Half of mobile data virgins say never again
July 13, 2006 | CommentsHalf of mobile data virgins say never again | The Registr: "44 per cent of first-timers told NOP they have no intention of using mobile data services again. 29 per cent of data users said they were trying the services out for the first time, with text alerts, video clips and picture messages the most popular services. Almost half cited cost concerns, and one in five cited ease of use issues."
What a Waste
July 11, 2006 | CommentsWhat a Waste: "The call to action is an inbound text message, which generates a WAP Push message to sign people up to the service. An amazing 75% never respond to the WAP Push."
This is a big problem for the industry. I posted a comment on Mobhappy which sums up our experience of this:
"75% sounds way too high.We’ve seen roughly 40% wastage on services. As you might expect, this %age increases for services which are promoted to the “mass market” (e.g. in the national press), and drops when you promote to audiences more attuned to mobile data usage (e.g. youth).
Explanations we’ve seen (and heard from follow-up research which a client conducted to look into this issue) include:
- WAP push message not arriving (lost in the network)
- Message arriving but going into separate “service inbox” rather than the general messaging inbox
- Handsets blocking WAP push completely (e.g. MS Smartphone)
- Users getting cold feet when seeing a service message, URL, etc.
- Users getting cold feet when being asked if they want to go online (mainly from not being sure how much it’ll cost them)
- Handsets not being configured for internet access (this is the most common explanation)"
The good news? Once a user has successfully downloaded content once, we see this drop-off rate decrease massively (from 40% to 10% or thereabouts). And it looks as though this drop-off is decreasing slowly over time, as folks get handsets which actually *work*, and more comfortable downloading mobile content.
Warrenellis.com » No Good Today
July 11, 2006 | CommentsWarrenellis.com » No Good Today: "I
said of KING KONG that for that film’s budget, I could grow my own giant fucking monkey."
The Lean Nature of Google's Development Practices
July 11, 2006 | CommentsThe Lean Nature of Google's Development Practices: "Google's software development process from the perspective of Lean Software development principles show nothing that is out of the ordinary. What is not ordinary is the massive scale that they are applying these principles."
Estimating Projects - Knowing Your Limits
July 11, 2006 | CommentsEstimating Projects - Knowing Your Limits: "If I had to sum up the art of project estimation in one word, that word would be experience. There’s simply no replacement for what experience can do for you when you have to think about tackling a problem."