Showing posts with label Create. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Create. Show all posts

Monday, 30 July 2012

Why carriers can’t create common APIs (but need to keep trying)

The Wholesale Application Community (WAC) will go down in mobile history as one of the most ambitious, but failed, attempts at collaboration by our dear telco friends. Locaid’s CEO Rip Gerber explains why these powerful carriers — all facing common threats — couldn’t get their WAC together.

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Over the past two decades, I’ve built and sold a few companies that have exploited the simple fact that the bigger an industry behemoth grows, the harder it gets for it to serve its customers. At my last company, Intellisync, my teams built products that wireless carriers needed but couldn’t deliver. Today, I run Locaid, a company that simply ?lls a void between giant carriers and giant enterprise developers. It’s hard enough for a single giant to innovate, so why do they always assume a coalition of giants will fare better? They never do.

Coalitions seldom succeed unless the members are motivated by a supreme crisis. Throughout history, a major threat or act of war was often needed to compel independent and competing parties to join forces for common gain: the United States, NATO, the international ban on whaling. Business can be war too, but the stakes aren’t usually high enough to keep a collective of companies aligned under a common agenda. Except for OPEC or Hollywood agencies, coalitions tend to generate more fodder for the press than progress.

Last week, another coalition tombstone was etched. As Kevin Fitchard explained (and eerily predicted) in his recent article: the Wholesale Application Community (WAC) will go down in mobile history as one of the most ambitious, but failed, collaboration attempts of our dear telco friends.

WAC, if you don’t know, was an industry alliance of 47 of the largest worldwide mobile operators. It was formed in 2010 to help wireless carriers compete in an open, unwalled mobile world. Rather than force developers to work with each individual operator to get APIs, the carriers would design a “single API” for location, billing, messaging and more. This would be the “iTunes for carrier stuff.”

Why couldn’t these powerful carriers — all facing common threats from open, data rich, ubiquitous platforms such as Apple, Google, Facebook and Amazon — get their WAC together?

Membership impatience. Collectively, the carriers endeavored for more than two years to launch a “single API,” and failed to develop much of anything. Now the carriers are individually frustrated with the GSMA and WAC. Rightly so. You won’t find the AT&T and Verizon chief technology officers publicly bashing the GSMA. But within their carrier walls, you can hear their screams at LTE and 4G speed. Don’t be surprised if splinter groups of carriers leave the WAC’s original 47 members behind to form their own common API solutions. And they should. Developers want tools and APIs that are easy and ubiquitous. A group of 47 single-minded designers won’t ever create a slick, friendly interface.

APIs aren’t backhaul. Deploying servers and towers is easy after developing decades of monopolistic experience. But building APIs is hard. Those of us that do it well (such as Apigee, or my company, Locaid) have spent years and tens of millions of patient investor money connecting behemoth, byzantine carrier networks to create easy-to-use APIs for developers. You cannot create an API by committee. And while the carriers have done a yeoman’s job of offering up more APIs – either directly or through partners – for high-demand services such a billing, messaging, location, it’s not an effort conducive to a group. The task is made more difficult for carriers because top developer talent wants Apple, Google or the latest VC-backed wunderkind on their resume — not AT&T or Vodafone. Carriers are trying to attract top developers, but that takes time. “Coding at carrier” isn’t hip in the college dorms just yet.

Policy versus products. Ultimately, WAC was a policy-setting machine, not an execution machine. And it certainly wasn’t a market-making initiative, which is what the carriers all desperately want. Some of us in the API enabler market have more sales people selling carrier API data than all 47 WAC carriers combined. It takes focus, design and execution to win share. And if you can’t launch product, you won’t survive. Hence, RIP WAC.

WAC will be resurrected. The concept of carriers working together comes around every few years. WAC will rise again (under a new brand no doubt). But even if carriers can get their network technology people to agree on standards, code, enablers, SLAs, etc. (good luck with that), and even if the carriers’ legal teams can agree on liability, privacy, etc. (more good luck to them there), they still have a major issue: carriers will have a hard time selling APIs. These are telcos. The sales teams, commission incentives, even the product offers, need to be dramatically restructured to become “developer friendly” services. Carriers can get there, but the journey will take time.

It’s a shame, really. The carriers want what WAC promised, and two-by-two they will eventually get there. WAC and carriers are populated with smart, innovative folks, and they should be admired for their ambition and fight. But carrier machinery — processing billions of bits per second at five nines of reliability — isn’t built to move at developer speed. Not out of the gate.

This is a great opportunity for developers. The message from the market is now loud and clear: “WAC is dead! Long live WAC!” The holy grail of “one API” remains. Venture capitalists and strategic investors have been funding the market-driven API agenda to date, and they will continue to do so because it’s the right thing to do. And it will be up to nimble, focused innovators to fill the need, one API at a time.

Rip Gerber is the founder and CEO of Locaid. The company offers Location-as-a-Service that connects developers to Tier 1 carriers via a single API.

Image courtesy of Flickr user buddawiggi.


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Sunday, 3 July 2011

How to Create YouTube Videos That Boost Affiliate Sales


If you are into affiliate marketing, you must already know that merely setting up a website and posting articles are not going to get you the traffic and revenue you dream of. An oft-overlooked technique is to create YouTube videos that bring traffic to your website. The real challenge to your online marketing success lies in thinking out-of-the-box and discovering new ways to market your website.

The latest trend in the affiliate marketing industry is to create YouTube videos that floor your prospects and customers into buying your products right away. I'm not talking about boring PowerPoint presentations converted into videos, but brilliant, streaming screen-capture videos with great audio. And you can do all this from the comfort of your own home, in less than 30 minutes. Yes, I do mean YOU and not any third-party 'professional' video expert!

While there are many great video-creating software out there, I personally prefer Camtasia, because it is something I have tried and tested and found to be incredibly useful. The biggest advantage in using a video software like this is that you don't need prior training or any technical knowledge (other than how to use your computer, of course!). It is simple to understand and easy to execute. You can create YouTube videos that act as tutorials or step-by-step presentations about the product you are promoting. In addition, the videos you create are visually stunning and are of high quality.

Why Should An Affiliate Marketer Create YouTube Videos?


It is a proven fact that visually appealing multimedia help increase sales. This is because all the senses of the customer are appeased and it adds credibility to your affiliate product or program.
When you create YouTube videos that demonstrate how to use a specific product, it decreases the chances of the customer complaining about the product in the future or asking for a refund.
Killer YouTube videos are a great way to promote your affiliate products. Dangle some juicy information before the customers and add a redirect at the end of the video to your affiliate website. This will make them visit your website, thereby improving your chances of making a sale.
YouTube videos are also a great way to give your customers a "feel" for the product. This is especially beneficial in online auction bids. It is a fact that auctions with pictures increase the bidding percentage by 400%. Can you imagine the boost in bidding percentages when you include videos to the auction? It has to be tried to be believed!
You can also create amazing info products with stunning graphics and templates. This will give you a chance to justify a higher price for your product.
The last, but most compelling reason to create YouTube videos for your affiliate products or services is that they reduce miscommunication with customers. When you display the product and its features visually, the customer understands it better and can make an informed decision on whether the product is right for them or not.

Here are some ways to create YouTube videos that explode your affiliate sales, using Camtasia:


Record your desktop screen/activity with just a single click.
Convert any number of videos recorded into web pages. The advantage is you can direct your customers to the webpage, where they can listen and view your product in action...this is a very compelling sales technique as it really grabs the customer's attention.
You can also upload and publish these pages to your blogs, podcasts, RSS feeds, etc. This is a sure-fire way to spread the word online about your website or product and can be a great advertising strategy to generate traffic and revenue.

Of course, there are many more useful features in this software program that can help you create stunning visual imagery and truly mind-blowing tutorials and presentations.

Just remember that the primary goal of creating YouTube videos is to drive traffic to your affiliate website and explode your profits. But, do you know how to make your YouTube videos work for your business? I know just the right person to help you make money off YouTube..




Now that you know how to create YouTube videos, it is time to make Money From YouTube. Find out how you can make YouTube videos explode your affiliate sales.



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