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Tuesday, October 26, 2010

Why the Sat-Nav Application Model is Broken

James Rosewell writes:

Over the past 3 years TomTom and Garmin have started to morph from companies that sell physical devices into software companies providing applications to run on other people's mobile platforms. Navigon and Co-Pilot have skipped the physical device stage entirely and established themselves as reputable Sat-Nav application providers. Free services from Google and Nokia have enjoyed huge success providing basic Sat-Nav services to their customers. Sat-Nav as a mobile application is enjoying huge growth as the barriers to access are removed. There’s a solution for literally any budget.

Most Sat-Nav applications are now obtained through the Application Store used on the mobile phone. Navigon have gone so far as to remove access to their application via any other route. Application Stores are now the only choice. This move to a platform-specific sales model is a massive mistake.

Unlike the PC application market where Microsoft dominates and only two other choices remain in the form of Apple and Linux, the mobile phone market is considerably less mature. PC customers stick with what they know, it’s only recently that many Windows users have even considered a move to Apple. Linux remains for the geeks. However, mobile phones are replaced more frequently than PCs and there is more healthy competition. As a result, platforms can change very quickly. Over a six year period an individual may use 3 or 4 different handsets and platforms.

Tying anything but low value (sub £1 applications) to a specific mobile platform is madness. Consider a customer who purchases a Sat-Nav application on Windows Mobile and then 6 months later starts to use an Android mobile phone. They’ll need to purchase the Sat-Nav application again. They will perceive the Sat-Nav application vendor is charging them twice for the same application. Sat-Nav CFOs might be rubbing their hands at the thought of charging twice for the same application. However the customer has now been placed in a position where they can purchase any Sat-Nav application, and will at the point of decision have strong negative feelings towards the incumbent vendor. Perhaps they won’t bother purchasing at all and will use the free Sat-Nav application provided by their mobile phone supplier. In my view there’s a strong possibility they’ll lose the customer.

The business models of Sat-Nav vendors involve getting people in cars from A to B efficiently and easily. They solve arguments between couples when navigating on long journeys, and they generally de-stress people’s lives a little. By getting involved in the battle for mobile platform domination they’ve become pawns in a game they don’t need to play.

Far better to sell a licence key via the Application Store that can be used to activate the application once on any platform. It's a move that'll keep customers loyal - and will ultimately keep the CFO much happier.

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Opinion Articles

Last week at The Fonecast: 17th October 2011

Mark Bridge writes:

Apple and Blackberry crumble. There, I’ve said it. Twitter’s favourite joke from the past seven days. The reality wasn’t so funny.

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Samsung Galaxy WiFi is the phone-less smartphone

Mark Bridge writes:

Samsung Electronics has announced the availability of the Galaxy WiFi multimedia device, with the 5-inch version available now and the 3.6-inch version due to arrive next month. Pricing is expected to start from £149.

Author: The Fonecast
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Handset manufacturer seeks mobile developer for mutually-rewarding relationship

Mark Bridge writes:

Call me naive or call me cynical - in either case you won’t be the first - but I was a little surprised to see a strong manufacturer presence at Droidcon UK last week. I’d assumed that manufacturers might be inclined to pick a popular operating system and then just start making devices.

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App developers can still make money from mobile advertising

Mark Bridge writes:

When I was a youngster, evangelists preached the gospel. Not the gospel according to Steve Jobs, Bart Simpson or Oprah Winfrey. The gospel of Jesus the Christ. That was all. That’s what the word meant.

In recent years, the word ‘evangelist’ has evolved to gain a wider meaning. We have Product evangelists. Customer evangelists. Developer evangelists. Technology evangelists. Even Word of Mouth evangelists (which sounds rather like being an ‘evangelism evangelist’, I reckon). Anyway, I’m sure you get the picture.

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iPhone 4S dismantled and photographed

Mark Bridge writes:

The Apple iPhone 4S launches in the UK today - but the self-repair chaps at iFixit.com have already acquired one and have disassembled it. Everything seems to be very much as expected, despite suggestions that Siri might provide distractions along the lines of “Number five is alive - no disassemble me!”

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