Quote

Tango, a messaging app and mobile social network, has raised $280 million … Eric Setton, CTO and co-founder of Tango, says 70 million of its 200 million registered users are active every month.

Tango Raises $280 Million via Business Insider

I used Tango for a short while on my Windows Phone before Skype was released on the platform. Not a surprising valuation for Tango given the recent WhatsApp purchase and their MAU’s. Their monetization and virality model seems focused on not dissuading users in any way (i.e. no core functionality behind paywalls). 

Quote

The experience made it clear that WhatsApp, even with more than 450 million users, by no means has certain domination of the free texting market — and you would think it might if Facebook paid up to $19 billion to acquire the start-up.

For Free Texting Apps, the Market Is Far From Conquered” via NYTimes.

I also have this “which app are you on?” experience whenever I meet people at conferences or networking events, especially internationally. My “messaging” folder of apps gets a workout daily as I switch between WhatsApp (friends in Mexico and Spain), GroupMe (Seattle friends), Skype (work), Facebook Messenger (NYC and Boston friends), then a much smaller percentage of time on Line and Viber (random international folks).

Quote

With an app like Secret, a user could post an original photograph and write a post about it, and people connected to that user can help the secret propagate through the app’s network, as well as through the web.

How Secret May Uncover A New Secret To Mobile Growth” via TechCrunch

I’m interested in what Secret is doing; not so much as an app on its own but instead as a lighthouse for seeing which types of content could find a new home in anonymous posting networks (beyond just NSFW Snapchatting). 

Quote

Most of the smartphones sold last year in China, or 57%, were Android devices that cost less than $350. But there is still strong demand for more expensive handsets. High-end smartphones priced above $500 accounted for 27% of smartphones sold last year; of that amount, 80% were iPhones.

China Now Has 700M Active Smartphone Users” via TechCrunch

“China became the world’s largest smartphone market in November 2011, but sales have gradually slowed as mobile penetration rates increase. Shipments decreased for the first time in more than two years at the end of 2013, according to a recent report from IDC. As the price of smartphones drop dramatically, however, more first-time users are buying their first device.”

Quote

The city is already on pace for the best first quarter in its history – with 98 companies raising nearly $1.3 billion to date and its second best quarter by capital committed since 2009, according to our data. In the last quarter of 2013 New York’s new companies raised over $1.6 billion.

Quote

Employees should use the products and services produced by the companies that employ them. They should be emphatic fans of their company’s products. Nothing less.

Great article, “How to Get People to Eat Dog Food” via AlleyWatch.

I remember when I first heard the question “are you dogfooding?” shortly after arriving at Microsoft in 2004. I was puzzled for a second about why anyone would not use their own company’s products, especially when they were on the product team building them.

Fast forward a few weeks to the mid-point of the Outlook and Exchange 2007 release, when our dogfood email environment would periodically go completely down for days at a time, and we would resort to using IM and our bug reporting system to exchange important messages. I remember that some of our execs were not in the dogfood environment, but when they heard about the issues we were having they asked to be moved into the pre-production environment with us. They wanted to see for themselves what was going on, and provide feedback. Want a quicker way to get your day-to-day product stability in shape? Inject a few executives and put their real email on the line, and you’ll get feedback ‘fo sure. 

My point here is not that we were in terrible shape in early Office 2007 engineering (we weren’t), nor that we weren’t dogfooding (we all were), or even that execs are the best way to do Q/A (they’re not). The point is that it’s easy to get stuck staring at the trees and to forget about the forest, and it’s something that happens more (I believe) as teams get bigger and more specialized. I would be heads down working on a specific and critical issue in Search (one of my features), and would assume that someone was seeing the reliability issues I was having with sending email. I remember bringing up one of those reliability issues to the team that owned Mail Transport and finding out that a specific issue with my setup of Outlook (having multiple POP accounts loaded into a profile) was causing an issue, and no one else on the team was seeing it. It was a critical bug because many of our customers had a setup similar to mine.

As teams get bigger and more specialized it’s critically important that everyone dogfoods their specific feature or product. It’s equally important, if not more so, to make sure you are always dogfooding end-to-end experiences outside of your area and across the entire breadth of products you build. We found that by adding the execs in during a time of difficult product stability during Outlook 2007 development, we were able to inject some “new eyes” into our day-to-day work and get some great objective feedback.

Here are Contactive, as our products get more complex and are our team grows, we continue to dogfood every day and have recently added in weekly team-wide bug bashes to help get fresh eyes on new areas of our code. We put up a whiteboard, crank the music (usually 80’s workout montages on Spotify), and everyone writes the bugs they find up on the board. We sometimes award “most interesting bug” and other fun topics – you’d be amazed by what you can find with that kind of intense focus. We have a “Bugs” email alias that gets traffic at all hours of the day as we’ve all adopted the habit of sending screenshots and bug reports the minute we see them. 

Our goal at Contactive is to be proud of our products and deliver amazing experiences to our customers. We believe pride comes from quality, and quality comes from eating your dogfood. Yum. 🙂