googlers — and has raised $1.3 million in seed funding from Baseline Ventures, General Catalyst, Lightspeed Ventures, FeedBurner founder Steve Olechowski, and TV director Greg Yaitanes.



Article courtesy of TechCrunch

Meet The New Foursquare, The One That You’ve Helped Build And Continue To Power

Tags: , , , , , , , , ,


5295175015_07eac72d42_z

As I’ve said before, I’m an avid user of foursquare, and it has become the de facto service for me when it comes to finding new places to grab dinner or just chill out with a drink. I’ve been using the service since it launched in 2009, and I’ve found it to be a fun way to chronicle the vast world that I live in. One day, I will be able to show my kids the history of check-ins and information that I’ve built up on the service and they’ll get an idea of how wild my traveling days were. I really believe that, and that’s why I use it religiously.

I’m not sure if others use the service in the same way, but for those of you who really love checking in and leaving tips about venues on foursquare, your “hard work” has paid off. Today, the company has launched a new homepage experience for those people who aren’t logged in or signed up. It feels a bit like Google search, I think.

Have a look:

I’ve been chronicling foursquare’s movements as a company over the past few years, and everything that I’ve seen and that the company has said, is now becoming true.

All of your check-ins, tips, photos and social connections have now been turned into one of the most impressive location-based search and exploration experiences that the Web has ever seen. I don’t take those words lightly, so just know that I’m serious.

Huge. But Why?

This is a huge direction that the company is going in, and it’s not just a shot at Google and Yelp. Foursquare is creating its own unique space in the location vertical, and continues to redefine it and bring its users along for the ride. Why? Because we power the experience. We built the experience. As long as we keep using foursquare, the service will get better and better.

Most startups only think short-term about how much money they can raise, who will write about them and perhaps cashing out to the highest bidder. What foursquare has done is taken a pre-meditated slow-paced, highly advanced approach to building a world-class standalone service. Many have called foursquare a “feature, not a company” in the past.

All I can now is, “Told you so.”

It’s not just the homepage, the “Explore” experience has been peppered throughout the site, and it’s awesome:

What this shift does for foursquare is open up brand new possibilities for monetization as well as draw in new people to install the app. The more people that use it, the better and more robust the service will get. It’s quite simple, actually.

I know that many have stayed away from foursquare for privacy reasons, but you can check-in without telling the world where you are. You can be choosey on which friends you connect with, and who sees where you are. If you take that approach, foursquare is your best friend. In a way, foursquare feels more “real” now as a company and business.

Nice work, Internet. You made foursquare, and foursquare is giving back with great tools. We’re all mayors today.

[Photo credit: Flickr]



Article courtesy of TechCrunch

Viber Updates iPhone, Android Apps To Version 2.2: Group Messaging, Improved UI, Enhanced HD Calling

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , ,


6

Viber has just released version 2.2 of the app for both Android and iPhone, bringing some much-requested features to the platform for the very first time including group messaging and improved call quality. The UI has also been significantly improved, which should please Viber’s growing user base.

In May, we learned that Viber had surpassed 70 million registered users. Today they’ve topped 90 million users and have taken the number of text messages sent from 1 billion to 2 billion per month.

But let’s not get distracted — back to the update.

Group messages show every member of the group’s thumbnail below the message preview, with the latest sender having the large profile pic on the left. Inside messages, you’ll actually be able to choose a fun background rather than the usual white. You can also use messaging in landscape.

More importantly, a new smart notifications feature has been added to make sure you aren’t bombarded with alerts, and a system has been implemented to speed up the process of kicking off a group message. Users will also be able share their name and photo.

Viber recently released their beta apps for BlackBerry and Windows Phone, and the group messaging features will carry over in an update to Viber for BlackBerry. The Android version will be getting nine additional languages including Arabic, Chinese (simplified and traditional), French, German, Hebrew, Portuguese, Russian, and Spanish.

To get hooked up with Viber, head on over to the website and install the app.

Click to view slideshow.



Article courtesy of TechCrunch

Noom Weight Loss Coach Gets A Revamp After Company Hit 13.5M Organic Downloads On Android

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , ,


noom-task-list

Noom Weight Loss Coach, an Android app that has seen over 5 million organic downloads, has just undergone a major redesign. The usual wheel on the homescreen has been replaced with a task list that shows all of your progress and goals at a glance. The exercise function has also been revamped to seamlessly integrate the pedometer into everything you do, letting you track your steps with your phone.

The app has added rewards and motivational features to increase engagement, along with a few new food tracking abilities. The idea is that you shouldn’t have to input very much information — just the bare necessities — and Noom will do the rest on its own to help you lose weight.

The app has also hit some major milestones with the launch of this new version, including 10,000 daily installs for Noom apps and 13.5 million cumulative downloads for Noom Inc.

The company reports that 86 percent of active members have lost weight, with an average of 4.2 pounds per user. Samsung and Verizon have also been impressed, making Noom the default fitness partner on Samsung Smart TVs and Verizon’s first mWell partner.

The new version of the app is rolling out over the next couple weeks, so if you feel like checking it out head on over to the Google Play store and install the app.

Click to view slideshow.



Article courtesy of TechCrunch

The Billion Dollar Mind Trick

Tags: , , , , , , , ,


2961565820_3d59b7bdfb

Editor’s Note: This article is co-authored by Nir Eyal and Jason Hreha. Nir is the founder of two acquired startups and blogs at NirAndFar.com. Jason is the founder of Dopamine, a user-experience and behavior design firm. He blogs at persuasive.ly.

Yin asked not to be identified by her real name. A young addict in her mid-twenties, she lives in Palo Alto and, despite her addiction, attends Stanford University. She has all the composure and polish you’d expect of a student at a prestigious school, yet she succombs to her habit throughout the day. She can’t help it; she’s compulsively hooked.

Yin is an Instagram addict. The photo sharing social network, recently purchased by Facebook for $1 billion, captured the minds of Yin and 40 million others like her. The acquisition demonstrates the increasing importance — and immense value created by — habit-forming technologies. Of course, the Instagram purchase price was driven by a host of factors, including a rumored bidding war for the company. But at its core, Instagram is the latest example of an enterprising team, conversant in psychology as much as technology, that unleashed an addictive product on users who made it part of their daily routines.

Like all addicts, Yin doesn’t realize she’s hooked. “It’s just fun,” she says as she captures her latest in a collection of moody snapshots reminiscent of the late 1970s. “I don’t have a problem or anything. I just use it whenever I see something cool. I feel I need to grab it before it’s gone.”

THE TRIGGER IN YOUR HEAD

Instagram manufactured a predictable response inside Yin’s brain. Her behavior was reshaped by a reinforcement loop which, through repeated conditioning, created a connection between the things she sees in world around her and the app inside her pocket.

When a product is able to become tightly coupled with a thought, an emotion, or a pre-existing habit, it creates an “internal trigger.” Unlike external triggers, which are sensory stimuli, like a phone ringing or an ad online telling us to “click here now!,” you can’t see, touch, or hear an internal trigger. Internal triggers manifest automatically in the mind and creating them is the brass ring of consumer technology.

We check Twitter when we feel boredom. We pull up Facebook when we’re lonesome. The impulse to use these services is cued by emotions. But how does an app like Instagram create internal triggers in Yin and millions of other users? Turns out there is a stepwise approach to create internal triggers:

1 — EDUCATE AND ACQUIRE WITH EXTERNAL TRIGGERS

Instagram filled Twitter streams and Facebook feeds with whimsical sepia-toned images, each with multiple links back to the service. These external triggers not only helped attract new users, but also showed them how to use the product. Instagram effectively used external triggers to communicate what their service is for.

“Fast beautiful photo sharing,” as their slogan says, conveyed the purpose of the service. And by clearly communicating the use-case, Instagram was successful in acquiring millions of new users. But high growth is not enough. In a world full of digital distractions, Instagram needed users to employ the product daily.

2 — CREATE DESIRE

To get users using, Instagram followed a product design pattern familiar among habit-forming technologies, the desire engine. After clicking through from the external trigger, users are prompted to install the app and they begin using it for the first time. The minimalist interface all but removes the need to think. With a click, a photo is taken and all kinds of sensory and social rewards ensue. Each photo taken and shared further commits the user to the app. Subsequently, users change not only their behavior, but also their minds.

3 — AFFIX THE INTERNAL TRIGGER

Finally, a habit is formed. Users no longer require an external stimulus to use Instagram because the internal trigger happens on its own. As Yin said, “I just use it whenever I see something cool.” Having viewed the “popular” tab of the app thousands of times, she’s honed her understanding of what “cool” is. She’s also received feedback from friends who reward her with comments and likes. Now she finds herself constantly on the hunt for images that fit the Instagram style. Like a never-ending scavenger hunt, she feels compelled to capture these moments.

For millions of users like Yin, Instagram is a harbor for emotions and inspirations, a virtual memoir in pretty pixels. By thoughtfully moving users from external to internal triggers, Instagram designed a persistent routine in peoples’ lives. Once the users’ internal triggers began to fire, competing services didn’t stand a chance. Each snapshot further committed users to Instagram, making it indispensable to them, and apparently to Facebook as well.

Photo credit: Dierk Schaefer



Article courtesy of TechCrunch

Facebook Will Remove the Discussions Tab App From Pages in One Month

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , ,


Facebook has begun notifying Page admins that it will be removing the Discussions tab application from all Pages on October 31, 2011. The in-house app, also known as Discussion Boards, allows Pages to host simple forums. However, Facebook says “The best way to encourage conversation and feedback is through posts and comments on your wall”. It will therefore eliminate the Discussions app, despite AppData showing that it has 22 million monthly active users.

Getting conversations to happen on the wall will make them more visible, and thanks to the new Friend Activity default tab app, the change will make Pages more immediately relevant to users. This is important to Facebook as Pages are not currently getting many views, which reduces the product’s value to brands and makes them less likely to pay Facebook to advertise for their Pages. The removal of old Discussions threads could anger some users and Page admins.

Facebook launched the Discussions tab alongside Pages years ago to permit longer-form, threaded conversations about specific topics within Pages. The app had as many as 54 million MAU and 27 million daily active users in December 2010. It has since declined to 22 million MAU and 914,000 DAU.

The upcoming removal of Discussions tabs is confirmed by the Help Center document. This is linked to in the alert to Page admins about the change which appears atop some Pages. It appears that Pages can no longer install the app. Earlier this month, Facebook informed Page admins it would be removing the Send an Update direct communication tool.

Users still engaged with the app or that had important conversation on it in the past may be displeased to find their threads erased. Page admins who conducted customer service on Discussions or that had invested time into moderating threads might also be angry. At this time, Facebook doesn’t appear to offer any way to export content from the app before it’s removed.

Tips for how to moderate your Page’s wall in order to avoid customer services problems and help your business can be found in the Facebook Marketing Bible, Inside Network’s comprehensive guide to marketing and advertising through Facebook.

[Thanks to Dan Birdwhistell for the tip]

Article courtesy of Inside Facebook

May 2013
M T W T F S S
« Apr    
 12345
6789101112
13141516171819
20212223242526
2728293031