Archive for March 26, 2013

Facebook Expands FBX Retargeted Ads From Sidebar To Desktop News Feed, Opening Its Most Engaging Inventory

Last year Facebook tested out and then launched Facebook Exchange ads in its right-hand column, a way for advertisers to market themselves to users based on those user’s online browsing habits. Those ads have proven to be some of Facebook’s strongest performing ad units, so now it’s taking them a step further, with an alpha test to extend FBX ads into the desktop News Feed, the place where users spend most of their time on the social network.

It’s important to note that this move will not increase the number of ads that Facebook shows in the News Feed, just make them more relevant. “Allowing advertisers to reach people in News Feed is important because people spend more time in News Feed than any other part of Facebook,” Facebook writes. “We also believe that ads delivered through FBX will create more relevant ads for people. Introducing Facebook Exchange in Desktop News Feed will not change the number of ads people see in their News Feeds.”

For now, the alpha test is desktop-only and does not cover mobile platforms. “Right now we’re focused on desktop,” a spokesperson tells TechCrunch. “Desktop is more in line with what FBX has been doing effectively in the right hand side. And we also find that desktop is the place where more people convert from seeing direct-response ads.”

The move will mean that advertisers will be able to offer links to Page posts in both places, with links going back to specific landing pages.

It comes on the heels of Facebook upgrading its News Feed earlier this month with bigger pictures and separate feeds for music, pictures and more — a move that gives users a nicer feed, but now also makes some sense in the context of enhanced advertising, too.

And the expanded role for FBX comes as Facebook is increasing the number of data sources that it uses to gather information about online browsing habits.

“We wanted to give advertisers and agencies the opportunity to deliver highly relevant ads in News Feed, the most engaging place on the web,” Facebook writes in its blog post.

That will prove to be a potent combination when combined with FBX. Early results show that FBX ads gave a 16-time return on investment to advertisers using the platform, according to AdRoll, one of Facebook’s early DSP partners for the initial roll out.

Demand-side platform partners for the alpha test in the News Feed are TellApart, MediaMath, and Nanigans. Facebook says that it plans to expand that to more DSPs and advertisers in the coming weeks.

After Serving Hundreds Of Thousands Of Rides, Lyft Acqui-Hires Cherry Operations Team, Plans Launch In Seattle

After serving two markets in California, ride-sharing startup Lyft is getting serious about expansion into other markets. To do so, the company has acqui-hired the operations team behind Cherry, the on-demand car wash startup. And it’s got plans to launch in Seattle, making its service available there seven days a week starting this weekend.

The acquisition of Cherry comes as Lyft looks to add some operational experience ahead of its launch in the Emerald City and beyond. That means moving fast and getting into as many markets as possible. But it also means managing both supply and demand in whatever city the company launches service in.

Users in San Francisco understand that hasn’t always been possible, as demand frequently outstrips supply in the city, leaving riders with no Lyft drivers available during peak hours of the day. But as quickly as the company has been growing in its home market, it’s been growing even more rapidly in Los Angeles, where it launched just a few months ago.

“Having someone strong in operations was going to be really important,” Lyft co-founder John Zimmer told me. “We plan to win in every market that we launch in.”

As part of the Cherry deal, its founder and CEO Travis VanderZanden has joined Lyft as the company’s chief operating officer. He brings with him some serious business experience, having served as chief revenue officer of Yammer prior to founding his own company. Cherry’s senior director of operations, Stephen Schnell, has also joined Lyft to help the company expand into new markets. With VanderZanden coming on board, Zimmer will take the role of president.

Cherry launched last year to offer on-demand car washes to customers who were too busy to clean the vehicle themselves, or to take it out to be washed. The idea was to bring the car wash to them instead. But after introducing the service in a few markets, Cherry abruptly shut down over the holidays.

VanderZanden explained that while the service was growing in the San Francisco Bay Area and San Diego, it wasn’t growing at the rate that venture-backed businesses are expected to. After raising more than $5 million from investors such as Shasta Ventures, Founders Fund, and the PayPal mafia (David Sacks, Max Levchin and Keith Rabois), the team began looking for other options.

“In Cherry and in Lyft, we saw two businesses that were operationally very similar,” VanderZanden told me. “Lyft has nailed San Francisco and is nailing L.A., and it’s ready to start scaling up.”

In Lyft, he saw an opportunity to help an emerging company scale up even more quickly. The primary challenge for Lyft is how to quickly grow its business while keeping the community that it has built intact and keeping the quality of the service high. After all, it’s the community that sets Lyft apart from other on-demand transportation services such as Uber, SideCar, or regular taxi e-hail apps.

Lyft has already served up hundreds of thousands or rides in San Francisco and L.A., and next has its sights set on Seattle. After a few more weeks of testing, the service will become generally available April 12. Unlike competitor SideCar, which does gradual rollouts in new cities by initially serving weekends only, Lyft will have seven-day service at launch. It’s hoping that will help it catch up in a market that already has a ride-share service available.

Of course, Seattle isn’t the only new city that Lyft is considering operating in. Lyft is looking at other markets which have serious transportation pain points. When examining new launch markets, it also considers the population density and how tech-savvy residents are. Zimmer told me that the company is looking to hit a new market each month, which he thinks is possible with the right people in place.

As it looks to expand, Lyft will likely fave competition in most new markets it enters, as SideCar has also been rolling out aggressively in cities across the U.S. SideCar is in nine cities now, three of which will overlap with Lyft’s service. And let’s not forget about Uber, which has had longstanding black car service in most major U.S. cities and is rolling out lower-priced options in many. That includes hiring community drivers itself in San Francisco.

Lyft will also likely face regulatory scrutiny in most new markets. While Seattle has so far had no qualms about SideCar’s operations there, other cities have been far less friendly. SideCar has faced issues with local officials in both Philadelphia and Austin, two cities which have tried to clamp down on community drivers — that is, people without taxi or limo licenses — giving rides for money. Before that, Uber had faced regulatory scrutiny in a number of cities, including New York, Boston, and Washington, D.C. But for new transportation services, it seems dealing with regulators is just the cost of doing business.

Lyft, which is based in San Francisco, now has more than 50 employees. The company recently raised $15 million in new funding led by Founders Fund.

Zillow Rentals For Android Now Features Google’s 3D Maps And Spanish-Language Support

Zillow today launched the latest version of its Rentals mobile app for Android. The app includes a number of new features, such as integrated 3D maps from Google, but it also marks the company’s first foray into offering foreign language support.

The Zillow Rentals app now features Spanish-language support in an effort to “better serve the rapidly growing Spanish-speaking community in the United States.” This, Zillow claims, makes it the “ first major online real estate company to optimize its app for the Spanish-speaking community.”

Spanish_Android_3DMapIt’s still pretty unusual for app developers to launch a Spanish-language version of their apps for the large Hispanic and Latino population in the U.S. As Zillow notes, however, this segment in the U.S. is growing at four times the pace of the national population and is adopting smartphones significantly faster than other segments.

It’s not clear if Zillow will also bring Spanish-language support to its other apps for purchasing real estate or to its iPhone apps. A Zillow spokesperson told us that its Android app had reached a level of maturity where the company believed it was an option to shift some of the focus away from improving the app’s core features to add Spanish.

This new version also introduces support for Google’s 3D maps and filters for laundry and parking, but otherwise, the app mostly remains unchanged compared to the previous version.

Zillow says about 7 million users visit the site’s properties to look for rentals. Zillow recently expanded its set of tools for rental professionals and acquired the rental and real estate search site HotPads for $16 million. Its database currently features about 600,000 rental listings, which are also syndicated to other platforms, including Yahoo Homes and HGTV’s FrontDoor.

Spanish_Android_HomeDetails




  • ZILLOW

Zillow, Inc. founded and operates Zillow.com – a leading online real estate marketplace dedicated to helping homeowners, buyers, sellers, renters, real estate agents, mortgage professionals, landlords, and property managers find and share vital information about homes, real estate, and mortgages. Zilow, Inc. also operates Zillow Mortgage Marketplace and Zillow Mobile.

Rich Barton and Lloyd Frink started Zillow in early 2005, and Zillow.com launched in early 2006 with data and information on millions of U.S. homes. Zillow’s goal is to help…

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Speed bump: load times at top 2,000 e-commerce sites down 22% in one year (infographic)

Apparently, if you run a top e-commerce website, it pays to be slow. Unless you’re Amazon.

The load times of the top 2000 online retailers is down 22 percent in the past year, according to a study released today by web app delivery and security provider Radware.

And the more money you make, the slower you are.

“This is a massive drop in performance,” Radware VP Joshua Bixby said in a statement. “If this slowdown rate goes unchecked, we will see median load times of 9 seconds or more, which is simply unacceptable for online shoppers.”

The median or most common load time for retailers’ home pages was 7.25 seconds, which is up from 5.94 seconds in the previous year’s study. Those slow speed can cost retailers up to 9 percent of their traffic and as much as 13 percent of sales, says Radware. And the top 100 e-tailers’s web pages loaded in an even slower 8.23 seconds.

Why?

Radware says that pages webpages are getting bigger. In December 2012, the average page was over a megabyte — 1163 kB — while in December 2010, the average page was only 665 kB. That’s 75 percent bigger, and at this rate, web pages will be over two megabytes by the end of 2014. Internet access speeds aren’t keepin gup.

In addition, web pages are getting more complex, with dynamic elements, multiple scripts, and resources pulled from multiple servers in multiple locations from multiple vendors. Radware says that the average top retailer site contains seven third-party scripts for services such as analytics, social media, and ad engines. Each of them can slow down a website.

Three simple things can improve performance drastically, says Radware: using a content deliver network (CDN) to deliver pages from geographically-distributed servers, enabling keep-alives to reduce handshake time between browsers and servers, and compressing text to send data quicker. But 75 percent of the top 2000 retailers do not use a CDN, 13 percent don’t use keep-alives, and 22 percent don’t compress webpage resources.

Interestingly, despite getting a bad rep for its big pages, Amazon is a top retailer that is reversing the trend of slower pages. Amazon.com loads in 3.26 seconds, faster than last year and in the top ten retailers for speed.

Top 10 retailers by site speed:

  1. CVS.com (1.02 seconds)
  2. Polo.com (1.9 seconds)
  3. eCrater.com (1.95 seconds)
  4. Abebooks.com (2.05 seconds)
  5. BHPhotoVideo.com (3.03 seconds)
  6. JCrew.com (3.15 seconds)
  7. Amazon.com (3.26 seconds)
  8. ShopAtHome.com (3.74 seconds)
  9. Etsy.com (3.88 seconds)
  10. Gamefly.com (3.94 seconds)

And more data, in visual form:

Radware_SOTU_Spring2013_Infographic_Final_Hi-Res

photo credit: ….Tim via photopin cc

‘Ungoogleable’ is no longer a word in Sweden after legal pressure from Google

Officially speaking, “ungoogleable” is no longer a legitimate word, according to a recent decision by the Swedish Language Council.

The council opted to remove the word from its official list after facing legal pressure from Google, who didn’t actually want it removed from usage. Google lawyers actually took issue with the definition of the word, which initially was listed as something that couldn’t be found using a search engine. Google wanted that definition to specifically refer to Google’s search engine. That makes sense because it’s an awesome marketing benefit to Google, but not if the term can refer to Bing or Yahoo.

Instead of changing the definition, the Swedish Language Council decided to just drop it from existence — something that was easier than tangling with lawyers, paying legal fees, and attending court for a few months.

“If we want to have ogooglebar [aka ungoogleable translated from Swedish] in the language, then we’ll use the word and it’s our use that gives it meaning — not a multinational company exerting pressure. Speech must be free!” council head Ann Cederberg told Swedish news site The Local.

You may be wondering why Google cares, and it likely comes down to protecting its copyright on the term “Google” in its various incarnations. If a word is considered common usage within a language, Google could lose its right to decide who and how “Google” is used, which is obviously something it’s not going to let happen. If Sweden had changed the definition, Google could still claim that it owned the usage since it specifically refers to the company. (So in other words, this isn’t just a case of Google being a huge a-hole.)

Via Engadget

The dumbest way to counter showrooming: Charging customers $5 just for browsing

Showrooming is a big problem for retailers. When people stroll into stores to check out goods but buy them elsewhere, retailers lose money.

While retailers have tried a number of tactics to counter this problem, the one attempted by an Australian gluten-free shop might be the dumbest of them all.

Noticing that lots of customers were visiting the store and not buying anything, the store’s owners announced that they would charge vistitors a $5 “looking fee”, which would be given back to them once they bought something.

Dumb? Musguided? Completely counterproductive? Yes to all of the above.

The real problem here isn’t even showrooming — it’s the fact that the store owners are taking a chainsaw to an issue that requires the use of a scalpel. Would you visit a store that charged you just to walk inside it? I know I wouldn’t and I’m pretty sure most of this store’s (now-former) customers won’t either.

The last thing retailers should do is turn their potential customers into their enemies, which is exactly what insane measures like this do. If this store wasn’t going out of business before, it most certainly will of it maintains this policy.

Here’s the full text of the sign. It’s okay if you cringe while reading it.

As of the first of February, this store will be charging people a $5 fee per person for “just looking.”

The $5 fee will be deducted when goods are purchased.

Why has this come about?

There has been high volume of people who use this store as a reference and then purchase goods elsewhere. These people are unaware our prices are almost the same as the other stores plus we have products simply not available anywhere else.

This policy is line with many other clothing, shoe and electronic stores who are also facing the same issue.

Photo via Reddit user Barrett Fox 

ELON MUSK: I’m About To Make A Big Tesla Announcement, And Put My Money Where My Mouth Is

Elon Musk, CEO and founder of electric car company Tesla, just Tweeted the following:

musk

Twitter

In a matter of moments, Tesla stock popped (h/t Daniel Grossman) — check it out:

tsla

Yahoo

Thus far Twitter speculation, such as it is, has clustered around Musk pouring more dough into the company:

Twitter

Forbes‘ Mark Rogowsky also had a piece just this morning on Tesla finally conjuring a lower-cost electric vehicle.

Can’t wait for Thursday…

Samsung Used Bikini-Wearing Women During A Launch Event For A Refrigerator In South Africa

samsung fridge event

Axel Buhrmann, editor of South African tech news site Livdigital Independent

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Samsung is in the middle of another controversy over how it treats women during product announcements.

At an event in South Africa, it had women in bikini tops dancing around its newest models of refrigerators.

This happened before it announced the Galaxy S4, its newest high-end phone, which also led to controversy.

When Samsung announced the Galaxy S4 it staged a huge Broadway production.

The spectacle was ridiculed by the cool-kids in tech journalism, and more damagingly, Samsung was accused of being sexist.

The sexist accusation was based on the careless way Samsung tossed around cliches about women. In the production, a woman couldn’t stare at her screen because there’s a shirtless gardener in her view. Other women joked about wanting to marry doctors. There was more, but that gives you an idea.

samsung fridge event

Axel Buhrmann, editor of South African tech news site Livdigital Independent

What people didn’t realize is that just a few days before Samsung had a significantly more sexist event half way around the world in South Africa at the Samsung Africa Forum.

At the Africa Forum, it had young women in glittered out bras and swimsuits dancing around the stage while it talked about its refrigerators.

samsung fridge event

Axel Buhrmann, editor of South African tech news site Livdigital Independent

South African blog GirlGuide first wrote about the event, pointing out how terribly embarrassing it was. After the write up, others in the media picked up on the story, and Samsung apologized.

Michelle Potgieter, head of corporate communications sent this statement to GirlGuide:

“It has come to our attention that, following recent Samsung events, there was dissatisfaction by the use of the selected promotional/entertainment ladies to unveil and demonstrate the new line up of product/s. Samsung South Africa are committed to embracing a variety of consumers across our very diverse local market and in no way intended to isolate or offend any one of these audiences through these events.

As a result, we would like to apologise for any offence caused in this regard and assure you that we acknowledge your views and opinions on the matter. To this end, we will endeavour to be more sensitive around these issues going forward and will raise all relevant matters with our Head Quarters and respective regional head offices accordingly. Furthermore, Samsung would like to assure all media and consumers that we in no way intend to favour any particular type of consumer, where each consumer and target audience represents a viable portion of our business and as a result, we will continue to embrace all consumer needs and requirements within the market.”

Photos of the event come from Axel Bührmann, managing editor at Livdigital Independent, a South African news site.

Bührmann pointed out that Samsung’s event the year before was also unusual, but it had “women/men/acrobats/magicians, etc – not just scantily-dressed women” so it didn’t generate the same sort of attention.

We’ve reached out to Samsung for a comment but haven’t heard back.

Basically, it looks like Samsung just has weird launch events. Sometimes they tip towards being degrading to women. This isn’t unusual in technology, however. There are “booth babes” at just about every major tech conference. Sexism and tech tend to go together, unfortunately.

Here’s a photo from last year’s event, which didn’t create the same uproar, despite clearly being an unusual event:

samsung event

Axel Buhrmann, editor of South African tech news site Livdigital Independent

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Foodpanda devours Hungarian food ordering rival Ételvitel after only 3 months [Interview]

Online food delivery is a hot space, with heavily-financed European startups such as Just-Eat, Delivery Hero, Lieferando and others quickly trying to gain market share all across the world.

The Samwer brothers’ Rocket Internet accelerator has got some skin in the game as well with its Foodpanda / HelloFood business, which it has been launching in a slew of countries worldwide at its typical rapid pace.

Today, Foodpanda is announcing that it has acquired Hungarian online food ordering service provider Ételvitel KFT, a mere three months after launching in the country.

According to a press statement, Etelvitel currently boasts more than 200 partner restaurants (only in Budapest, though).

After this move, Foodpanda delivers food in Poland, Ukraine, Hungary, Russia, Nigeria, Morocco, Kenya, Senegal, Ghana, Ivory Coast, Peru, Mexico, Brazil, Colombia, Chile, Singapore, Thailand, Vietnam, Indonesia, India, Malaysia, Taiwan, Pakistan, Argentina and Venezuela.

25countries Foodpanda devours Hungarian food ordering rival telvitel after only 3 months [Interview]

We caught up with Ralf Wenzel, Foodpanda’s global managing director, to learn more about the move and the company’s overall strategy.

TNW: Foodpanda essentially lets people order food online. What makes it special compared to other Internet food delivery services?

RW sw Foodpanda devours Hungarian food ordering rival telvitel after only 3 months [Interview]

RW: Food delivery is all about choice, quality and convenience. We aim to offer the broadest choice of restaurants and covering every possible regional area and city. We ensure highest quality standards by rating and assessing all restaurants, taking into consideration our customers’ recommendations and feedback.

Foodpanda provides a very simple, fast and convenient way for ordering food, online and through mobile channels. We also feel responsible for the fast delivery and the overall service.

If the restaurant does not offer delivery, we will do it.

How many countries are you in now, and which countries or regions are up next?

We are already the most global food delivery service: Foodpanda with our affiliated brand HelloFood targets by now 3 billion people worldwide, which is almost half of the world population.

At the moment, we deliver food in 25 countries, focusing on markets like Brazil, India, Russia or Singapore.

In the last couple of months alone, we were able to bring Foodpanda to 14 more countries, serving an additional number of over 800 million people.

Is this basically a numbers game, where you roll out as quickly in as many countries as possible, or is each regional launch carefully considered and assessed?

The nice thing about food delivery is that it works pretty much everywhere, since everywhere people are interested in food and more people become aware of the possibility of ordering food online. Though we always analyze new markets very carefully, look into local infrastructure, cultural behavior, Internet penetration and the competitive landscape.

Based on that we decide about the next countries to launch. And even though this is a global business model, some countries qualify much more than others. I think our central team in Berlin has learned a lot from our local teams and vice versa. We believe in investing in opportunities but always focus on feasibility and quality.

Where is most growth coming from, geographically speaking, from a user and revenue perspective?

Foodpanda is already famous in Asia, since we had a bit of a head start there and in some Asian countries we are the market leader already. But Africa, Latin America and especially Eastern Europe are catching up really fast. One example is Hungary: we have just started 3 months ago but we are already taking over the service of our competitor Ételvitel KFT.

In just one step, we now cooperate with more than 200 new partner restaurants to guarantee the greatest variety.

This takeover is the logical consequence of our worldwide expansion. Foodpanda is a global movement.

You recently became Foodpanda’s global MD – what differences in culture between different countries and regions have you encountered that Foodpanda has had to adapt to?

Food belongs to every country’s culture and is a central part of everyone’s daily life. As such there are more similarities than differences. However people’s preferences differ from country to country and this can be sometimes very surprising to us.

In Senegal, the most ordered food is croissants, whereas the Vietnamese favor Mexican food. Overall, we adapt to local cultures by always offering a customized choice of the best and most recommended cuisines and restaurants.

The fact that people share one culture doesn’t mean that they all prefer the same meal. Our goal is that people immediately think of Foodpanda when they think about food, no matter what cuisine.

What’s the ratio between customer orders from mobile versus the Web? What about Android vs. iOS?

Our mobile app is now available in 21 countries: the number of customers using our mobile service has been growing rapidly. At the moment, Web predominates but we expect that the mobile orders are going to pick up even more in the future. iOS is used twice as much as Android for now but this also differs widely from country to country. It’s important for us to accept orders through all locally important online channels.

What’s the deal with marketing both foodpanda and hellofood? Or will they be folded under the same umbrella brand in the future – and if so, which one?

In Asia and Eastern Europe, we work as Foodpanda; in Africa, the Middle East and Latin America we are called HelloFood. We set the same ambitious standards and the service remains the same. We have a strong central team in Berlin and local experts in all of our countries.

This close cooperation creates perfect synergy. The whole coordination is done in Berlin with central teams for IT, Product, Marketing and Business Intelligence. The centralization enables us to expand into new countries very fast, both as Foodpanda and HelloFood.

You face quite some stiff competition from Just-Eat, Delivery Hero and others, all of which are heavily funded and also expanding internationally fast. Do you see consolidation on the horizon, or is there room for many players in this field?

The majority of the market is unexplored. Most customers still order their food offline, via phone. The next years we will see a big shift in offline to online.

Offering the widest reach of the best restaurants, having an easy to use product and an overall outstanding customer journey will allow us to capture a large part of this growing market. And the reality proves us right: Once people come to our website they come back again and again.

Most importantly, we know our customers. This enables us to be successful in such diverse markets. We already have a big network of restaurant partners and a robust supply and distribution.

How does Rocket Internet, and your experience working for other Samwer brothers-founded ventures in the past, help you scale the business?

I have now been working in the Internet industry for about 10 years and many experiences can be used and leveraged.

But still, every venture is different and performance management on this global scale is an exciting challenge. We are a very young venture and profit a lot from Rocket Internet’s expertise. Our growth in 25 countries would not have been possible without them.

Top image credit: istolethetv / Flickr

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