5/14/2013

Nexus Tablet Success And Why There #8217;s No Time Like The Present For A Google Retail Store

Rumors from an “extremely reliable source” speaking to 9t05Google have suggested Google will start to operate its own physical retail stores starting as soon as the 2013 holiday season in the U.S. Brick-and-mortar shops from an Internet search company? Sounds like a stretch, but the Goog is breaking out of its search box big time, and recent additions to the Nexus line are proving it has a real chance at establishing a direct relationship with customers.

Google has had a difficult time keeping its Nexus 4 smartphone, manufactured by partner LG, in stock, with the device being mostly unavailable through Google’s Play store until just recently. But the company’s efforts to sell direct weren’t an overnight success; it attempted to sell hardware direct with the Nexus One back in 2010, but stopped selling after a few months, since very few customers opted to buy the device at its full, unsubsidized price online.

But if Google does one thing well, it’s iterating on less-than-stellar product launches and building on a firm foundation of failure. And that’s exactly what it has done with Nexus; the tablets it starting selling the via its online hardware store did major one thing better than the Nexus One, by offering no-strings-attached hardware at a bargain basement price. Hardware sales, Google seems to have learned, won’t work if customers are asked to eat a cost hit in exchange for freedom. They needed both, and weren’t willing to trade economy for freedom.

Now Google has the recipe right for online sales, and it appears to have worked very well for the Nexus 4, and at least moderately well for Nexus tablets. But Google is still missing a key ingredient that has helped the iPad gain enormous consumer traction, and this latest rumor indicates it’s listening to the words of its biggest rival about how to possibly finally come up with a significant breakthrough for Android tablet market share.

Apple CEO Tim Cook has made no secret about Apple retail’s impact on iPad sales. Most recently, he essentially attributed the iPad’s worldwide success to Apple’s physical stores, and the opportunity they provided to make believers out of customers who might otherwise not necessarily have understood Apple’s tablet as a product category. As Ingrid noted in her recent piece covering Cook’s comments on retail at a Goldman Sachs investor conference last week:

“One of the things that’s not understood that well about the stores is that I don’t think we would have been nearly as successful in the iPad as an example if it weren’t for our stores,” said Cook. He noted that people’s view of the tablet, prior to the iPad, “ingrained in their minds [was] a heavy thing that no one wanted.”

Google needs a tablet to achieve the same kind of thing with an Android tablet, or at least to come close. Making an “experience”-baed retail store akin to what Apple’s offering doesn’t guarantee consumers warm up to Android tablets, but it’s a risk that’s likely worth taking, given that Google has had positive indicators for its online retail efforts of late, and that Apple seems to place a lot of the credit for the iPad’s success squarely on the Apple Store’s shoulders.

Nexus tablets need a home run, and that hasn’t come in the form of hardware so far, despite modest gains by gadgets like the Nexus series and the Kindle Fire. But maybe that’s because a device isn’t the answer they’re looking for: customer outreach is.

5/03/2013

Ahead Of SXSW, Highlight Adds New Photo Features And A Map View To See People And Places Nearby

Just a few weeks ago, social-local-mobile app Highlight announced a big new update that would add photos and events — just in time for SXSW! Well, now we have another just-in-time update of Highlight version 1.5, which is adding more photo features and other stuff to help people find out what’s happening around them.

One of the big new features of the app, which is available today for iOS users, is the addition of photo filters, so that users can get that Instagram-like feel without having to leave the app. Photos can also be posted from a user’s camera roll, meaning that they don’t have to be shot in-app to be shared with other users.

The app will also allow users the ability to save photos that they’ve shared or that have been shared at events that they’ve attended. While the introduction of Highlight version 1.5 a few weeks ago meant that users could now see and contribute to collections of photos from the events that they attend or the places they’ve been, there wasn’t any good way to download them and save them for later. Now Highlight users will be able to save photos to their camera roll, whether they are photos they’ve contributed or those uploaded by others. They’ll also be able to share them on Twitter and Facebook, you know, so you can brag about that awesome PlayStation party that you are going to in Austin this week.

Also key to the SXSW experience is being overwhelmed with everything and everyone around you. Well no worries! The update has a new map view that will detail people and events nearby. Now users will be able to tap on people in the app to see where they are, or tap on events to find out what’s going on nearby. For those of us who plan on just showing up to things without RSVPing, it’s an awesome way to pretend you were invited to the whatever party happens to be nearby.

In addition to all that, there’s search functionality so you can find your friends. Always a good thing in Austin at SXSW. Whee. Anyway, for now, these new features are only available on the iPhone version of the app, but Highlight says an Android update is coming soon.


Crunchbase

    HIGHLIGHT Company:HighlightWebsite:highlig.htLaunch Date:October 2011

    Highlight is a mobile ambient awareness app. When you come within a few blocks of another Highlight user who is your Facebook friend or that you have friends or interests in common with, Highlight sends you a push notification and lets you message them. The app’s homescreen displays a reverse chronological list of all the people you’ve crossed paths with.

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