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Wednesday, 15 August 2012

How to Make Successful Projects with “Free” Business Model


How to Make Successful Projects with “Free” Business Model

Modern consumers don’t buy cr*p. We see more and more free products made available on the Web since businesses make the move from the material economy to the bits-and-bytes economy. Physical things are much more expensive compared to virtual ones and that is the reason why the free business model is becoming more and more popular.


(Image Source: Lukas Troup)
As more businesses adopt this model you may have to rethink your business strategy because people may just stop buying your products if they can get the same for free.
Learn all you can about the free business model in order to stay ahead of your competitors.
Read Also: Handling The Business Side Of Design

Types of Free

Yes there are different types of free, namely:
1. Buy one get one free – This type of free exists with traders who want to clear their stock inventory. This sort of free sells because people think that they get more while buying less even though the fact is that they are spending money for free stuff.
2. Someone else pays – Via advertisements. People buy AdWords from Google and that’s why we get to use free mail, powerful search engines, great productivity features and more products for free from Google.
3. Cross-subsidy – Product X is free but the customer pays a hefty price for sub-product Y which covers the cost for both items, for example, you get a free razor but the blades are going to cost you for the long term.
4. Freemium – Quite popular these days. For example the basic account of the product is free but if user wants more features, he or she has to pay for premium services. Premium customers subsidize the free for products like Flickr, DropboxMailChimp. Critical mass is vital.
5. Gift Economy – The price for the product is not fixed, e.g. Wikipedia is the free encyclopedia that anyone can edit, people usually help by donating. Lost Type – you can pay as much as you want for the fonts you download but it is not obligatory.
6. Free for real – giving things for free without expecting anything in return, e.g. charity.

Who’s using free business model?

Numerous companies. Most of new start-ups offer something for free, for example Spotify, SoundCloud, Rdio, GrooveShark, Evernote etc. The same applies to older established brands like Twitter, Skype, Vimeo, YouTube, Google, Yahoo who all implemented something from this business model and successfully grew with that.
Spotify

How it works

Michael Woloszynowicz explains how the freemium business model works and uses Dropbox as an example. To be successful with freemium you need massive amounts of traffic and a continuous flow of new sign-ups.
At the beginning, freemiums is a loss of money but a point where you reach a certain number of premium users, you will start making money. At that point, profit becomes bigger than cost and this freemium model will start to pay off. Both bad and good scenarios are explained in the charts below.

In order to succeed you have to make sure that you have good enough features to achieve better conversion rates. This freemium model works very well even with small conversion rates. Only 3.5-4% of Dropbox users pay for everyone. You can accomplish this by testing your concept within your target audience. Another important point to consider is the visibility of pro account and benefits users will get by choosing premium. You can achieve better visibility by effective usage of reminders.

Free Games: Angry Birds

Angry Birds is free for Android, Chrome and Facebook. By letting people play this game for free they are building the fan base and spreading brand awareness. When the brand becomes well known, they start selling merchandise, apps for iPhone or the iPad, and special editions of Angry Birds like Angry Birds Rio, Angry Birds Space etc.
Toys

How to implement

You can easily implement the free business model in your current business by following good practices used by other companies. Here is a list of some paid services you can offer your users.
  • Upgrade features
  • Premium services
  • Support
  • Add-ons
  • Pay for commercial use
  • Product giveaways for promotional purposes
  • Membership
  • Product trials

burning Questions

1. What are your user communities?

If you are creating something for everyone you’re creating to nobody then. You have to narrow down your target audience and address specific types of people segmented by interest, needs or income. You have to define your target audience and test your business concept with the people from your target audience to make your business successful.

2. What problems do they share?

To be successful with this free business model you have to listen to the people you’re creating products for and try to help them to solve their problems with your products. Nobody wants to fork out money for something that doesn’t help them solve problems.

3. What can you monetize once you have the traffic?

You have to decide what you are going to monetize when traffic is big enough. You can offer premium upgrade features, memberships, release free products and offer paid support. For example WooThemes, the leader in the market offers high quality WordPress themes; some are for free but with these free themes, you don’t get any support. If you want support you can buy a membership and get an access to the forum to get the information you need.
WooThemes

4. Pros and Cons

One of the pros is the small conversion needed in order to succeed. Only 3-5% of users pay for the rest. That means you don’t need a lot of users who actually pay for the product to be successful. Also, having a free product is easier to promote as well as build a community around it. For sustainability, huge amounts of traffic and users is needed, which is really hard to acheve if your product is very new and cannot compete with big competitors in terms of discoverability and originality.

Money is not everything

You might think it’s not true but in reality it’s not just the money that counts. To get a good reputation for the company is a hard and long process. Everyone from the company should be involved. If your company values differ from the values of your employees, you have a problem.
Everyone is connected to the Web via social media platforms and they can say whatever they want after working hours so you should be aware of this and make sure your employees understand that how they behave online will affect the direction of their product and organization.


(Image Source: Fotolia)
Reputation is one of the things that is really hard to build and very easy to lose. A single wrong message or mis-directed campaign can destroy all your hard work. By giving things away for free, you can build a reputation as a good and caring company, and if the things you are giving away are really good, people will consider supporting your organization by buying other products from you. If your products are too expensive, give something for free to show them that your products are really worth their attention. This is the chance for them to get to know your company and products without spending money.

Every company is unique

You should analyze your company and current market in the niche you’re targeting, to choose the best way of implementing the free business model in your business. Every company is unique and while what worked for the companies mentioned above might not work for you, it strengthens the argument that you should conduct your own analysis and find the best way to use free economy in your business to put your product on the map.

20+ Tools to Create Your Own Infographics


20+ Tools to Create Your Own Infographics

 
 
A picture is worth a thousand words – based on this, infographics would carry hundreds of thousands of words, yet if you let a reader choose between a full-length 1000-word article and an infographic that needs a few scroll-downs, they’d probably prefer absorbing information straight from the infographic. What’s not to like? Colored charts and illustrations deliver connections better than tables and figures and as users spend time looking back and forth the full infographic, they stay on the site longer. Plus, readers who like what they see are more likely to share visual guides more than articles.
While not everyone can make infographics from scratch, there are tools available on the Web that will help you create your very own infographics. In this article, we’re listing more than 20 such options to help you get your messages across to your readers, visually.
Read Also: The Infographic Revolution: Where Do We Go From Here?

What About Me?

"What About Me?" is a personalization tool that produces colorful infographics that display your social media habits automatically from Facebook, Twitter and YouTube. The tool is provided by Intel. Create an infographic of your digital life and become inspired by the people you know, the things you see, and the experiences you have online.
What About Me?

Vizualize.me

Vizualize.me allows you to create an online resume format that is beautiful, relevant and fun, all with just one click. It enables you to express your professional accomplishments in a simple yet compelling personal visualization, and will help optimize your LinkedIn Profile to get a kickass Visual Resume.
Vizualize.me

Piktochart

With Piktochart, you get to create an innovative Infographic using a combination of different types of visualizations: themes, icons, vectors, images and chart exporter. Drag-and-drop and click your way through color schemes, shapes and fonts, then export the materials as static or html to easily embed it for use at your site.
Piktochart

easel.ly

Easel.ly is a fun tool to create your Infographics with drag and drop features and a simple interface. You can easily create and share visual ideas online, supported by ‘vhemes’ or visual themes that help you get started from the preset Infograpic style. Drag and drop a ‘vheme’ onto your canvas to turn your idea into a full infographic.
easel.ly

Visual.ly

Visually helps you customize infographics in seconds, and no, you don’t have to be an analyst or designer to make infographics with Visually Create. Visual.ly allows you to also discover infographics and favorites from other users.
Visual.ly

Infogr.am

Infogr.am is a simple yet most exciting way to create static and interactive infographics. Import raw data to Infogr.am, and the site’s online tool will help you turn that data into a nice looking chart or full-blown infographic in minutes.
Infogr.am

Many Eyes

Many Eyes is an experiment by IBM Research and the IBM Cognos software group with a simple belief: ‘Finding the right way to view your data is as much an art as a science’. Many Eyes provides a range of visualizations from the ordinary to the experimental, where each can be put together with a click.
Many Eyes

Venngage

Venngage is an online infographics tool that helps you create and publish custom infographics, and at the same time, engage viewers and track results. Venngage allows you to create beautiful infographics for blogs and websites and you can also watch the numbers of your audience grow with compelling and beautiful content.
Venngage

iCharts

With iCharts, you can create great-looking charts in minutes with interactive and easy-to-share data. iCharts makes it easy to visualize, share and distribute big and small data.
iCharts

Dipity

Dipity is a free digital timeline website, if you are looking for a different type of Infographics. The mission is to organize the web’s content by date and time. Dipity is the fastest and easiest way to bring history to life with stunning multimedia timelines.
Dipity

Timeline JS

TimelineJS is a beautifully crafted timeline that is easy and intuitive to use. You can pull in media from different sources with built-in support for Twitter, Flickr, Google Maps, YouTube, Vimeo, Dailymotion, Wikipedia, SoundCloud and more.
Timeline JS

StatSilk

StatSilk offers web-based and desktop software to make data analysis easy, efficient and enjoyable, to cater to diverse mapping and visualisation needs.
StatSilk

InFoto Free

InFoto Free is an app for your Android to create an infographic of your photo-taking habits, using a Photo stats analyzer. With InFoto Free you can create awesome looking high-res infographics from your photo collection. It tells you things like what time of the day you prefer to take photos in, whether you prefer horizontal or vertical orientations as well as your favorite city to shoot in.
InFoto Free

Photo Stats

Photo Stats is an iPhone app that analyses the photos you take on your iPhone. The app generates cool and stylish infographics that shows how, when and where you take your photos from. You get to easily visualize your photo-taking habits and share it with friends.
Photo Stats

More Tools

  1. ChartsBin – An online tool to create your own interactive map instantly with no installation or coding needed, and you can embed the map in your own website or blog easily too.
  2. Tableau Public – A free application for your Windows computer that brings data to life. You can create and share interactive charts and graphs, stunning maps, live dashboards and fun applications in minutes. Anyone can do it, it’s that easy.
  3. Creately – Want to create beautiful diagrams in no time? Creately may be a good choice to use as it can be used across all sectors by individuals, corporate teams, developers, software architects, students and teachers alike for diagramming purposes.
  4. Gliffy – Gliffy helps to easily create professional-quality flowcharts, diagrams, floor plans, technical drawings, and more. You can easily drag-and-drop your way through the makings of an infographic using the many shapes from an extensive library.
  5. SIMILE Widgets – SIMILE is a free and open-source data visualization Web widget.
  6. Tagxedo – Tagxedo turns words – famous speeches, news articles, slogans, themes, even your love letters – into a visually stunning word cloud. Every word is individually sized to highlight the frequencies of occurrence within the body of text.
  7. Wordle – Wordle is a simple web app for generating “word clouds” from the text you provide. While the clouds give greater prominence to words that appear more frequently in the source text, you can also tweak your clouds with different fonts, layouts, and color schemes.

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[Chromium OS Blog] Chromium Vulnerability Rewards Program: larger rewards!


[Chromium OS Blog] Chromium Vulnerability Rewards Program: larger rewards!



The Chromium Vulnerability Rewards Program was created to help reward the contributions of security researchers who invest their time and effort in helping us make Chromium more secure. We’ve been very pleased with the response: Google’s various vulnerability reward programs have kept our users protected and netted more than $1 million dollars of total rewards for security researchers. Recently, we’ve seen a significant drop-off in externally reported Chromium security issues. This signals to us that bugs are becoming harder to find, as the efforts of the wider community have made Chromium significantly stronger.
Therefore, we’re making the following changes to the reward structure:
  • Adding a bonus of $1,000 or more on top of the base reward for “particularly exploitable” issues. The onus is on the reporter to provide a quick demonstration as part of the repro. For example, for a DOM-based use-after-free, one might use JavaScript to allocate a specific object type in the “freed” slot, resulting in a vtable dereference of 0x41414141.
  • Adding a bonus of $1,000 or more on top of the base reward for bugs in stable areas of the code base—see below for an example. By “stable”, we mean that the defect rate appears to be low and we think it’s harder to find a security bug in the area.
  • Adding a bonus of $1,000 or more on top of the base reward for serious bugs which impact a significantly wider range of products than just Chromium. For example, certain open source parsing libraries—see below for an example.
The rewards panel has always reserved the right to reward at our discretion. At times, rewards have reached the $10,000 level for particularly significant contributions. An extraordinary contribution could be a sustained level of bug finding, or even one individual impressive report. Examples of individual items that might impress the panel include:
  • Nvidia / ATI / Intel GPU driver vulnerabilities. High or critical severity vulnerabilities in the respective Windows drivers, demonstrated and triggered from a web page. Submissions on Chrome OS would also be interesting. Chrome OS typically runs on a device with an Intel GPU.
  • Local privilege escalation exploits in Chrome OS via the Linux kernel. Chrome OS has a stripped-down kernel, so a working exploit against it would certainly be worth examining. We reserve the right to reward more generously if the exploit works inside our “setuid sandbox” and / or our fast-evolving “seccomp BPF sandbox”.
  • Serious vulnerabilities in IJG libjpeg. For well over a decade, there hasn’t been a serious vulnerability against IJG libjpeg. Can one be found?
  • 64-bit exploits. Any working code execution exploit on a 64-bit Chrome release. Sandbox escape not required.
  • Renderer to browser exploit. Any working browser code execution exploit, starting from the assumed precondition of full code execution inside a normal web renderer or PPAPI process.
Aside from the new bonuses, it’s worth recapping some details of the existing reward structure that aren’t as widely known:
  • Our reward program covers vulnerabilities in Adobe Flash as well as other well-known software such as the Linux kernel, various open-source libraries and daemons, X windows, etc.
  • Our base reward is $2,000 for well-reported UXSS bugs, covering both the Chromium browser and also Adobe Flash. (With the new reward bonus for exploitability, UXSS rewards will likely become $4,000.)
  • Our reward program already includes a bonus of $500 to $1,000 when the reporter becomes a more involved Chromium community member and provides a peer-reviewed patch.
  • We have always considered rewards for regressions affecting our Beta or Dev channel releases. It’s a big success to fix security regressions before they ship to the Stable channel.
To illustrate how the new reward bonuses will work, we’re retroactively applying the bonuses to some older, memorable bugs:
  • $1,000 to Atte Kettunen of OUSPG for bug 104529 (new total: $2,000). We believe that our PDF component is one of the more secure (C++) implementations of PDF, hence the $1,000 top-up.
  • $3,000 to Jüri Aedla for bug 107128 (new total: $4,000). There is a $1,000 bonus because this bug affects many projects via core libxml parsing, and we added a $2,000 bonus for exploitability: this is a heap-based buffer overflow involving user-controlled data with a user-controlled length.
We’re more excited than ever to work with the community and reward their efforts.

Pivot Point


Pivot Point


Samsung’s newest tablet, the Galaxy Note 10.1, comes with a small stylus called the S Pen. Photo by Ariel Zambelich/Wired

When Samsung first introduced the Galaxy Note in late 2011, the company floated the idea that the funny device with the 5.3-inch screen and a stylus wasn’t a phone or a tablet, but something in between. At the time, Samsung claimed it had launched an entirely new class of device, the premiere entry in the “Note” category.
Once we actually got our hands on the Note however, the marketing speak evaporated and it was clear that the Galaxy Note was indeed just a big phone and a few gimmicky apps engineered to take advantage of the stylus. While we didn’t think highly of the Note (we gave it a 5 out of 10) the massive handset went on to sell millions of units worldwide.
Samsung has taken the Note’s proven DNA and embiggened it to create the Galaxy Note 10.1, a Wi-Fi-only, Android 4.0 tablet with a 10.1-inch screen and a stylus.
Less than a year later, Samsung has delivered a second Note. But this isn’t a phone, nor a “phablet.” Rather, Samsung has taken the Note’s proven DNA and embiggened it to create the Galaxy Note 10.1, a Wi-Fi-only, Android 4.0 tablet with a 10.1-inch screen and a stylus. It also ships with some specialized apps for drawing and taking notes that have been optimized to work with the pen-like appendage.
The Note 10.1 is available this week, starting at $500 for the model with 16GB of storage, and $550 for the 32GB model.
It arrives at a time when Samsung is in desperate need of some momentum within its tablet line-up. In 2011, shortly after the Galaxy line of Android tablets launched, Samsung reported it sold more than 2 million units worldwide. But it has since come to light, according to documents from the Apple vs. Samsung patent trial, that the company only sold 339,000 Galaxy tablets in the U.S. — the largest market for tablets by a wide margin — during that time: 262,000 in Q4 2010 and 77,000 in Q1 2011. Newer sales data from the first half of 2012 is more promising, but Samsung is still far, far behind Apple in the tablet market, with a 9.6 percent market share compared to Apple’s 68.2 percent.
So Samsung is eager to earn some swagger with this release. But while the Galaxy Note 10.1 wears a different name that its Galaxy Tab predecessors, it’s still essentially the same tablet, offering largely the same experience, as the Galaxy Tab 10.1 and Galaxy Tab 2 10.1.
The only real differentiators that separate the Note 10.1 from its Tab brethren are the S Pen stylus and Samsung’s suite of stylus-compatible apps. The S Pen uses Wacom’s conductive stylus technology to allow you to easily write and draw on screen, and also interact with websites and on-screen menus. If you hold the S Pen just above the display, you’ll see a small cursor floating around the screen, just like you’re moving a mouse. You maneuver the cursor into position, then actually bring the stylus to the screen with a tap. It’s very intuitive, and it’s easy to use for basic navigation, to scribble words or pictures, or to interact with an app. The S Pen requires no battery, and a raised button near the tip brings up contextual menus, just like the right-click of a mouse.
The stylus included with the Note 10.1 features 1,024 levels of pressure sensitivity, up from 256 levels on the Note phone’s S Pen. It’s 4.5 inches long and slightly thinner than a no. 2 pencil, so it’s comfortable and natural to hold. Also, when the pen is near the screen, the display switches off the touch sensitivity, so you can rest your palm on the screen without interfering with the pen’s input. It’s not perfect — it didn’t always pick up my intended pen strokes, and drawing or writing on such a large, slick surface took some getting used to. But, without a doubt, using the S Pen on a tablet feels much more natural, much more “right” than using the stylus on the Note phone. Also, if you’re a Wacom devotee and you have a few stylii kicking around, they should work with this tablet, since the same technology is being used.

Razer announces new Kraken gaming headsets: Pros get a pull-out mic (hands-on)


Razer announces new Kraken gaming headsets: Pros get a pull-out mic (hands-on)


Razer announces new Kraken gaming headsets Pros get a pullout mic
Razer wasn't done with the Gamescom crowds just yet, revealing its latest Lime-doused gaming headset. TheRazer Kraken is readying for a global launch next month, with a Pro version (with microphone in tow) hitting your wallet for 80 bucks and the similar-looking Music and Gaming cans priced around $60. Razer's pushing the headphone's ergonomic charms and we'll admit, they were pretty cosy, with some good (but not perfect) noise-isolation at work. The Kraken Pro packs a 40mm audio driver and the wired headphones will work with your phone or any device with a 3.5mm jack. Get all the audio statistics on the Hulk-esque headsets in the PR after the break.

Continue reading Razer announces new Kraken gaming headsets: Pros get a pull-out mic (hands-on)

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Microsoft outs Artist Series wireless mice just in time for the fall semester with a $30 price tag


Microsoft outs Artist Series wireless mice just in time for the fall semester with a $30 price tag

Microsoft outs Artist Series wireless mice just in time for the fall semester with a $30 price tag
If a regular ol' mouse just won't match your back to school wardrobe, Microsoft is looking to help out. The folks in Redmond have unveiled the Artist Series of mice that will definitely spice up your physical desktop. Designs by five artists from around the globe will wrap the topside of the Wireless Mobile Mouse 3500 and will set you back $29.99. For a look at the whole lot, peek at the gallery below while more info about each of the participants awaits at the source.

Windows 8 RTM: what's new in the final build of Windows 8?


Windows 8 RTM: what's new in the final build of Windows 8?

Windows 8 RTM what's new in the final build of Windows 8
It's been two weeks since Microsoft signed off on Windows 8, and shipped the final code to manufacturers prepping shiny new computers. Today, another round of folks are getting their hands on the code: devs, and IT pros with subscriptions to Microsoft's TechNet program. Of course, you might not be a developer or IT whiz and, if we're being honest, neither are we! Happily for us, though, Microsoft gave us an early peek at the RTM build -- the same software that will ship to consumers October 26th. Granted, Microsoft says it will continue tweaking the built-in apps, with updates coming through the Windows Store. Barring these minor changes, though, what you see here is what you'll get ten weeks from now. Meet us after the break for a summary of what's new.


Windows 8 RTM rolls out to developers, IT departments with TechNet subscriptions


Windows 8 RTM rolls out to developers, IT departments with TechNet subscriptions

Windows 8 RTM rolls out to developers, IT departments with TechNet subscriptions
At this point, we're expecting very few surprises when it comes to Windows 8: Microsoft just shipped the final code to OEMs, and the company already published a list of staggered dates when developers, volume licensees and Joe Schmo consumers would be able to download the software. We already knew, then, that on August 15th developers with MSDN subscriptions would be able to get the RTM build, as would IT pros subscribed to TechNet. Now that that day has come, though, it's worth repeating that those of you plugged into either the developer or TechNet program can start exploring the final software now -- a good ten weeks before the rest of the world. Don't have access? Luckily for you, Microsoft granted us early access to the RTM, and we've got a breakdown of the new features waiting for you right here.

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