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Friday, March 22, 2013

The secret to starting a successful mobile-related business

Mark Bridge writes:

What’s the secret to starting a successful mobile-related business?

It turns out there’s no magic answer… but there’s plenty of useful advice worth listening to. There are also plenty of opportunities to get funding, whether in the form of a loan, a grant or an investment.

At the Mobile Monday London meeting this month, John Spindler of Capital Enterprise talked about the finance options available and later chaired a panel discussion that took a closer look at some of the challenges.

Afterwards, I asked John why starting a business involved in mobile technology was different from other start-ups.

“I think there are three things that mobile’s doing. One is - it’s a cliché but it’s true - it’s a disruptive technology. When you’re starting a business you need fissures to occur in the ground so new businesses can compete with those megalithic businesses that dominate. Disruptive technology puts them at a bigger disadvantage than a start-up. A start-up can innovate quicker, can do things which break business models that a big business can’t do. Big businesses are just focussed on paying the overheads, making money, looking after shareholders and not focussed on ‘how do I innovate, make a service better, help customers to achieve more’. I think investors like it because you can start small and scale quickly, you don’t need millions of pounds. And thirdly it’s important because it’s a talent-based industry. Lots of industries are asset-based; to be an oil prospector I need millions!  To be a mobile business I just need good brains, a good team, some contacts and some time.”

What are the attributes of a successful mobile start-up business?

“To be that disruptive game-changing business, the most important thing is you need to be solving a big problem for a big set of customers. People need to really care about what you’re doing because then they will search for it and they will try it. Secondly, you need to have a really good team. You need that hipster, hacker, hustler in the team. Someone has to be incredibly passionate to get their business off the ground. Thirdly, in the UK, you need at least prove some of the business model: how you’re going to make money. At least on a small scale - that if you made money here, if you had more funds, you could make it even bigger. And the fourth thing is to understand what you’re going to offer investors, why they should come down this journey with you.”

John’s presentation included a broad and detailed list of resources for mobile start-up businesses. I asked him to summarise the best place to begin and he gave me three recommendations:

John’s presentation was followed by a panel discussion with contributions from Alistair Hill, Nic Brisbourne, Sitar Teli, Michel Sabatier and Inmaculada Martinez. You can listen to their conversation via iTunes, from our RSS feed, by downloading the mp3 file or via our website audio player.

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Opinion Articles

Google Nexus One: quarterback or cheerleader?

Mark Bridge writes:

Four months ago, Google unveiled a new way for consumers to buy an Android mobile phone. In fact, that’s pretty much what the first line of the press release said. The phone was the Nexus One and it was being sold online by Google.

You could buy it SIM-free or you could buy it with a contract – but you’d be buying it from Google’s online shop. You couldn’t buy it on a real high street.

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Why Marketers and Copywriters might actually 'need' an iPad... and soon

John Forde writes:

As I sit tapping away on a keyboard, here at 30,000 feet above the Atlantic, I can't help but think...

Thank God Arthur Summerfield got it all wrong.

See, Arthur was the U.S. Postmaster General for President 'Ike' Eisenhower. And in 1959, he boldly predicted...

"Before man reaches the moon, your mail will be delivered within hours from New York to Australia by guided missiles. We stand on the threshold of rocket mail."

Imagine. I'd hate to think what spam would look like, under those circumstances.

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Google Dictation - "I shall say this only once"

James Rosewell writes:

Back in January 2010 I wrote a brief review of the Google Nexus One that included my thoughts on the not-so-accurate voice dictation feature. From the marketing hype, I had expected to simply speak into the phone and a few seconds later my words would appear as a perfectly formed text message. The reality was somewhat disappointing. For all but the simplest short phrases it struggled to produce the intended words, making it inferior to even the touch-screen keyboard.

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The iPhone and its data are still uneasy bedfellows

Mark Bridge writes:

Being an optimistic cynic isn’t easy. But, hey, I do my best.

Which is why I smiled benignly when I heard this week that WiFi provider The Cloud was offering a free app to O2 iPhone users. It's a simple tool called FastConnect and it'll make it easy for those O2 customers to find free WiFi access via hotspots powered by (you guessed it!) The Cloud.

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Mobile payments could be on the way after all

Mark Bridge writes:

Cash is still king… but its days are numbered. That’s the message from a new report published this week by the Payments Council.

The Payments Council, which is a group of financial institutions that sets strategy for UK payments, has released ‘The Way We Pay 2010’. It shows how the last decade has seen a fall in the percentage of transactions using cash, from 73% in 1999 to 59% in 2009. In just five years time, cash transactions are expected to represent less than 50% – and a further fall to 45% is expected by 2019. Meanwhile, debit card spending in the UK rose from £65 billion in 1999 to £264bn in 2009.

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A month of mobile: O2 counts on 3, Microsoft counts to 10 and Apple counts its profits

Podcast - 30th January 2015

We're back with a month of mobile industry news, including takeover talks and takeover rumours. O2 and Three are said to be discussing a merger... but is there any truth in the suggestions that BlackBerry could be up for grabs?

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