Posts Tagged ‘Market Research’

8 Crucial Elements of Startup Success

Published by pratyushkp on July 19th, 2011 - in Social, Technology
Does Google Map's Use of All Right's Reserved ...

Image by Thomas Hawk via Flickr

Bill Clark is the CEO of Microventures, a securities broker/dealer that uses crowdfunding to allow investors to invest between $1,000 and $10,000 in startups online. You can follow him on Twitter @austinbillc.

Most people understand that a high percentage of startups never make it. So what if you could give yourself a leg up on the competition? Below is a list of tips that may help your startup get to the next level. These ideas are not revolutionary, and many successful startups already have these qualities. Why not ensure yours does too?

1. Hire Great Coders


If you don’t have the skills to code, make sure you find someone with a solid programming background who can implement your idea. You want to make sure that person has built successful websites with features similar to your own vision. That way, you know they have the right skills for your startup. An inefficient coder will take a long time to launch the site, wasting time by making minor changes and fixing bugs. You will lose valuable time and potentially miss the opportunity to capitalize on first-to-market advantages.


2. Launch Your Product Site Quickly


Sometimes you’ll encounter a last-minute opportunity to add features to your product. However, this can delay the launch. You might consider it worth the wait, especially if the added features will further engage customers. However, make sure to launch as soon as possible with the critical functionality. You can always make later changes to improve your site and product. Furthermore, you’ll be able to start gathering valuable feedback from your customers. If you’re insecure about a hasty launch, let customers know they’re viewing the beta version of the site, and they can expect improvements soon.


3. Identify Your Users


If you’re developing a product, make sure you truly understand the needs of your end users. You might assume that potential customers are seeking your particular solution, only to discover after launch that your product might be too expensive or doesn’t precisely repair the problem. Make sure that you take some time to understand exactly what your users need, and what they are willing to pay for.


4. Don’t Target a Small Niche


Solving a problem for a targeted niche is not a bad idea — the smaller the niche, the less competition you may face. The downside is that you might not gain enough users to render a profit. Make sure to perform market research to understand the scale of consumers interested in your product. Also, plan to expand the niche once you service its need. When you evolve your original idea into adjacent markets, you will increase the probability of exponential growth.


5. Raise Enough Money the First Time


As most startups know, determining how much money to raise is difficult. Raising enough money in your seed round will carry your business through inevitable growing pains and redesigns, but it’s important to retain enough money to develop the final product your users will love. You don’t want to spend all your time convincing investors to sign that next check that will keep the company afloat. Investors would rather you spend it further developing the business and getting them a timely return on investment. You want to raise enough money initially so that you can hit a major milestone and have something to show investors.


6. Don’t Waste Money


As obvious as this one sounds, startups waste money every day. They often overspend on things that can wait until later, or on a tool that doesn’t get them the expected results. By outsourcing a variety of activities, however, startups are now becoming less expensive to launch.

One area in which startups waste money is hiring too many employees too fast. You need to make sure you can fill up the entire day of each (indispensable) employee. Early on, only hire people who add required functionality that cannot be fulfilled by current staff. You should also determine whether a person can be hired as a short-term, temporary resource (i.e. outsourcing), or whether hiring a full-time employee is the right, long-term solution. Employee salaries contribute to high overhead expenses, and should be carefully controlled at the beginning of a successful startup.


7. Have Multiple Co-Founders


A startup can be very time-consuming. Although you envisioned its concept, you may lack the required skills to launch your idea into reality. Therefore, divide the work among trusted partners with necessary skills sets, and be able to bounce ideas off each other freely.

Dave McClure states that the ideal startup has a hacker, a hustler and a designer. The hacker can code, the hustler brings in the business, and the designer architects the concept to make it appealing to a consumer or investor. You may have one or all of these skills, but often not enough time in the day to wear all of the hats. If you can’t convince a co-founder to come on board and fill a role, it may be a red flag that your idea needs tweaking.


8. All Or Nothing


We’ve all heard the saying “don’t quit your day job, kid,” but in the world of startups, any time spent focused on outside tasks is an opportunity for competitors to beat you to market. You need to focus all your time on your startup if you want it to succeed. And this may mean quitting your day job.

If you’re building a product, targeting customers, and trying to attract investors all in your spare time, you don’t have your priorities lined up. If you dedicate all your time to your startup, you will have more drive to successfully get it to market, because now your livelihood depends on it.


This list doesn’t guarantee that you will succeed, but it will give you some benchmarks to compare yourself against. Can you think of any additional characteristics that successful startups have going for them? If so, leave them in the comments.

Source :- http://mashable.com

  • 8 Crucial Elements of Startup Success (mashable.com)
  • How can you use the updated Grow VC service? (growvc.com)
  • Sponsored: What is Startup Riot? (seattle20.com)
  • Why making a cool project is a good idea for an aspiring software developer (garlicsim.org)
  • Why a Startup Visa Category Would Create U.S. Jobs [OPINION] (mashable.com)
  • 3 Myths of the Startup Bubble: Chris Shipley on How to Survive the Inevitable Crash (readwriteweb.com)
Tags: 500 Hats, Bill Clark, , , , , Niche market, Product (business), srartup success, , Thomas Hawk

‘Yeahh!! It happens on Live Television!’ Wardrobe malfunction video used in Facebook scam

Published by pratyushkp on July 1st, 2011 - in Social, Technology

Image via CrunchBase

A quick check on Wikipedia revealed that she is a model and Italian TV hostess, whose biggest contribution to popular culture is that she had something of a wardrobe malfunction on live TV during a soccer show called “Diretta Stadio”.

Clearly, the spammers behind the latest scam spreading quickly across Facebook were better acquainted with Miss Fruscio than me. I think perhaps I would like to keep it that way.

Here’s the message that is appearing on many people’s Facebook newsfeeds:

Yeahh!! It happens on Live Television!
[LINK]
Lol Checkout this video its very embracing moment for her

I suspect they meant “embarrassing” rather than “embracing”, but spelling has rarely been scammers‘ strong point.

And it doesn’t seem to matter if you recognise Marika Fruscio or not. I suspect she isn’t known outside of her native Italy, and yet the messages are appearing on users’ Facebook pages around the world, enticing their online friends to click to see more.

Anyone who regularly reads the Naked Security site will know only too well what’s likely to happen if you click on the link, but for those of you who are uneducated about scams, here’s what happens next.

Your browser goes to a webpage which claims that it’s about to show you a video of the mighty Marika Fruscio falling from grace on live television.

Interestingly, on this occasion some of the graphics are not rendering properly – perhaps the imgur website which is serving the real graphics in this instance is aware that its images are being abused and so have removed them.

The page wants you to click “Jaa”, and claims that doing so will verify your age. The truth is that it will do nothing of the sort.

The scammers want you to “share” the video with your Facebook friends before they’ll let you watch. The message is in Finnish and – you guessed it – “Jaa” is Finnish for “Share”.

And here comes the payload. If you share the link with your friends, thus helping it spread virally across the Facebook social network, you will then be presented with an online survey. The scammers earn commission each and every time a survey is completed – now do you see why they were so keen for you to help them spread the link around?

Fortunately it’s easy to remove the scam from your Facebook page.

Maybe if folks showed a little more restraint when presented with a sexy messages on their Facebook newsfeed these sorts of scams wouldn’t spread so quickly.

Source :- http://nakedsecurity.sophos.com

The Amazing Orgasm Facebook scam (NSFW) – don’t think with your trousers

Published by pratyushkp on June 20th, 2011 - in Social, Technology

The latest survey scam to spread successfully on Facebook is clearly targeting people who have so much blood flowing to their loins that the supply to their brains has been cut off.

It seems when faced with the prospect of seeing a video of a woman having an “amazing orgasm“, common sense goes out of the window for some people and they click the link without thinking of the possible consequences.

Here is the message that is spreading between Facebook users (I’ve pixelated out parts of the image so as not to offend anyone):

Amazing Orgasm
[LINK]

And here’s an alternative version:

The links point to pages on Blogspot, where you will then be redirected to a webpage which presents you with what appears to be a sexy YouTube video of what is claimed to be an “Overly Dramatic Orgasm”.

The only thing is that they want you to click a couple of times (sharing and liking the video to your Facebook friends) before they’ll let you watch. Curiously, the messages are in Finnish (“Jaa” is Finnish for “Share”). Could the scammer who set up this particular attack be Finnish?

You probably won’t be surprised to hear that the purpose of the whole scam is to earn money – through tricking users into taking online surveys. And through your clicking on the links, you have helped promote the survey (via the sexy video lure) to your online friends.

My feeling is that the last thing you’re probably in the mood to do, if you want to watch a sexy video, is fill out an online survey. But that’s precisely the kind of social engineering lure that appears to work on so many occasions.

Don’t think with your trousers, show some common sense. I wish when you logged into Facebook it said, alongside asking for your email address and password, “Have you had a cold shower in the last 20 minutes?”

Maybe then folks would show a little more common sense when they see one of these sexy messages appear on their newsfeed.

What are you doing if you’re clicking on this kind of thing from your work computer anyway? Content like that which these links promise is definitely NSFW (not safe for work).

Source :- http://nakedsecurity.sophos.com

Osama bin Laden leaked video scam rises again on Facebook

Published by pratyushkp on May 18th, 2011 - in Social, Technology

Image via CrunchBase

A new version of the various Facebook scams we have seen since the death of Osama bin Laden has emerged.

Naked Security reader Sampath sent us a tip-off about the latest variation he had seen of a viral scam that poses as a video of the killing of Osama bin Laden:

OSAMA KILLING REAL VIDEO LEAKED
OMG! real video of Osama Bin Laden being killed. Video leaked by wikileaks. Watch it before it get deleted.

A link in the message may, at first glance, appear to point to the YouTube website but in fact points to a similar-looking Indian domain name ending in “.in”.

If you make the mistake of clicking on the link you are taken to a third-party webpage, which poses as a security verification check from YouTube.

Quite why anyone would imagine that typing in the words “real video” is any form of security verification is beyond me.

But what’s happening here is that when you submit the so-called CAPTCHA text you are unwittingly publishing the message to your own Facebook wall. This spreads the message virally to your Facebook friends, and helps spread the scam further on behalf of the bad guys.

The scammers make their money by tricking you into taking an online survey. They earn commission for each person they managed to complete it, and you might be the sort of person who is tempted to answer the questionnaire in the belief that you’ll get to see a video of the Osama bin Laden being killed.

Remember – the real YouTube would never ask you to complete an online survey before watching a video, and that scams like this are rife across Facebook. As long as Facebook users keep falling for scams like this, they’ll carry on being a problem.

Source :- http://nakedsecurity.sophos.com

  • Osama bin Laden leaked video scam rises again on Facebook (nakedsecurity.sophos.com)
  • Osama bin Laden scams on Facebook (securitybloggersnetwork.com)
  • Martin Short Sings a Tribute to the Killing of Osama Bin Laden (VIDEO) (tvsquad.com)
  • Osama Bin Laden and Computer Security (netlz1.wordpress.com)
  • Video Released of Osama Bin Laden Being Thrown Into The Sea From The Helicopter (socyberty.com)
  • What Osama bin Laden is forced to wear in hell (offthebench.nbcsports.com)
  • Osama Had A Facebook Page! (ramanan50.wordpress.com)
  • Osama bin Laden’s ghost (search.japantimes.co.jp)
  • WARNING: Fotos_Osama_Bin_Laden.exe Email Attachment Is A Banking Trojan (techie-buzz.com)
  • U.S.-leaked Osama bin Laden video proves he was apparently… (shortformblog.tumblr.com)
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