Archive for November, 2008

Private Labeling PointAbout – A Case Study

PointAbout has private-labeled Washington, DC’s feed of real-time crime alerts as an example of the power of PointAbout’s private label offering.  You can download the private-labeled application from the iTunes AppStore by searching for “DC Alerts” in the Applications section of the AppStore.  This video explains how the private-labeling works, and how your brand can white-label our thin-client springboard application.

PointAbout is charged as a flat monthly fee for distribution on all the mobile platforms we support.  If you’d like to learn more about our pricing, please contact us.

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Thoughts on the massive leverage effect of mobile

Many businesses are very interested in mobilizing their brands, usually because they simply want more access to their user base, and they see a lot of potential in opening up a new channel of communication through a mobile device that the user is carrying around with them anyway (more often than even your wallet, after all, if you leave your wallet at home, you might not turn around because you can always borrow cash from a friend.  But if you leave your phone at home, most people would turn around to pick it up.)

But we’ve identified what we believe is an even more powerful argument for mobilizing your brand: the massively leveraging power of mobile content creation.

So what do we mean by this?   Let me start by asking you a question:  If only 2% to 5% of your user base is carrying around a smart-phone, does it make sense to put the thought, time & resources into creating a mobile version of your brand?

Your initial answer might be ‘no,’ but we have a strong argument as to why that answer is a resounding ‘yes’.  

Let’s start by analyzing a pattern of behavior on the Internet (and in other parts of life too):  Typically, most people “consume” content, and few people “create” content.  It’s like this with TV, and it’s like this on the Internet.  Many fewer people are out there creating the content than the size of the audience that’s consuming it.  Let’s call this the 90/10 rule, where 10% of the user base is creating the content, while 90% is consuming it.

Another interesting trend with smart phones is that people with these types of phones, which are basically mini-computers, are much more active on the Internet through their phones than the typical phone user.  In fact, even though a vast minority of users have an iPhone, they are big Internet users, because the iPhone has made it easy to browse web pages through the mobile device.  The ergonomics here become very important.

So then, these pieces come together.  You have very active mobile users within your user base that could be creating very rich, original content for the rest of the passive user base to consume.

And even though those users might be a minority of the entire user base, or might only be in certain geographic areas, the content they make can (and will) still be consumed by the entire audience, and your brand, and site, will be much richer because of it.

picture-8This is illustrated very clearly by a “Twitter Vote Report” app that NPR did for the elections (pictured at left, you can also find the link here courtesy of FortiusOne).  Although the actual amount of data produced was small – on the order of what appears to be several thousand submissions nationwide, the effect is stunning when viewed on the full desktop experience.  And here’s a link showing the twitter comments people were making about their wait times – again it’s as if these mobile users were all reporters, sending in “news from the front lines” that passive desktop users crave.

We encourage you to think about mobilizing your brand in this way:  You will get a new channel of localized communication between you and your user base by extending your brand to the mobile handset, and making it easy for current and future customers to interact with you from their phones.  But you will also have a tremendous opportunity to leverage the data from this small subset of your users over your entire userbase, so make sure you put some thought into how you can apply this for maximum effect.

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PointAbout Wins 11 Awards in AppsForDemocracy Contest

PointAbout was just notified by the Office of the CTO of Washington, DC and Mayor Fenty that we have won the Silver medal + 10 others for our AppsForDemocracy submissions.  You can find all the medal winners here.

 
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Daniel R. Odio, COO of PointAbout above with Washington, DC Mayor Adrian M. Fenty

Here is a video of the entire awards ceremony:


(PointAbout mentioned in minute 14 of the video above)


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PointAbout Submits 14 Applications to Apps For Democracy Competition

PointAbout has submitted the following 14 applications (!!!) for iStrategyLabsAppsForDemocracy” competition utilizing the Office of the CTO’s data feeds:

  • Marinas near you
  • Libraries near you
  • Gas stations near you
  • Banks near you
  • Hotels near you
  • Construction projects near you
  • Embassies near you
  • Places of worship near you
  • Vacant properties near you
  • Building permits pulled near you
  • Crime alerts near you
  • Post offices near you
  • Housing code violations near you
  • Police stations near you

You can see screenshots of the applications below.

PointAbout will be submitting all of these applications to Apple’s iTunes App Store, so each will be available for download on the iPhone, and soon, the Blackberry.  The Apple approval process takes approximately 21 days.  However, all the applications above will be available for use by Thursday 11/13 just by downloading our flagship application, titled “PointAbout” in the iTunes App Store (click here to open the app’s iTunes page on your computer), and then “checking out” the applications from our Application Gallery of 100+ applications we’ve made location aware.  Detailed instructions are in the video above, so start using these applications on your iPhone today!

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PointAbout featured in Inman News

Inman NewsPointAbout was profiled in Inman News for mobilizing The Best Home Search Ever, a popular MLS search site for residential property for sale.  The Best Home Search Ever is branding PointAbout’s service to create a downloadable application for installation on customer’s phones.

Here is the article; you can also find it on the Inman site here.

 

IPhone users can test beta home-search app

DROdio Real Estate, which recently launched a beta version of its home-search application — The BestHomeSearch Ever Mobile — is looking for beta testers to provide feedback and any bug reports before an official launch in the Virginia-Maryland-Washington, D.C., region in November.

TheBestHomeSearchEver Mobile runs only on iPhones right now, but DROdio said it’ll be adding Blackberry support within the next 90 days. The tool searches the complete MRIS database of MLS listings when queried.

According to DROdio, the tool is “incredibly easy to use. We add a ‘TBHSE’ icon to your phone, and it launches our tool. Then, wherever you are, we bring up the homes for sale or for rent that match your search criteria. You can easily see the property on a map, and we even give you directions on how to get there based on where you’re currently standing.”

Home shoppers can request a showing via e-mail, and get a copy of the property details e-mailed — or press a button to connect with an agent who can provide more property details.

If you have an iPhone (1st generation or 3G) and would like to try this service out, please send an e-mail.

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PointAbout Featured in Bisnow Publication

 

PointAbout was recently featured in Bisnow.  The excerpt is below:   

HELPING YOU FIND THE POLLS    

We met yesterday in DC with Daniel Odio, co-founder ofPointAbout, whose start-up just created a shell mobile application that lets iPhone users locate the nearest polling locations using the phone’s built-in GPS. The company has created similar programs for the D.C. Metro (so you can see the nearest stations and when the next trains are coming). “We pull GPS info from your phone and plug it into sites that can send back useful info based on where you are,” Daniel says.      

We caught Daniel just before a meeting with iStrategy Labs CEO (and Twin Tech promoter) Peter Corbett. Here the duo is atop Peter’s new Dupont Circle offices, which just happens to be the former home of George Stephanopoulos. Peter even showed us thetwo-headed shower and sauna we can only assume George installed. (See what you learn here?) Peter is busy hyping a Nov. 19 launch party for DubMeNow, a service that saves contact information (like stuff found on a business card), but updates it as people switch jobs.

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LBS Today = Television in 1930’s

The problem with a really, really great idea is that nobody quite knows quite what to do with it.

Take television, for example.  Here’s a quote from TIME Magazine, Feb 22, 1926:

“In London, a concern called Television Ltd. obtained licenses to retail the ‘televisor,’ a radio device invented by John L. Baird of Glasgow that permits ‘looking in’ as well as listening in. Broadcasting from a televisor station in London was to begin at once.

The television.  The device so many of us can’t live without today.  The device many people spend hours in front of each day.  But when it was first invented, many people didn’t know what to make of it.  ”A radio with pictures?”  In fact, early television shows mainly consisted of a newscaster sitting in front of the camera, reading a script.  It was basically just that: Radio, with pictures.  Nobody had figured out how to take advantage of this new medium.

Contrast that with television today:

We’ve probably gone about 98% up on the value curve in terms of exploiting the television medium.  It’s doubtful we’ll see any major innovations until the technology changes again (3-D TV’s, etc).

PointAbout is in the same position as TV was in the 1930’s.

What we are enabling by mobilizing brands is an entirely new channel of communication between the user and the brand.

For the first time, a company’s website knows exactly who and where the user is the moment they go to the site.

That’s a really big deal.

For example, when you walk into a Walmart today, you don’t visit Walmart.com as you’re walking in – there’s no reason to do so.  It wouldn’t make sense.

But what if Walmart.com wasn’t the main corporate site, but instead it was a site that was personalized and individualized for YOU.  What if, when you were near or in the store, you could interact with your phone to find out whether Walmart had something in stock, or heck for that matter, what if Walmart could invite you to come into the store because Walmart knew you were nearby and knew that you needed to buy toothpaste.

What if, in fact, your phone reminded you that you needed to buy toothpaste.  What if you had forgotten, but Walmart was telling you because you were in the neighborhood?  ”Why not stop in while you’re nearby, after all, you’re right around the corner.”

These ideas are really just scratching the surface of what’s possible with PointAbout.  The web has been blind, but we give it vision.  So for the first time, the web can see you, and see where you are and interact with you on a very personalized level.  And I’m confident that we haven’t even started to figure out how to take advantage of it all.  But if there’s one thing I’m sure of, it’s that the PointAbout crew will be helping brands figure it out.

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