Tag Archive | "turkish"

Madvertise Launches madPlus To Add Real-Time Bidding, Further Targeting To Its Mobile Ad Network

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madvertise-logo

Madvertise, the European mobile ad network backed by the likes of Earlybird and Blumberg Capital, is adding a raft of new options for advertisers using its platform, including the introduction of AdWords-esque Real-Time Bidding, along with more sophisticated targeting.

Dubbed ‘madPlus’ (those crazy Germans!), the new ad technology suite sees madvertise able to offer its clients new targeting capabilities that go beyond its existing geo-targeting and other criteria, such as content topics, defined handset models, operating systems, time, geographic location, and frequency capping. New to the table is the ability to select and target predefined audiences (e.g. “shopping mums” or “globetrotters”), resulting in a greater ROI, since it reduces ad wastage, says the company.

At the heart of madPlus, however, is the new mobile Real-Time Bidding (RTB) offering. Similar to the way Google AdWords works, madvertise’s RTB technology enables mobile advertising space to be auctioned in real-time, “leading to better purchasing conditions for media agencies and their clients”, claims the company. That, of course, depends on if the auctioneering process doesn’t push up the cost of the ad, which in turn may depend on target audience and other criteria relating to the campaign itself.

madPlus also sees the introduction of madPlus Trading, a new tool providing media agencies with direct access to the madPlus technology so that they can “independently plan their campaigns, reach and budget”.

In terms of scale and reach, madvertise claims six billion monthly page impressions. That looks like it’s up from two billion as recently as April — a likely benefactor of its recent purchase of the Turkish mobile ad network Mobilike as the company expands towards the Middle East.

Madvertise was founded in 2008 and is funded by Earlybird, Blumberg Capital, Team Europe, Point Nine Capital and Felicis Ventures. The company currently has over 90 employees with offices in Berlin, Hamburg, London, Madrid, Milan, Paris and Istanbul.



Article courtesy of TechCrunch

From Disrupt Runner-Up To $22 Million In Funding, CloudFlare Tells All

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cloudflare

According to Matthew Prince, CEO of CloudFlare, the service that makes websites faster and more secure, he and co-founder Michelle Zatlyn, had their heart set on launching at TechCrunch Disrupt ever since it was called TechCrunch50. They eventually got their chance – though not at TC50. Instead, CloudFlare ended up as runner-up to Qwiki at TechCrunch Disrupt SF 2010. But their story is a good one to tell, because it demonstrates that you don’t have to take home the trophy to win.

The company has since gone on to raise $22 million in funding, help the U.S. formulate policy around how the Internet works, and grow CloudFlare’s base of websites to over half a million, ranging from small startups to the Fortune 500. The company now sees more traffic in a month than Instagram, eBay, Amazon, Aol, Apple, Twitter, Wikipedia, Bing, PayPal and Zynga…combined.

We recently caught up with Prince to talk about what it was like launching at TechCrunch Disrupt and what advice he might have for new Disrupt participants. Prince has stayed involved with Disrupt in the months since his near-win, serving as a judge at TechCrunch Disrupt Beijing, for example, and also helping new Disrupt startups prepare for the onslaught of traffic. CloudFlare has worked with previous finalists like Bitcasa, CakeHealth, (recent Salesforce acquisitionGoInstant and many others, which Prince says has allowed them to live the Disrupt experience time and again.

Using data accumulated from 15 to 20 companies during Disrupt SF 2011 and Disrupt NY 2012, he knows exactly what startups are up against:

  • Over the 3 days of TC Disrupt, startups’ sites see an average of a 3x to 10x surge in traffic.
  • Startups see 10,000-20,000 pageviews per day during the event, with 20% of the traffic hitting while they were on stage.
  • Traffic builds throughout the competition, but spikes when the TC post goes up.
  • For finalists, traffic can reach hundreds of requests per second while on stage and during the winners announcements.

TechCrunch: What were some of the highlights between Disrupt 2010 and now?

Prince: Internally, we’ve taken the approach of hiring incredibly smart people. Instead of throwing as many people as possible at the problem, we’re getting the best possible people. And so building our team up has been incredible – that’s sort of a cheesy thing to say – but that’s been the biggest highlight.

And it’s been pretty heady when we got a call from a senior official in the Turkish government who had put their official elections results page up on CloudFlare during their last election. They called us and said “thank you for helping us preserve Turkish democracy.” And you know, we’re just a bunch of dorky engineers sitting in a corner of San Francisco. Seeing you can have that wide of an affect…that’s been amazing.

Getting to sit and help formulate policy for how the Internet should work has been amazing, too. Michelle, one of my co-founders, was invited recently to be a representative to the Federal Communications Commission – the only representative from any Internet startup to advise on network neutrality – she’s one of fifteen setting network neutrality policies.

TechCrunch: What was it like right after Disrupt?

Prince: What was nerve-racking, leading up to Disrupt, was that we knew it would work at a small amount [of users], but we didn’t know how many people would sign up. And we didn’t want to say “oh, today, you can sign up to sign up.” We didn’t want to have a waiting list. We wanted to step on stage, flip the switch, and actually have the service on. I remember walking backstage, and there were still 34 critical bugs that needed to be solved before we could actually turn the service on. Michelle and I were actually sitting backstage watching the team chat, and all the engineers were saying “OK, I’ve got #12, I’ve got #13,” but there were still a handful when walked on stage.

It was remarkable to then watch as people started signing up. And what’s been remarkable is that a huge percentage of those users that signed up – a lot them that were in the audience at Disrupt watching – are still our biggest users today, and are our biggest advocates.

TechCrunch: What was it like to launch on the Disrupt stage?

Prince: We sort of had a demo problem. We could say “here’s how this works,” but it was a very difficult product to show. It was like, “we make sites faster,” but it was hard to show that you weren’t faking it.

The way that Mike Arrington described it was that there’s one company that’s incredibly boring, and they’re essentially doing muffler repair for the Internet. And that’s not very sexy. Then there’s this other company that’s essentially a Ferrari, but we’re not sure if it’s going to get out of the garage. It turned out that muffler repair wasn’t very sexy, but it turned out that a lot of people needed their muffler repaired.

TechCrunch: And how did it affect investor relations afterwards?

Prince: Well, it didn’t hurt us. We launched on September 27th, 2010, and the 29th was the finals. You know, you work for months to do this. Everyone was just exhausted afterwards. There’s kind of a weird letdown. Nothing broke, it was all kind of working. But the next couple of days, investors didn’t immediately call. That’s just kind of the cycle of how investors work. But it was about two weeks later, our phone started ringing like crazy from investors. In mid-October, we started talking to just about every firm you’ve ever heard of, and everyone was interested in participating with us. It was a very humbling thing to see. We never put together a presentation deck, we would just go and meet with people. Investors would come to us.

We whittled things down to our top five firms, and there was this one particular Monday that we had five final meetings with five different firms. Michelle and I were kind of sprinting from one firm to another. We ended up coming out of that with a number different options from some amazing, different people. It was hard to rank order the different offers we had. And the person that stood out from that was Scott Sandell at NEA.

[CloudFlare went on to raise $20 million, but held off on announcing it for some time.]

Prince: I think fundraising stories are boring. I think that raising money can often screw the culture of companies up, and it’s not necessarily something to be proud of. Every time you have to raise money, it’s a failure. It means you didn’t generate enough revenue from your customers, and that’s OK, but it’s not something to shout from the rooftops. So that’s why we kept our fundraising round secret for 8 months. And I would have kept it secret longer, but somebody started to get word of it.

TechCrunch: Do you have any advice for the incoming companies that will launch at Disrupt?

Prince: One thing is that they should definitely sign up for CloudFlare.

TechCrunch: I knew you’d say that.

Prince: It really is very sad. There are companies that will launch, and their site will crash. It adds to the stress enormously. All the companies that have launched at Disrupt with CloudFlare have had 100% uptime.

Also, tell a story, be real. And the thing that I think we did – the thing that has become slightly unfashionable – is actually launch. If you say, “now we’re going to launch this in six months, that’s very different than “…and we’re launching it today.” If you do that right, you can do what we’ve done – continue to grow like crazy, all off that initial momentum.



Article courtesy of TechCrunch

CloudFlare Launches Business and Enterprise Accounts With Support, SLAs, DDoS Mitigation And A Railgun

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cloudflare-logo

Despite its little security incident last week, CloudFlare has been on a roll lately. The service, which as its CEO Matthew Prince likes to call it, provides something akin to “operations as a service” for website owners, now has more than half a million customers. CloudFlare is a mix between a content delivery network that speeds up website load times and an online security service. It’s currently being used by a number of major sites and even various U.S. and international government agencies. For these large business customers, CloudFlare now offers two new service plans that go beyond its current free and $20/month offerings.

Business customers can now subscribe to a $200/month service that provides them with dedicated customer support and a DDoS mitigation service, as well as all the features included in the $20/month pro account (as well as two new image optimization features the company released earlier this month).

Larger organizations like enterprise companies, banks and government agencies with additional needs can now also subscribe to the company’s enterprise plan which starts at around $3,000/month. This service comes with dedicated account managers and 24/7 phone support.

For both services, CloudFlare is also offering a service level agreement (SLA) that will reimburse paying users for any downtime. Enterprise users will, as Prince told me earlier this week, get an even more generous SLA that will basically reimburse them for 25x the downtime they suffered.

We Were Promised Railguns

One other interesting new feature that we will likely write more about in the future is CloudFlare’s “Railgun optimization,” which is currently only available with the business and enterprise plans.

CloudFlare currently operates 14 data centers around the world. As it gets closer to the end user, though, its data centers also get further away from the server where the data actually originates from. To speed up and optimize the data transport between server and data center, CloudFlare developed what is basically a replacement for HTTP. HTTP, however, says CloudFlare, “only allows for limited object caching and adds unnecessary latency to communications with your server.”

Railgun works more like the codecs used for streaming online video, as it caches the whole site in the data center and just looks at and downloads the few lines of code that changed from the last time it pinged the server. This, says CloudFlare, “allows for up to 99.6% compression of content that passes between the origin server and CloudFlare’s global network, including among previously uncachable web objects, resulting in performance gains for a site’s visitors of up to 730%.”

Installing Railgun on a server isn’t quite trivial yet, Prince told me, but the company is also making this service available to its long list of hosting partners.

Growing To 50 Billion Pageviews/Month By Word Of Mouth

Until now, Prince told me, CloudFlare offered these services on a one-by-one basis and worked with these companies to understand their needs and gather data about how its services are being used in different business segments. Some of the services that are already using CloudFlare include StumbleUpon, StockTwits.com, Slideshare and Clicky. According to StockTwits CTO Chris Corriveau, his company decided to subscribe to the enterprise service “for security during an attack on StockTwits.com. We were back online within an hour. Since joining CloudFlare, we’ve seen performance benefits, too, and added CloudFlare to several more sites.”

Interestingly enough, CloudFlare still doesn’t have any dedicated sales force. Instead, it’s been growing mostly based on word of mouth. To underline this point, Prince told me an interesting anecdote involving Turkish escort services that often came under cyberattacks from conservative hackers. After one of them switched to CloudFlare to mitigate these issues, virtually the whole industry switched to using the company’s systems. After that, more Turkish e-commerce sites switched and then media sites and even some branches of the Turkish government.

Today, CloudFlare, which launched at TechCrunch Disrupt in September 2010, has just under 500,000 customers and serves close to 50 billion pages per month. Overall, about 475 million unique users pass through its network every month.

Also New: Polish and Mirage

In addition, CloudFlare launched two services for all of its paying customers over the last two days. With Polish, CloudFlare can now automatically optimize the file size of your images. Polish comes in two modes: lossless and lossy. Almost half of the size of an average website today is made up of images, so by reducing the size of these files by up to 50% with the lossy setting and about 21% in lossless mode, CloudFlare is able to significantly speed up the average download time for the sites in its network.

Mirage, the second of these services, is a bit more complex. It doesn’t just optimize images for download, but also optimizes them for the device you are downloading them to, as well as the speed of your network connection. In addition, it lazy loads images that aren’t currently in your browser window, which should speed up the time until a page first appears in your browser.



Article courtesy of TechCrunch

Flirty Turkish Users Propel Social Network Interconnections

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Turkish Love Me

Turkey has been named the most social and most flirtatious country in the world by a new study by social network Tagged. Turks, and specifically Turkish men, sent the most friend requests as well as the most “winks” — a flirty communication method on Tagged similar to the Facebook Poke. The most flirty women on the service were from the U.K. and U.S.

Turkish users strengthen the density of Tagged’s social graph, and drive up engagement by increasing the average number of friends the gaming and meeting network’s users have. However, questions remain regarding whether such extroverted users are degrading the experience for women who may not want to field their romantic advances.

Tagged tells me it found “nothing showing Turkish accounts to be out of the norm in complaints or abuse”, but I’m skeptical. Active Turkish users apparently send an average of 173 friend requests and 25 winks. Unless all of these are going to people that truly know and reciprocate the feelings of the senders, the higher volume seems likely to translate into abuse complaints or at least the need for Tagged to throttle their communication channel usage.

In the past, I’ve heard from user experience and enforcement teams at other social services that Turkish men trigger more complaints than other demographics. This is a natural side effect of globalized social networks, and in no way am I trying to paint the Turks as villains. Tagged’s own researchers say the flirtatiousness of users from Turkey, as well as Egypt, France, and Italy that also scored high on those axes, could be due to “Europe’s long-standing, open attitude towards love and romance.” Communication, friendship, and courtship norms are inherently different in each country.

Most social networks probably thank the Turks for their high engagement and for populating the content feeds and notifications of their fellow users. Still, maintaining a safe and friendly online environment free of harassment is important. Too much unwanted flirtation from men can lead women to abandon a service or lock down their privacy controls. Tagged may be currently touting the flirtaciousness and extroversion of its Turkish population. In reality, it may be walking a fine line between behavior that helps keep users on the site, and behavior that could drive them away.



Article courtesy of TechCrunch

60 Photos, Mobile, Pages, MyCalendar and Bandsintown on This Week’s Top 20 Facebook Apps by MAU

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Applications all about a user’s Facebook friends were popular on our list of the top 20 growing by monthly active users this week, in addition to a few pertaining to mobile and Page tabs.

Other notable apps included Yahoo, Bandsintown, and a birthday calendar. The titles on our list gained the most MAU of any apps, growing from between 338,300 and 3.3 million MAU, based on AppData, our data tracking service covering traffic growth for apps on Facebook.

Top Gainers This Week

Name MAU Gain Gain,%
1.  60photos 34,501,191 +3,342,877 +11%
2.  Facebook for Every Phone 5,579,886 +1,905,218 +52%
3.  Static HTML: iframe tabs 33,916,519 +1,857,982 +6%
4.  MyCalendar 1,294,965 +1,021,349 +373%
5.  Global Warfare 4,480,204 +828,235 +23%
6.  Yahoo! 17,205,578 +759,152 +5%
7.  Video Yeri 2,665,584 +705,954 +36%
8.  Mahjong Saga 1,131,550 +682,887 +152%
9.  Gardens of Time 15,397,165 +673,226 +5%
10.  Sayfalar için Hoşgeldiniz Sekmesi – Davet ve Beğen butonlu! 885,190 +644,525 +268%
11.  Socialbox 1,859,028 +640,414 +53%
12.  Static Iframe Tab 5,735,810 +573,966 +11%
13.  Kingdoms of Camelot 2,357,151 +486,020 +26%
14.  Welcome tab app for Pages 7,759,584 +478,960 +7%
15.  21 questions 17,580,050 +469,831 +3%
16.  Samsung Mobile 8,949,112 +435,971 +5%
17.  Zynga Game Bar 7,000,210 +421,897 +6%
18.  Friend Buzz 4,910,950 +399,935 +9%
19.  It Girl 7,769,920 +343,556 +5%
20.  Bandsintown 2,522,834 +338,271 +15%

60photos topped our list this week with more than 3.3 million MAU; the app shows users the photos of their Facebook friends, giving them an opportunity to rate them, then generating feed stories with favorable ratings.

Other apps bringing in a user’s friends this week included Socialbox, which is a downloadable desktop chat app that grew by 640,400 MAU. 21 questions grew by 469,800 MAU and asks users questions about their friends, publishing to that particular friend’s Wall with an answer. Friend Buzz grew by 399,900 MAU and asks users silly and raunchy questions about their friends, publishing answers to the stream; this app grew particularly in the United States, the Philippines and India.

Mobile apps included Snaptu’s Facebook for Every Phone with 1.9 million MAU and Samsung Mobile which grew by about 436,000 MAU. Then there were Page tab apps on the list. Static HTML: iframe tabs with 1.8 million MAU, the Turkish Sayfalar için Hoşgeldiniz Sekmesi – Davet ve Beğen butonlu! with 644,500 MAU, Static Iframe Tab with about 574,000 MAU and Welcome tab app for Pages with about 479,000 MAU.

MyCalendar is an app that asks users to send friends requests to add their birthdays to this calendar, helping the app to grow, then asking for a user’s email, helping the app to retain users; the app added more than 1 million MAU. Yahoo’s app grew by 759,200 MAU, Turkish video app Video Yeri grew by 706,000 MAU and BandPage by RootMusic competitor Bandsintown grew by 338,300 MAU.

All data in this post comes from our traffic tracking service, AppData. Stay tuned for our look at the top weekly gainers by daily active users on Wednesday, and the top emerging apps on Friday.

Article courtesy of Inside Facebook

MySpace, Facebook Live, Change.org, Hulu and More on This Week’s Top 20 Emerging Facebook Apps by MAU

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The apps on our list this week were interesting in that they were varied and didn’t really share any common themes, among them were a Page tab app, a birthday calendar app, several Facebook Connect apps a professional networking app, Facebook’s livestream app and MySpace’s Connect app for music artists.

The apps on our list grew from between 125,000 and 565,100 MAU, based on AppData, our data tracking service covering traffic growth for apps on Facebook. All in all, it was a pretty typical week for the emerging category, which we define as apps that ended with between 100,000 and 1 million MAU in the past week.

Top Gainers This Week

Name MAU Gain Gain,%
1.  Sayfalar için Hoşgeldiniz Sekmesi – Davet ve Beğen butonlu! 590,340 +565,136 +2,242%
2.  Video Galerisi 924,192 +564,511 +157%
3.  Mahjong Saga 672,789 +516,355 +330%
4.  MyCalendar 575,699 +478,752 +494%
5.  المزرعة السعيدة 628,703 +443,249 +239%
6.  Change.org 477,221 +345,006 +261%
7.  Animal Party 592,934 +302,516 +104%
8.  CivWorld 289,986 +273,862 +1,698%
9.  แฮปปี้เบบี้ 809,295 +258,398 +47%
10.  Perfect Getaway 731,575 +254,124 +53%
11.  Hulu 282,773 +229,876 +435%
12.  BeKnown 299,262 +167,827 +128%
13.  Facebook Live 519,332 +167,676 +48%
14.  Pet Tales 808,111 +160,081 +25%
15.  OSCARS 418,817 +159,533 +62%
16.  Total Domination: Nuclear Strategy 320,606 +145,602 +83%
17.  Myspace Music App 742,913 +142,809 +24%
18.  小小忍者 – 動漫主題網頁遊戲巔峰鉅作 405,864 +134,437 +50%
19.  100YearsWar Philippines: An UNREAL 3D MMORPG ★★★★★ 192,492 +132,968 +223%
20.  BomBom 981,673 +125,024 +15%

Sayfalar için Hoşgeldiniz Sekmesi – Davet ve Beğen butonlu! is a Turkish welcome tab application that grew by 565,100 MAU. Another Turkish app, Video Galerisi grew by 564,500 MAU and it’s a video application. Then the birthday calendar app MyCalendar grew by 478,800 MAU; the app asks you to send friends request to add their birthdays, which helps this app to grow, and then asks for your email, which can also enable the app to retain active users. Then there was OSCARS, which grew by 159,500 MAU that assigns your Facebook friends Oscars awards titles such as “best director,” then publishes a photo to the stream, tagging your friends in the process.

Change.org and Hulu were on our list with their Facebook Connect apps this week, growing by 345,000 MAU and 229,900 MAU, respectively. People may be fleeing to Hulu after Netflix’s announcement of a change in pricing structure.

Professional networking app BeKnown grew by 167,800 MAU; the app publishes a feed story when you begin to use it then requests you invite people to use the app in order to begin. Facebook Live’s app grew by 167,700 MAU since last week not just in the United States, but Italy, Indonesia and India. Then Myspace Music App grew by 142,800 MAU; basically the app explains how users can import a “light version” of their artist profile that can be used to simultaneously publish content to Facebook and MySpace fans.

Article courtesy of Inside Facebook

Naspers Values Turkish Ecommerce Giant markafoni At $200 Million, Buys 70% Stake

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Multimedia juggernaut Naspers has entered the Turkish internet market with a bang by acquiring approximately 70 percent of the shares of markafoni, a Turkish private shopping club, through its subsidiary MIH-Allegro. Our source in Turkey says the investment values markafoni at around $200 million.

Markafoni is the third biggest ecommerce company in Turkey, and has ambitions to become a global brand.



Article courtesy of TechCrunch

Bruno Mars, Subway, Turkey, Disney, Vin Diesel and Converse on This Week’s Top 20 Growing Facebook Pages

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Facebook’s top Pages continued to be dominated mostly by musicians, but food, celebrity, Turkish apps and various media companies made an appearance this week, too. Musicians like Rihanna and Lady Gaga are regulars on the list, but musician Bruno Mars made an appearance this week, as did Aerosmith. Food was on the list, too, with Subway and Pringles, in addition to several media companies like Disney and the Converse shoe company. The Pages on our list grew from between 535,700 and 2.6 million Likes, we measure the growth of Pages with our PageData tool.

Top Gainers This Week

Name Likes Gain Gain,%
1. Bruno Mars 7,747,981 +2,632,468 +51%
2. Subway 6,648,846 +2,263,418 +52%
3. Mustafa Kemal Atatürk 846,784 +846,784 +0.0%
4. Amerikan Bayrağının 1 Milyon Hayranı Varsa Türk Bayrağının 70 Milyonu Geçer 828,763 +828,763 +0.0%
5. Rihanna 33,505,211 +774,561 +2%
6. Lady Gaga 34,806,862 +722,452 +2%
7. Disney 23,669,451 +721,226 +3%
8. Facebook 41,135,533 +708,511 +2%
9. Shakira 29,799,147 +690,219 +2%
10. Eminem 36,632,305 +670,077 +2%
11. Will Smith 18,541,930 +629,465 +4%
12. Bob Marley 25,049,857 +627,602 +3%
13. Harry Potter 23,932,167 +618,590 +3%
14. Vin Diesel 24,177,900 +616,947 +3%
15. YouTube 33,897,860 +601,891 +2%
16. Aerosmith 3,577,593 +567,733 +19%
17. Converse 16,993,691 +551,524 +3%
18. Nhật ký 548,752 +548,752 +0.0%
19. Cristiano Ronaldo 26,393,273 +537,902 +2%
20. Pringles 13,876,929 +535,693 +4%

Bruno Mars topped the list with 2.6 million new Likes to his 7.7 million total; the landing tab for his Page features tour and music video information and the Wall contains news of recent awards and charity work. Rihanna, with 774,600 new Likes to add to her 33.5 million, also won some awards. Lady Gaga drew 722,500 new Likes to her 34.8 million this week with the launch of her new album.

Shakira’s 690,200 Likes pushed her Page’s total to 29.8 million, she’s been posting videos to her Wall. Eminem’s Page features music videos on the landing tab, drawing 670,100 Likes to his 36.6 million total. Bob Marley’s Page grew by 627,600 Likes to pass 25 million by featuring music, story and video posts. Finally, Aerosmith’s Page grew by 567,800 Likes to reach 3.5 million; the Page also promoted a recent appearance on the TV show “The Simpsons.”

Food featured this week included Subway with 2.2 million Likes to grow the Page to 6.6 million, partly due to a Commit to Fit sweepstakes featuring up to $25,000 in prizes. Also, Pringles with 535,700 Likes grew the Page to 13.8 million, featured a Share Your Way Sweepstakes with 181 prizes.

Two Turkish Pages were as usual big on the list this week. Mustafa Kemal Atatürk grew to 846,800 Likes this week; he was the first president of Turkey and a prominent historical figure. Secondly, another Turkish flag Page, Amerikan Bayrağının 1 Milyon Hayranı Varsa Türk Bayrağının 70 Milyonu Geçer, grew this week to 828,800 Likes.

There were media properties on the list. Disney with 721,200 Likes to grew to just about 23.7 million by posting photos and animated film stills. Facebook with 708,500 Likes to pass 41.4 million. YouTube with 601,900 Likes to almost make it to 34 million. Then, “Harry Potter,” which added 618,600 Likes to almost make 24 million by promoting the final installment of the series.

Celebrities made an appearance, too. Will Smith with 629,500 Likes to his 18.5 million updated with a visit to Oprah. Vin Diesel with 617,000 Likes to grow the Page to 24.1 million added a landing tab that asks users to invite friends to his Page. Finally, Cristiano Ronaldo’s Page grew by 537,900 Likes to its 26.3 million with updates about his professional matches. The remaining Pages, Converse with 551,500 Likes and a 16.9 million total and Nhật ký (Diary in Vietnamese) added 548,800 Likes this week.

Article courtesy of Inside Facebook

Videos, Page Tabs, Vevo, Quizzes, Zoosk, More on This Week’s Top 20 Facebook Apps by MAU

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There were a few interesting new additions to the usual Turkish video applications on our list of top growing apps by monthly active users this week, including the Vevo music video app and Zoosk dating app.

Apps on our list grew from between 243,000 and 1.8 million MAU during the past week. The list is compiled using AppData, our data tracking service covering traffic growth for apps on Facebook, and covers those that gained the most users in the past seven days. Note that Facebook has been experiencing reporting delays since May 14, so the

Top Gainers This Week

Name MAU Gain Gain,%
1. Gardens of Time 8,004,969 +1,807,324 +29%
2. Kral Video ! 1,397,829 +1,323,258 +1,774%
3. Daily Horoscope 6,591,994 +1,081,483 +20%
4. Quiz Taco! 13,472,424 +1,004,234 +8%
5. 60 Photos 4,015,569 +929,684 +30%
6. Zombie Lane 6,538,999 +893,017 +16%
7. PowerVideo 896,440 +877,000 +4,511%
8. BandPage by RootMusic 23,858,449 +775,281 +3%
9. Bubble Saga 4,032,687 +683,189 +20%
10. HTML + iframe + FBML = iwipa 5,727,077 +514,392 +10%
11. Welcome Tab for Pages 3,183,398 +488,988 +18%
12. Gourmet Ranch 5,965,466 +486,292 +9%
13. Diamond Dash 7,612,751 +417,527 +6%
14. Videohane 376,596 +372,944 +10,212%
15. Today’s Video 1,309,951 +363,103 +38%
16. Zoosk 9,356,846 +359,811 +4%
17. VEVO for Artists 3,316,909 +309,585 +10%
18. Super Texas Holdem Poker 262,698 +258,844 +6,716%
19. VideoGezegeni 549,240 +252,072 +85%
20. Tarjetitas 1,701,700 +242,957 +17%

In the Turkish video app category, we had  Kral Video ! with an increase of 1.8 million MAU, PowerVideo with 877,000 MAU, Videohane with 373,000, Today’s Video with 363,100 MAU and VideoGezegeni with 252,100 MAU. The apps all pretty much do the same thing: show a selection of videos for users to choose from, to view, Like or Share. A few of them had different viral elements; Kral Video asks with a pop-up to provide daily video posts and VideoGezegeni automatically posts daily to your stream.

Two Page admin apps,  HTML + iframe + FBML = iwipa with 514,400 new MAU and Welcome Tab for Pages with 489,000 MAU allow users to install custom tabs on their Pages. Then there were two music apps, BandPage by RootMusic with 775,300 MAU and VEVO for Artists with 309,600. The VEVO app was interesting because it seems to represent a new direction for music on Facebook, namely the exclusive promotion of an artist’s music videos. Installing the app creates a Music Videos tab on your Page.

The rest of the apps were different types. Daily Horoscope, a Turkish app, added 1 million MAU and provides daily horoscope posts to your Wall. Quiz Taco is an app that grew also by more than 1 million MAU and uses a 25-question Q&A about a user’s Facebook friends, posting a feed story with each answer, to grow.

60 Photos is an app that grew by 929,700 MAU and collects the photos of Facebook friends, allowing the user to click “nice” or “pass,” posting stories to the owner of the photos when “nice” is selected. Dating app Zoosk grew by 359,800 MAU this week and is trying to bring users deeper into the apps’ integration by asking for more personal information. Finally, the Spanish language greeting card app Tarjetitas (little cards) grew by about 243,000 MAU mostly in the United States and Mexico.

Check in later this week for our look at the top weekly gainers by daily active users on Wednesday, and the top emerging apps on Friday.

All data in this post comes from our traffic tracking service, AppData. Stay tuned for our look at the top weekly gainers by daily active users on Wednesday, and the top emerging apps on Friday.

Article courtesy of Inside Facebook

Free Flights, Turkish Videos, Custom Tabs, Cards and More on This Week’s Top 20 Emerging Facebook Apps

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The usual group of Turkish video applications was joined by a couple of custom tab apps, a free flight app in Spanish, a greeting card app, photo app and friend app. The apps grew from between 116,900 and 888,300 monthly active users. The list of top 20 emerging apps was compiled based on AppData, our data tracking service covering traffic growth for apps on Facebook and covers apps that grew the most in the past week, ending at between 100,000 and 1 million monthly active users.

Top Gainers This Week

Name MAU Gain Gain,%
1. PowerVideo 895,884 +888,288 +11,694%
2. Auto Hustle 794,953 +328,530 +70%
3. VideoGezegeni 539,951 +283,558 +111%
4. My Tab 781,791 +234,079 +43%
5. Videohane 235,892 +233,793 +11,138%
6. BandRx 774,200 +227,519 +42%
7. Genç Video 305,338 +182,719 +149%
8. vuelosgratis 238,523 +168,985 +243%
9. Puzzle Saga 928,564 +166,837 +22%
10. UFC Undisputed Fight Nation Game 890,573 +163,732 +23%
11. N.O.V.A. Near Orbit Vanguard Alliance: ELITE 439,000 +143,550 +49%
12. Sohbeti Arkadaşlık 346,545 +143,397 +71%
13. Especially for You 699,313 +142,170 +26%
14. BomBom 189,652 +140,642 +287%
15. Buddy Rush 422,861 +139,443 +49%
16. Hero City 198,041 +135,844 +218%
17. Battle Pirates 400,138 +130,879 +49%
18. My Top Fans 990,906 +120,760 +14%
19. Videolar 2011 233,610 +118,182 +102%
20. Spot The Difference 847,858 +116,938 +16%

Most of the Turkish video apps work the same way, although a few of them are different this week. The basic structure of the app is that each takes the user to a selection of videos, where they can watch, share, Like, or comment upon the videos. This week, several of the apps — notably VideoGezegeni, and Videolar 2011 — automatically post daily videos to your feed if you install the app. Finally, Sohbeti Arkadaşlık is an explicitly sexual app that says it’s for “chat” but automatically posts sexually explicit videos to your feed.

All that said, PowerVideo topped our list and grew by 888,300 MAU, VideoGezegeni by 283,600 MAU, VideoHane by 288,800 MAU,  Genç Video by 182,700 MAU, Sohbeti Arkadaşlık by 143,400 MAU and Videolar 2011 by 118,200 MAU.

Custom tabs included My Tab with 234,100 MAU; the app promises to allow Page admins to create customized welcome or other tabs for their pages. BandRx grew by 227,500 MAU and promises to all users, musicians in particular, to create a tab for their MP3s, videos, tour schedules, merchandise, social media content and more.

Vuelosgratis is a sweepstakes app from Air Europe Iluba in Spanish that grew by about 169,000 MAU. The app is something of a sweepstakes for users to invite their friends to the app and win a chance for free flights to Europe. Especially for You grew by 142,200 MAU and allows users to send sparkly greeting cards to their friends and publish to the feed. My Top Fans grew by 120,800 MAU; the app tells you who you “Top 8 Fans” are and then publishes a list to the feed. Last, Spot The Difference with about 117,000 MAU is a timed puzzle games where users have to compare two similar photos and identify the differences.

Article courtesy of Inside Facebook

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