Showing posts with label Business. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Business. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 15, 2008

Apple sold 4 billion songs 4 million iPhones

Apple sold 4 million iPhones to date, selling 20,000 iphones every day
Marketshare in the US is an amazing 19.5% of the smartphone market

4 billion songs sold.
20 million sold on Christmas day.

125 million TV shows.
7 million movies
Steve job says "did not meet our expectations."


Live from Macworld 2008: Steve Jobs keynote
-- This has whole keynote pics...
In Pictures: 10 Great Steve Jobs Moments

Apple TV take2 - Flicker, YouTube built-in , It no computer is required(still syncs to your computer), watch pre-programmed podcasts ..... you buy for these




Monday, January 14, 2008

The NANO Effect - India Becoming Hub For Low-cost Innovations

Much has been written about how the Nano from Tata Motors has changed forever the way India is perceived globally. Now after all the euphoria begins to subside, it’s time to ask some key questions. Is this the visible face of a wave of innovation that’s sweeping across India? And is India poised to become a hub for low-cost innovations for the world?

Ujwal Parghi would agree. As director of Shri Kamadhenu Electronics, the Anandbased company founded by seven young entrepreneurs with less than half a million rupees as seed capital, he’s been part of this wave. His firm has developed Akashganga, an automatic milk collection and accounting system that has made lives of dairy farmers in cooperatives, much easier. What previously took over five minutes, now gets done in just 30 seconds, saving dairy farmers from serpentine queues where they had to worry about their milk getting spoilt by the time it was measured. The machine incorporates a milk analyser that provides data on six parameters of milk simultaneously and helps monitor adulteration.

“This electronic system has brought total transparency in the system as farmers immediately come to know about quality and value of their milk with a printed slip in their hands,” says Parghi. Little wonder that Akashganga has, in addition to big dairy and food clients such as Amul and Nestle India, transformed milk collection systems across Maharashtra, Bihar, Jharkhand and Rajasthan and has even found a ready market in countries like Kenya, Uganda, Vietnam and Nepal.

The Akashganga example is just one of the numerous and successful low cost innovations that have been designed to meet the needs of consumers in emerging markets such as India, and go beyond the innovations driven by big businesses that get more attention. Says Prof Anil Gupta of IIM Ahmedabad, “We can’t rely on large corporates alone to produce innovation. The world over it’s small companies that produce the most innovative products and services. But for that we need to build a strong innovation support system.”

In Bangalore, ReaMetrix has devised an immune monitoring test for HIV-positive patients, which has cut the cost of testing by one-fifth, thereby reaching out to the lower sections of the society that tend to have the highest infection rates. Now priced at Rs 125, the test earlier cost Rs 600-750 to administer. Moreover the reagents were in liquid form and had to be maintained and transported at a specified temperature, failing which they were spoilt. ReaMetrix managed to develop the reagents in a dry state, so they can now be transported over long distances without refrigeration even in harsh climatic conditions. “This is innovation, not some reverse-engineering or copying. And it creates sustained economic activity,” says Dr Bala Manian, the company’s founder-CEO, who’s also a serial entrepreneur and a scientist with 35 patents to his name.

ReaMetrix is supplying the product to countries in Africa, which has the highest incidence of AIDS, and to Brazil apart from some of the best-known labs in India.

“There’s a lot of innovative entrepreneurial activity in India today, far more than it was in say 2001, and we have invested in several such companies that show promise to attain leadership position within the next 4-5 years,” says KP Balaraj, founder and MD of Sequoia Capital, a Bangalore-based VC fund.

Similarly, Ahmedabad-based Troikaa Pharmaceuticals has successfully introduced an injectible (Dynapar AQ) of lower dosage volume for relief in post-operative pain, trauma pain, fracture, renal and biliary colic and other acute painful conditions. The Rs 105-crore company managed to bring down the dose from 3 ml earlier to 1 ml now at Rs 14 per unit. “Our aim is to innovate on such products and reach more markets where they are most needed,” says Ketan Patel, CMD, Troikaa Pharmaceuticals, who plans to take the product to Latin America, the EU, CIS and African countries. Says Prof Srinath Srinivasa of IIIT-Bangalore, “India is poised to be at the forefront of low-cost innovations that can have a global market. It is easier to innovate in this sphere because of the low costs involved in setting up an IT-based industry than a brick and mortar factory or say a retail outlet.”

Indeed, technology has played a key role, and most innovations coming out of India are leveraging this combination of low cost and high tech to produce killer products for bottom-of-the-pyramid consumers. Take for instance the Gramateller, an ATM that incorporates a fingerprint reader to authenticate the account holder, obviating the need for an ATM card and PIN. The machine, developed by Chennai-based Vortex Engineering and the Tenet group of IIT Madras, is enabling a low-cost delivery model for banking services in rural areas and locations not covered by banks so far. “India can be an innovation hub if it continues what it has been doing. However, it’s important that companies focus on marketing their products to their target audience as well,” says Vortex’s managing director L Kannan.

Many low-cost innovations actually create new markets where none existed, and kickstart a category for others to follow. Ask Mukesh Bhandari, CMD of Electrotherm India. His is the first company to launch e-bikes in India at an affordable price point of Rs 13,000 in early 2006. The bike runs on an electric battery. “As we are nearing China’s population levels we need to look at providing environmental-friendly means of transportation to our people,” he says.

Bad roads and rising fuel costs prompted this entrepreneur to produce bikes that are 20% cheaper than the even the ones coming in from China. With sales of more than 50,000 bikes, and a share of 60% in the category, Bhandari estimates that his company has helped save $1 million in fuel costs per month for the nation. Now he intends to export these bikes to emerging markets in South East Asia, Africa and Latin America.

There are hurdles though to innovations and that’s the challenge for entrepreneurs. Says Vineet Rai, CEO, Avishkaar Venture Management Service, which finances rural innovations and supports them towards becoming profitable enterprises, “India has always had talent, which is required for any country to become an innovation hub but then what we may lag behind in is infrastructure.

But that isn’t deterring entrepreneurs who are aiming for that one big revolutionary idea that truly democratises a product or service. Tide Technocrats Pvt Ltd (TTPL), which specialises in rural energy solutions is one such company. It’s pico and micro hydel devices provide cheap power to rural areas that lack consistent access to grid power by utilising locally available natural water flow systems. It’s biomass processing system taps an alternate source of energy for rural consumption. Says K Dinesh, partner TTPL, “We address the alternative fuel need for power plants and make energy affordable for the masses.” While providing electrification in far-flung remote areas the bio mass processing would create employment and entrepreneurship avenues for villagers. The company has developed a direct sales agent based strategy for reaching out to areas interested in micro hydel Installations.

For India this could be just the beginning of a string of innovations that will find applicability across the world. IIMA’s Gupta cautions against getting carried way by the celebrations in the wake of the Nano, and suggests that small businesses look at moving up the value chain, which will spur them to innovate. “We are not there yet,” he says.

Thursday, December 20, 2007

Dream things

Epson S5 2000 Lumen 3LCD Multimedia Projector - #2 in business projectors
- Energy-efficient E-TORL lamp that lasts up to 4000 hours
- see this review: 17 of 19 people found the following review helpful:
and have been in photography since high school. Digital projection technology has really come around!, September 10, 2007
- Not only can you electronically zoom in or out on total picture size, but you can electronically "tilt the image" forward or back, to compensate for raising the front of the projector to elevate the image on your screen or wall. It takes care of the "trapizoidal distortion" in optical projectors of yester-year.

Pro CSS and HTML Design Patterns - book to production


Multiple Monitors and Productivity


eApps - Web Hosting For Demanding Customers

Tuesday, October 30, 2007

fFree legal documents and free business documents

docstoc is a user generated community where you can find and share professional documents. Find free legal documents and free business documents. Upload your documents for all the world to share.
Business Idea Analysis Worksheet -- good thing you can view them full page with out website, print and download ( if you register )
Business Startup Expense Worksheet
Docstoc is designed to be a shared repository of commonly used forms and documents

java interview questions -- big doc with 60 page questions in printable and savable form
Naming your business

Wednesday, October 17, 2007

weatherbill

http://www.weatherbill.com/
asr: - useful business idea, must have bought weather forecasting algorithms
- dozens of people may know/have access to these weather alogrithms and idea of linking with hedge trading in the backend
- founder resume is good: David friedberg
* Corporate Development & Business Product Manager at Google
* Late Stage Tech Investor at Concert Capital Partners
* Tech M&A at Broadview International
- Took star investors in first round (skype founder) etc..
January tech crunch story
Weather Derivatives Provider WeatherBill Takes $12.5 Million More taken $12.5 million in a round led by New Enterprise Associates and Index Ventures
Total funding for Weatherbill to date is now $16.5 million. ( so the first round was $4 million )

Monday, October 1, 2007

Mobile Stats

Mobile usage Stats: - great stats site, it has stats for most IT categories -- link came from gigaom.com article

4 mln users to access mobile maps in 2007
The number of mobile subscribers accessing maps and downloading routes using their mobile handsets in Europe and the USA is expected to grow from 4 mln users in 2007 at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 60.8% to reach 43 mln users in 2012. Revenue from subscriptions and advertisement is expected to reach 512 mln euros by 2012 from 96 mln euros in 2007, a CAGR of 39.8%.


Youth to account for 30% of mobile subscribers and 25% of mobile revenues in 2008
According to In-Stat/MDR, the 18 to 24 cohort had nearly twice the affirmative response rate when questioned about interest in wireless entertainment services, such as wireless gaming. Looking at the services that had more potential business applications, we see less of a variance between the youth cohort and the larger market. The youth market will account for over 25% of wireless revenues and nearly 30% of subscribers by 2008



This blog section records real consumer business apps on Mobile devices:
Samsung has 50% of South Korean mobile phone market
- 350 phone models available in South Korea have music-playing functionality, while 159 models enable users to perform bank transactions and make payments with their phone. In 2006, more than 16 mln mobile phones were sold in South Korea. Samsung was the market leader in 2006, with about 50% market share, followed by LG and Pantech, In-Stat says.

Wednesday, June 13, 2007

Is this the world's most generous internship?

06/2006 : written by Joel Spolsky is the co-founder and CEO of Fog Creek Software in New York City and the host of the Joel on Software blog at joelonsoftware.com

There's a better way to find and hire the very best employees.

I keep hearing people say that they only hire the top 1 percent of job seekers. At my company, Fog Creek Software, I want to hire the top 1 percent, too. We're doubling in size each year, and we're always in the market for great software developers.

In our field, the top 1 percent of the work force can easily be 10 times as productive as the average developer. The best developers invent new products, figure out shortcuts that save months of work, and, when there are no shortcuts, plow through coding tasks like a monster truck at a tea party.


From a recruiting perspective, the problem is that the people I consider to be in the top 1 percent in my field barely ever apply for jobs at all. That's because they already have jobs. Stimulating jobs. Jobs where their employers pay them lots of money and do whatever it takes to keep them happy.

If these pros switch jobs, chances are the offer came through networking, not because they submitted a resum� somewhere or trolled a job site like Monster. Many of the best developers I know took a summer internship on a whim and then stayed on. They have applied for only one or two jobs in their lives.

A lot of companies think they're hiring the top 1 percent because they get 100 resum�s for every open position. They're kidding themselves. When you fill an opening, think about what happens to the 99 people you turn away. They don't give up and go into plumbing. They apply for another job.

There's a floating population of applicants in your industry that apply for nearly every opening posted online, even though many of them are qualified for virtually none of these positions. So if the top 1 percent never apply for jobs, how can you recruit them? My theory is that the best way is to find them before they realize there is a job market--back when they're still in college.

Ah, college. Most kids wait until their last year to worry about finding their first job. And they are not that inventive. At more prestigious schools, the kids tend to feel that they are in such demand that they don't bother reaching out to employers. They simply go to on-campus recruiting events to see what's there. At Fog Creek, I've had a lot of success recruiting college students. In fact, I hired more than half of my developers as college interns, then recruited them for full-time work.

Before I go any further, I need to clarify that these are paid internships. Although unpaid internships for school credit are common in other fields from fashion to music, we pay $750 a week, plus free housing, free lunch, free subway passes, relocation expenses, and various other benefits.

Every time I talk about internships, somebody inevitably gets confused and thinks I'm taking advantage of slave labor. You there, young whippersnapper: Get me a frosty cold orange juice, hand-squeezed, and make it snappy!

That's not how it goes. The annual routine starts in September, when I begin tracking down the best future software developers in the country. I send a personalized letter to every promising computer science major that I can find.

Last year I sent 300 letters to fill six intern positions. Not e-mail. My letters are printed on a real piece of Fog Creek letterhead, which I sign myself in actual ink. Apparently this is rare enough that it gets kids' attention. I also call professors and former interns at schools such as Stanford, Duke, Dartmouth, and the University of Illinois to ask them for recommendations.

Finally, I write an article for my blog, which gets about a million unique visitors per month, that's especially relevant to students. At the end of the article, I solicit internship applications.

Eventually, we get hundreds of applications for these internships, and they're good candidates because they represent the whole population, not just the job-seeking population. We call the most promising candidates for a phone interview. It's a three-part conversation.

First, I ask the candidates to tell me about themselves and their classes. Then I pose a software development challenge. For example, how would you implement a Web-based clone of PowerPoint?

This gives me a feel for how smart they are, and if they know the basics of software development. Finally, I ask the candidates to interview me for the last 15 minutes of the call. They can ask about the company or living in New York City--whatever they want. If they pass the phone interview, Fog Creek flies them out to New York City to be interviewed in person.

By that time, there's a pretty good probability that we're going to want to hire them, so it's time to launch into full-court-press recruitment. Even though Fog Creek is a bootstrapped company where money is not spent lightly, we roll out the red carpet for our prospective interns.

A limousine meets them at the airport. A uniformed driver grabs their luggage and whisks them to their hotel, probably the coolest hotel they've ever seen--ideally it's right near the fashion district with models walking through the lobby at all hours and complicated bathroom fixtures that may be a part of the permanent collection of the Museum of Modern Art but good luck trying to figure out how to brush your teeth.

Waiting in the hotel room is a hospitality package with a T-shirt, a suggested walking tour of New York City written by Fog Creek staffers, and the DVD of Aardvark'd, a documentary about our 2005 interns made by Lerone Wilson, a filmmaker whose work has appeared on PBS. After a long day of interviews, we invite candidates to stay in the hotel for two more nights at our expense, so that they can explore the city before the limo takes them back to the airport for their flight home.

Only one in three applicants who make it to this stage will be hired, but still we don't skimp on them. We want the kids who don't make the grade to go back to campus thinking we're a classy employer. Our hope is that they tell all their friends how much fun they had and encourage them to apply for an internship the next summer, if only for the free trip.

During the summer of the internship itself, the students generally start out thinking, "Okay, it's a nice summer job and some good experience." We're a little bit ahead of them.

We use the summer to decide if we want them full-time. So we give them real work. Hard work. Our interns always work on production code. Sometimes they work on the coolest new stuff in the company, which can make the permanent employees a little jealous, but that's life. One summer we had a team of four interns build a whole new tech support product, Fog Creek Copilot, from the ground up. That particular intern class paid for itself by the end of the year.

Even when they're not building a new product, our interns work on real shipping code, with the helpful advice of experienced mentors, of course. Our interns are totally, personally responsible for some major area of our software's functionality.

And then we make sure these kids have a great time. We host parties and open houses. We get them free housing in a rather nice local dorm where they can make friends from other companies and schools.

We have some kind of extracurricular activity or field trip every week: Broadway shows, movie openings, museum tours, a boat ride around Manhattan, a Yankees game. Believe it or not, one of last year's favorite excursions was a trip to Top of the Rock at Rockefeller Center. It's just a tall building with a nice view of the Manhattan skyline. You wouldn't think it would be such an awe-inspiring experience. But it was.

At the end of the summer, a few interns will have convinced us that they are truly great programmers and that we just have to hire them. Not all of them, mind you--some are merely great programmers who for some reason we are willing to pass on, and others would be great somewhere else but not at Fog Creek.

For the ones we really want, there's no sense in waiting. We make an early offer for a full-time job, conditional on their graduation. And dollarwise, it's a great offer: $75,000. We want them to be able to go back to school, compare notes with their friends, and realize that they're getting a higher starting salary than their peers.

Does this mean we're overpaying? I don't think so. You see, the typical first-year salary has to take into account a certain amount of risk that the person won't work out. But we've already auditioned these kids, so there's almost no risk that they won't be great. When we hire them, we have more information about them than any other employer who has only interviewed them. Because there's less inherent risk, we can pay them more money.

At this point, if we've done our job right, the intern gives up and accepts our offer. Sometimes it takes a little persuading. Sometimes they want to leave their options open. That's fine with us.

An outstanding offer from Fog Creek ensures that the first time they have to wake up at 8 a.m. and put on a suit for a high-pressure interview with Oracle --well, when the alarm goes off, there's a good chance they'll say to themselves, why the heck am I getting up when I already have an excellent job waiting for me at Fog Creek? My hope is they won't even bother going to that interview.

An internship program creates a pipeline for great employees. It's a pretty long pipeline, so you need to have a long-term perspective, but it pays off in spades.

Friday, May 25, 2007

Venture funding , M&A

http://www.paidcontent.org/categories/name/Venture funding , M&A
- Seems they are covering all VC funding M&A news in tech sector. For old VC news go to http://www.paidcontent.org/categories/name/VC+M&A/P10/ change /P20/ /P100/ /P200/ you get more old news, you can program and extract to get all old VC news if reqd.


http://www.mediabankers.com/digital/digital.php


DeSilva & Phillips M & A Report 2007

Friday, May 18, 2007

Startups

Startup Case Study: Reddit Vs. Digg
- Both companies started about same time, Digg is a block buster success where are Reddit is just hanging there, my analysis is as follows.
Digg allowed user content, users can comment , read other users comments etc.. There are emotions involved, some thing great to see that your comments are read by 1000s of users, Rating is involved etc.
Where as Reddit you just give a + or - mark to a site that is all, no user comment no emotions no nothing. This is is recipe for failure with no user input/content.
Then Digg expanded in to podcasts , video . Podcasts are great user/Magazines added many of them 1000s of people listened to it , There are like radio stations.


Riya Story
Early few months are very hyped with visual photo search/recognition and google buy ( almost ..). A high profile CEO( read connections, proven once with Andel ) can not create "non existed" user demand for the site riya.com . You have to credit Munjal a) for his open blog b) for the courage to turn it into like.com


Startups can you these kind of services to design graphics , marketing collateral etc.. Engineers should not try to do this them self , they should do what they are good at building best systems.
EggFirst is a design agency specializing in providing comprehensive marketing communication design for small and medium enterprises - especially start-ups. It has played the role of marketing strategy and design partner for iPolipo, providing product strategy, graphic user design and marketing collateral to help turn the vision of iPolipo into reality.

Innovation

The Greatest Innovations of All Time
Service Innovation: The Next Big ThingIBM, Oracle, and other tech companies have formed a new nonprofit consortium dedicated to the advancement of this hot concept.

It's all about managing complexity.Jeneanne Rae, service innovation consultant, Peer Insight. Her thought being that our lives are so complicated today, with our triple tasking everything, that any company that offers us any solution gets our loyalty and our money.
Example--how to efficiently pick a summer camp for our kids.
Example--how to efficiently pick which colleges our kids should apply to.
Example--how to efficiently pick our cell phone provider.

The Experience Economy: Work Is Theater & Every Business a Stage
Pine and Gilmore take great care in defining the five economic offerings -
* Commodities
* Goods
* Services
* Experiences
* Transformations
Each level is of greater value than the prior level. Tailoring offerings to reduce customer sacrifice adds value and moves the offering up the progression of value. At the same time, offerings are continually commoditized to bring greater value going the other direction.

The distinguishing factors of each offering are explicitly defined and reinforced throughout the text. These offerings are a progression. They build upon one another. For example, at the transformation level where the customer is the offering, guiding transformations can be explained in three basic steps:

1. diagnosing aspirations, with characteristics of a service,
2. staging experiences, to bring about the transformation, and
3. follow-through, to sustain the transformation.

Towards the end a terrific thought provoker -- "Who or what does your business glorify?" What a thought provoker

Monday, May 14, 2007

Web 2.0 Startups

Web 2.0 Startups
Check these companies before starting any new startup, so many of them exists in each category. For any category there is a startup company that exists already and these are a bit established since techcrunch covers companies with some reputation Web 2.0 Tech comapnies.