Facebook Connect Design Best Practices

Facebook only gets larger with no real competition in sight. The claim that Newsfeed is the new SEO is only underestimated. Severely underestimated. The data is in the presentation below –  Hiten Shah and KISSmetrics‘ presentation on Facebook Connect Design Best Practices:

View more documents from Hiten Shah.

Thoughts about Palm. And its failures.

When you are not the market leader (Palm) and can’t bully the competition or your audience (Apple & Google), you have to act like a startup in order to survive. That means, customers first. Empower your small audience to like you. Give them a superior product. Superior service. Engage. Give better technical support to independent developers that want to build on your platform to make fancy apps. Don’t charge a dime for building platform ($99) — they are enriching your platform. That’s cheap labor! Even consider recruiting startups to build apps for your platform. That’s what Apple did. And I think it worked quite well for them and those developers.

This is about winning enough market share and a pay wall hasn’t helped with their apps selection. Run contests to entice developers (Paypal, Amazon) and offer awesome prizes for the best apps. Solicit feedback and iteriate on the feedback you get from developers on how to make your tools and development kit better. Win the time, wallets, and more importantly the trust of developers and your audience. Without them, you have nothing but a soon-to-be-obsolete brick and lines of code — a device and technology capable for so much, yet no magic key to unlock that power.

I spoke to a person at Palm recently on the phone. He gave me a synopsis about Palm and their modile device/webOS strategy. He even bragged about how great their platform is and how it’ll be great for the future of modile devices. He mentioned how awesome their newest phone is (Pixi). But, I think Palm has it all wrong. Even if they believe their technology makes the most sense, it doesn’t mean the mass audience cares. Sure, I took a look at their website to learn more, but the problem is, I have an iPhone and there hasn’t been enough rave, mass adoption, or reason to even consider going to the store to check it out.

The mass audience doesn’t give a crap that uses webOS uses web technology such as HTML 5, JavaScript, or CSS. Nor do they care that the web browser uses WebKit layout engine. Those are things developers care about. The mass audience care about what cool apps they can download, what games they can play, what their friends are up to on Facebook, how reliable the network/phone is in their area, and so forth. Oh wait. That’s what Apple promotes on their advertisements.

Time is ticking. Elevation Partners already put in $325M for 25% stake in Palm (current market cap: 1.56B @ price: $10.96) in the beginning of 2007 plus another $100M in late 2008. And what do they have to show for that? Another straight quarterly loss (10th) and a decline of 5% in # of units in its fiscal second quarter. This past quarter, S&M expenses rose 64% and operating cost rose 21%. The stock price has increased 3x since the beginning of this year because of the hype and anticipation that Palm will become relevant again. But, that’s all it is. Hype and anticiptation. Time is running out — In the AM many shares will be sold because of poor execution and results. Will they ever get the equation of success, right? Before they burn through all their money? Before reality kicks in and investors realize Palm is nothing more than a technology company that can’t figure out how to turn a profitable business?

Mint.com Presentation by Aaron Patzer

This is a very popular PPT file. Mint.com was acquired by Intuit earlier this year in September after only being in business for two year (took one year to build). There are a ton of reasons on why this news created so much buzz — Mint.com was absolutely awesome and it solved a really personal and painful problem that we all experience.

Here’s the presentation below:


Startup Building 101

ROI Analysis on Farmville – w/ Spreadsheet! (Developing)

One of the best features about Farmville (by Zynga) that I quickly noticed was the math that could be applied to the game. From a strategic standpoint, I discovered not all crops that I was planting yielded the same amount of ROI. In Farmville terms, this would be coins (and XP points, but I haven’t really figured out XP points yet). So I started a spreadsheet for myself on Google Docs.  The more I continued to play, the more items I was able to unlock. And in doing so, I found myself wanting to throw every unlocked item onto my spreadsheet so I could see if the new crop, animal, or tree was a better return than the current options that I had available.

I also noticed it came in handy when I talked to some of my Farmville buddies:

“My artichokes are choking my profits ” – Farmville buddy

“Yeah, I know. That’s the third worse ROI crop!” – Me

I’m only on level 11 right now so wanted to develop the spreadsheet a little more before putting it out for my friends to use it. But, I promised that I’d get it out, so here it is (Farmville ROI Analysis — Google Spreadsheet)! (It’s in its very rough stages as you can see, but it gets the job done for me.) Some more analysis that I have not done, but would like to add to the spreadsheet are:

  • Trees & Animals have one fixed cost whereas plots of land is linear.
  • Trees take up less space than plots of land.
  • Space taken up by animals vary. Must be factored in to value the true ROI.

Hopefully, it’ll be helpful to all you Farmville fans! And if you find new discoveries or have any comments, feel free to share!

Update: Per the comment below, a much more comprehensive and complete Farmville spreadsheet is located here: http://spreadsheets.google.com/pub?key=rrFQP5AOGa4yUZCL-1VLUyg&gid=9

Social Gaming Lately — FarmVille

Now that I’m up and running on my domain and have some free time, I should be blogging. Yet, I haven’t. No excuses.

So with that prefacing this post, I’ve been “social gaming” on Facebook. Partly because it’s FUN! and partly because I’ve been highly interested in this space lately. I want to share this conversation regarding the game, FarmVille:

Joshua: i don’t think it rots on trees If you read the help file, you can leave them on trees for as long as you want.

Me: Thanks for the tip! awesome.

Me: How sad, I’m not buying a tree until I figure out the NPV on the tree investments.

Yeah, we’re big FarmVille fans (and apparently, we’re not alone. Over 20M monthly active users on this Facebook game!) Is what is FarmVille? Well, it’s a SIM-type game where you build out your own farm. Planting crops, raising farm animals, harvesting crops to earn coins, getting your friends to play with you and be neighbors. We think this is pretty awesome game — great concept, attractive game design, fun icons, friends, achievements, and yes, math. I’ll explain the math part in my next post. Stay tuned!

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