Thursday, December 1, 2011

4 Tips For Turning App Downloaders Into Subscribers



Prasad Thammineni is the CEO and co-Founder ofOfficeDrop, a digital filing cabinet with scan-to-cloud apps forMacPCiPhoneiPad and Android.

App stores aren’t just for selling games – they have also become increasingly important distribution channels for online services. Many companies are developing mobile apps with the ultimate goal of driving users to their online services. But getting a new user to register for your service after downloading an app can be tricky.

This is a common struggle for developers. The killer app gets downloaded, but never used, because the user doesn’t feel like entering his email to sign up for the online service that powers the app.
When my company’s apps first launched, our conversion rate from download to sign-up was terrible. Thankfully, we were able to have conversations with a number of experienced (and successful) app developers. Their advice helped us dramatically raise our conversion rate, and we’d like to share what we learned. 

Why? Because frankly, there are many great apps out there that simply aren’t reaching their potential. Developers need to understand that getting users to both download and sign up for the online service are equally important.

To successfully transform a downloader into a subscriber, and then into a regular user, you have to understand how people think. There is a bit of an art to it, but this three-step process should serve as a guide.


1. Establish Trust


Someone just downloaded your app – great! Now you must convince him that your company has his best interests at heart.
How? First, make sure your app looks professional. Shoddy design will annoy people and often cause them to doubt your trustworthiness. Think about when you land on a sketchy-looking webpage. There are visual cues that will often cause you to leave: sloppiness, misspelled words, poor navigation. The little things matter here, so make sure your app is polished if you want to establish trust and retain your new user.

Next, if you must ask for their email (and this is often unavoidable for an online service), make it clear that you have a terms of service agreement and privacy policy. Very few people actually click on the terms of service, but seeing that you actually have one will increase users’ comfort with your registration process. 


2. Perfect the Art of the Organic Install


It’s all about the flow – you have to make it feel natural. It’s like a game of connect-the-dots from download to sign up for the online service. How do you do this? The key is to make it effortless by removing any barriers between installation and sign-up. Push people from one step to the next without time between to grow bored or frustrated. Removing unnecessary parts of our form, like the “confirm password” field, dramatically increased our sign-up rate. 

You also need to reduce confusion. This means not giving people a million different ways to sign up. (Sign up with Facebook! Sign up with Twitter!) Many app developers have learned the hard way that giving users more choices will only paralyze them and decrease your sign-up conversion rate. 

Remember that getting the app downloaded is not the end game. If you can figure out why most people downloaded the app in the first place, then you can sell the sizzle on the sign-up form, either with words or an engaging video. Even better, if you can get the person to actually use the app prior to hitting the sign-up form, you may increase sign-ups because of the commitment effect, where they begin to feel invested in your app, becoming more inclined to sign up for your service.


3. Test and Measure


The perfect sign-up flow for your app will require testing. I recommend measuring everything. You can go with an in-house analytics system or use something off the shelf, like Localytics. But knowing when, where and how someone drops off of your conversion flow will really help you understand how any changes impact your sign-ups. And knowing what features both casual and power users spend the most time with can help you craft the language you put on the sign-up form.

While certain app stores make it hard to experiment quickly due to their burdening approval processes, you can quickly test in less regulated environments, like Google’s Android Market. Pick an app that you can iterate on quickly when you are testing so that you don’t end up stuck in an approval queue with something that proves to be suboptimal. 


4. Guide Them Through the On-Board Process


Great success! Your user has downloaded the app and signed up for your online service. Your work is done.

No, it’s not!
Now your mission is to keep them coming back — and they are not going to come back unless they get value from the app right away. You need them to use it right then and there. Again, make sure this process feels natural. Here is where good product design comes into play, as well as smart on-boarding. 

Some app makers have great luck driving initial use and reuse by providing smoothly placed tutorials when users first login. Others have found these to be useless. Again, this is something that depends on the nature of your app and your users, and you’ll have to test to find what works for you.

Game mechanics, like a progress bar, often keep people motivated to complete certain steps over time to achieve the ultimate goal of completion (things like finishing your LinkedIn profile). The desired effect is that the user comes back to your app, he can gradually move closer to completion. By the end, he will have fully learned how to use the app to its full potential.

Source:Mashable

Wednesday, November 30, 2011

NASA Plans First Space Washing Machine


Space washing machine will allow astronauts to change underwear more than once a week

Have you ever wondered how astronauts in the International Space Station deal with their laundry when they stay there for months at a time? With no easy way to wash clothes or get them delivered, astronauts spend up to a week wearing the same underwear, and even longer than that for other articles of clothing. In order to make their lives a bit more hygienic, NASA has commissioned a washing machine design that can work in zero gravity.

NASA contracted Oregon-based UMPQUA Research Company to create a prototype of a low-power washing machine that uses a very small amount of water. To be more precise, part of the contract reads: "Flight Hardware for long duration human missions beyond low Earth orbit...The system is suitable for use in any long term space mission where resupply logistics preclude routine delivery of fresh crew clothing and removal of disposable clothing articles. While the proposed laundry system is microgravity compatible, the system will be completely functional in reduced gravity environments."

UMPQUA proposed a machine that uses not only jets of air and vapor but also microwave rays to clean clothes. The company claims its system achieves "greatly enhanced softness" compared to other low-water laundry tech. Once the machine is deemed viable for use, astronauts can stop the current practice of sending their laundry on unmanned capsules to burn on the Earth's atmosphere, and using their soiled underwear to grow plants in. The futuristic washing machine may be designed for outer space, but the company believes it could also be used on ships, military outposts, and Earth-bound research stations.
Source:Yahoo

10 New Google Analytics Features You Need to Start Using...!


Over the past eight months, Google has steadily released one revolutionary new feature after another. On Mar. 17, the company announced a new version of Google Analytics. Up until this point, users could decide whether they preferred to stick with the old interface or switch to the new one. However, Google recently announced that the old version of GA will be turned off in January 2012.
 If you’re not already familiar with the new version, take the next few weeks to get comfortable with it. To help you get started, let’s review the top 10 features of the new Google Analytics.

1. Dashboards

Dashboards got a much needed overhaul in the new GA. Users can now create up to 20 personalized dashboards, developing widgets and formats that make the most sense for them or their company. For instance, each company department could develop its own distinct dashboard to quickly access site performance statistics that relate to department goals. Keep in mind: Dashboards can only be shared by users on the same login.
At a minimum, these four widgets would benefit the average user.
  • Visits – Timeline (can also include Metric)
  • Goal Completions and/or Transactions – Timeline
  • Source/Medium – Table
  • Bounce Rate – Timeline

2. Keyword Clouds


Rather than viewing a long list of keywords to spot trends, users can now evaluate a keyword cloud. This cloud makes it easy to visualize top keywords based on different user-selected criteria, including visits, bounce rates and pages per visit.

3. Real-Time Data


In the past, Google Analytics data was typically delayed up to 24 hours after the visit. For the first time, GA offers a real-time data solution. With its real-time reports, users can view the activity on the site as it happens, drilling into the top active pages, top referrals, keywords and geographic locations driving the traffic. In addition to monitoring current activity on the site, these reports can also be used to test campaign tracking prior to launching campaigns.

4. Site Speed


When Google released this report several months ago, it required additional code to be added to sites. Now speed reporting is standard on GA, and doesn’t need extra code. Use the site speed reports to get information about average page load time.
Why is this important? A slow site can have a negative effect on quality score for paid search, so visits can cost more to a slower site. Google has also indicated that site speed may be an important factor in organic search rankings. Additionally, a one-second delay can result in a 7% reduction in conversions. Use this report to monitor site speed and avoid these issues.

5. Search Simplifies Navigation


GA has activated menu search, a phenomenal usability update. The tool makes it easier for users to quickly navigate to the proper report. Google also created an account search that lets users directly access the correct profile, rather than scrolling through hundreds to locate the right one.
GA also introduced the ability to switch between multiple profiles while staying with and maintaining the settings of the same report. Previously this could only be done using a Firefox plugin.

6. Webmaster Tools


The new integration incorporates Google Webmaster Tools data into Google Analytics. Using this tool, users can get a better sense of which Google property (web, image, local) drove site traffic. Similar to statistics provided to paid search advertisers, Webmaster Tools provides impressions, average position and CTR data for GA.
Although the numbers are not 100% accurate, they can be used to evaluate relative trends and to provide insight into data lost due to Google’s search update. Although the Webmaster Tools report is in Google Analytics, it’s limited to a single part of GA.

7. Social Engagement


Use Google Analytics to track how visitors interact socially with your site. A 2010 study showed 54% of small and medium-sized businesses said they already use or plan to use social media, and 17% planned to increase their social budget again from 2010 to 2011. With more companies making a push for social, it makes sense to analyze social site interactions.
GA’s new social reports break down how many of a site’s visitors are socially engaged with the site, itemizing which social source and action occurred. That way you can determine how many of your visitors +1′d site content vs. how many Liked it, as well as the pages that prompted this social action. Social plugins ShareThis and AddThis easily integrate with Google Analytics, passing information on social interactions back to GA with minimal changes.

8. Visitor Flow & Goal Flow Visualization


Flow Visualization was announced in October, but only recently started rolling out to most users. Flow Visualization consists of two reports: Visitors Flow and Goal Flow. The Visitors Flow report can be used to visualize the “flow” of visitors through the site, while the Goal Flow is an improvement on the original Funnel Visualization reports.
The Goal Flow report is especially valuable, as it simplifies evaluating a conversion funnel. Have a checkout process six pages long? Now you can determine at which page people are abandoning their carts. Then improve the process and save the sales.

9. Event Tracking


Prior to this new feature, any goal interaction with a site that didn’t result in a new URL needed to be tracked using special code to create a virtual pageview, which resulted in inflated numbers in GA. For the first time, Events can be used as goals. Want to find out how many people downloaded a PDF? Interested in knowing how many visitors viewed more than 30 seconds of a video on your site? Now users can easily track these events without affecting other metrics.

10. Multi-Channel Funnels


The Multi-Channel Funnels are a series of reports intended to help provide attribution information. For example, a person visits your site first from a paid search ad, then from an organic search listing, then from a link in Twitter, and finally from an email link. Therefore, which channel should get credit for the conversion? With many analytics platforms, the credit goes to the final funnel, thus, the email marketing campaign.
Multiple reports in the new Multi-Channel Funnels allow users to view further back than the final channel. Now GA shows every interaction a user had with the site in the 30 days prior to conversion. Using these reports, departments can take credit for their assists to conversions, and companies can make more informed decisions about which marketing activities have the highest ROI.
These are just a few of the many great advancements made to Google Analytics with the new rollout. While there are still several features missing (such as the PDF and email export functionalities, percent comparisons, missing graph by week option, etc.), Google is constantly striving to correct these with future iterations of the platform.
Source:Mashable

Nvidia Wins Processor Slot In Next Kindle Fire, Analyst Says ??


 Nvidia will supply the application processor in the second version of the Amazon Kindle Fire tablet, Canaccord Genuity analyst Bobby Burleson asserts in a research note. He attributes the information to “conversations with sources in the tablet supply chain.”
 Burleson says the next Fire is expected to have an 8.9-inch screen, larger than the current 7-inch version.
Nvidia’s win would be a loss for Texas Instruments, which provides a comparable part in the first-generation Fire. “Widely viewed as the only other successful tablet besides iPad/2, a win or loss in the next gen Fire could be seen as a proxy for TXN’s overall apps processor potential in higher-end tablets,” Burleson writes in a research note.
NVDA is up 62 cents, or 4.2% to $15.53.
Source:Forbes

Strange Pits at Stonehenge Reveals New Clues to Ancient Worship

 Stonehenge may have been a place for sun worship long before the iconic stones were erected more than 5,000 years ago, according to archaeologists who are carrying out the biggest-ever virtual excavation.

The sun rises behind the Stonehenge monument in England during the summer solstice, shortly after 4:52 am, early Monday, June 21, 2010.
 Using noninvasive technologies such as ground-penetrating radar and geophysical imaging, a team from the University of Birmingham's IBM Visual and Spatial Technology Center, known as VISTA, and the Ludwig Boltzmann Institute for Archaeological Prospection and Virtual Archaeology in Vienna, discovered evidence of two huge pits positioned on a celestial alignment at Stonehenge.


Measuring more than 16 feet across and at least 3 feet deep, the pits lie within the Cursus, a large enclosure north of Stonehenge, which predates the prehistoric monument by up to 500 years.
"This is the first time we have seen anything quite like this at Stonehenge," said project leader Vince Gaffney, an archaeologist from the University of Birmingham.

"When viewed from the Heel Stone, a rather enigmatic stone which stands just outside the entrance to Stonehenge, the pits effectively mark the raising and setting of the sun at midsummer days," he explained.

According to the archaeologists, the pits may have contained tall stones, wooden posts or even fires to mark the sun rising and setting. Most likely, they defined a processional route used to celebrate the passage of the sun across the sky at the summer solstice.

"It is possible that processions within the Cursus moved from the eastern pit at sunrise, continuing eastwards along the Cursus and, following the path of the sun overhead, perhaps back to the west, reaching the western pit at sunset to mark the longest day of the year," said Gaffney.

The hypothesis gained more weight when the researchers measured the walking distance between the two pits.

They discovered that the procession would reach exactly halfway at midday, when the sun would be directly on top of Stonehenge.

"This is more than just a coincidence, indicating that the exact length of the Cursus and the positioning of the pits are of significance," said Henry Chapman, senior lecturer in archaeology and visualization at the University of Birmingham.

According to the researchers, the presence of the pits within the Cursus suggest that the Stonehenge area, which features England's densest complex of Neolithic and Bronze Age monuments, was already sacred before construction work began to build the enigmatic stone circle. 

"Even though Stonehenge was ultimately the most important monument in the landscape, it may at times not have been the only, or most important, ritual focus," said Gaffney.

"The area of Stonehenge may have become significant as a sacred site at a much earlier date. Other activities were carried out at other ceremonial sites only a short distance away," he continued.
The researchers have already found a henge-like monument, several other small monuments, and a new horseshoe arrangement of large pits northeast of Stonehenge, which may have also contained posts.

They believe that these structures functioned as minor shrines, perhaps serving specific communities visiting the ceremonial center.

The team is confident that the project will produce new discoveries soon.

"Our knowledge of the ancient landscapes that once existed around Stonehenge is growing dramatically as we examine the new geophysical survey results," said Paul Garwood, a lecturer in prehistory at the University of Birmingham.

"We can see in rich detail not only new monuments but entire landscapes of past human activity, over thousands of years, preserved in subsurface features such as pits and ditches."

Source:Foxnews