The Archives

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Happy Holidays and Prosperous New Year – The LBS Way

Tuesday, December 28th, 2010

My best wishes of peace and prosperity.
Check my LBS WAY Card

The Mobile Marketing Revolution and Location Intelligence – Seminar at Versailles

Friday, April 30th, 2010

Over 120 persons RSVP to the VBC event in Miami

I’ll post my comments here after the event.

If you had the opportunity to participate, I’ll appreciate your feedback. What do you see in this map now?

Thank you!

Claudio Schapsis

GyPSii, Market Approach and Business Models for a Truly Mobile Digital Lifestyle Application

Wednesday, July 8th, 2009

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INTRODUCTION:
For a few months I’ve been writing about Location Based Services business models and how to monetize LBS applications, particularly in the newest area of Location Based Social Networks.
I invited a few companies to share their vision and show how they approach this market. I would say it takes leadership and real confidence in your business to open your company strategy for others to learn. It is not surprising that the first company to accept this challenge was GyPSii. They were recently awarded a core patent in mobile social networking, but GyPSii goes beyond the mobile social networking platform, it is a mobile digital lifestyle application.
I had the privilege to share some time with Shane Lennon, GyPSii’s SVP Market Development (Thank you again!). The result of our conversation is summarized in the following text. In my next post I’ll evaluate the interview, add the full interview on podcast, and comment about their market / business approach. In the mean time please leave YOUR comments

Q: Can you please give me a few words about GyPSii, how it started and your perspective of the company?

GyPSii is a global company, unusual for a start-up. The founders are based in Amsterdam. They had a mobile lifestyle vision that’s more than an LBS vision: “I want to capture my world; I want to be able to share with others”. On the technical level, it translates to creating a searchable mobile index of user-generated content based on the actual world. This is different from what you see on Internet today, which is built by companies, indexed on search engines, and driven more from their perspective and less from that of the user.
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On the quest for the 13.3 billion dollar Location Based Ecosystem.

Monday, April 27th, 2009

It has been a while since my last post. Launching a new product line was a tough and demanding task. Nevertheless the break gave me the time to look through a new perspective at the information I was putting together.

Almost 100 Location Based Social Networks after, we start to see the inevitable: consolidation and closings. More interesting, companies are trying to license the accumulated knowledge, without yet finding an appropriate business model to survive. We are still at the same starting point where developers struggle to understand how to migrate applications from Web2.0 environments to the mobile world.

To be or not to be
If we take a look back to my previous notes, one possible conclusion is that for an isolated company it’s almost impossible to succeed in this market. There are many obstacles that need to be solved even before they can try to implement the excellent idea that they have in mind. How are they going to get the location data? How to approach carriers minimizing fees? How to get information from mobile devices without GPS? How to overcome the difference of data between carriers, or even different handsets? and many other.

The good news is that location services are becoming a must. The question is how can we facilitate the go to market process of a carrier/handset agnostic solution without solving again the same problems other 100 companies already solved.

To aggregate or to facilitate that’s the question
In the beginning it was a map – latitude and longitude (a street map of Miami).
Now we add 5 restaurants in the block and by adding data or content to the map the result is Location Based Information.
Now we add context – 2 are Mexican restaurants, 2 are Italian and 1 is Chinese, all of them offer lunch and all close at 9PM. On top we add collaboration – reviews, recommendations, pictures, experiences, etc. now we have created value. If we can share that value and each one use it according to their needs and giving back to the system, we created Sustainable Location Based Intelligence.
We can extrapolate this to any other type of information; weather, news, traffic, advertising, 411, etc.

Now think of a platform that solves all your development and logistics problems, i.e. handsets OS, carrier fees, mapping interfaces and licenses, etc. In exchange you have to share your data, and benefit from other’s contributions. The key is participation and the challenge is to create an open platform where developers can craft on the fly partnerships, and help in building the functional building block that will put together that 13.3 billion dollar market that everybody is talking about. We can call it a Location Based Democracy.

Think of it as a solar system, where each one is moving in its own orbit, some have 1 or more moons revolving around, and all contribute to the mutual equilibrium. In business terms, creating this ecosystem will allow many companies to make a living, establishing micro-LBS-business around others without worrying about reinventing the wheel again and again rather unleashing the real value of “location base contextual valuable information”.

Give them the help and the technology to build cheap cars, and install toll booths
So why will somebody take the responsibility to create this? In the democracy of location based data somebody has to take the initiative to lead. Nobody wins from the chaos, and I believe it’s in everybody’s interest to keep it a “democracy”. It is a give and take game. So what are you ready to give away and what are the core assets you will keep for your company?
And at the end we come back again to the same question “What is the business model?” Is it revenue sharing? Is it success sharing? What is proper compensation for each party? Where is the money? In this case I’ll say “Take a closer look… It’s all over the map.”

Four Marketing Executives on Location Based Technologies

Sunday, January 4th, 2009

I have the privilege of belonging to MENG, the Marketing Executive Networking Group. MENG is a national network of top-level marketing executives.
Last week I asked four senior marketing executives from the network how Location Based Services and Technologies will affect their practices.
Without more introduction, here are their shots.


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Another Location Based Services – Social Networking Business Model – Old meet Web2.0

Sunday, December 28th, 2008

This article presents an additional business model associated with a Location Based Social Network, this time applied to a mature market – your automobile GPS devices and fleet management.

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My list of Location Based Social Networking sites

Saturday, December 20th, 2008

I compiled a list of Location Based Social Networks I visited while researching for my previous posts. Per request of many readers I’m posting the list in a separate page.

The general impression I had after putting all of them together in one page, is that many of the LBSN are “me too” applications, and at this point I can’t pinpoint one that present a marketing message with a unique offer, a distinctive value proposition or main differentiators from the others. I included standalone sites, and applications that complement as add-on Social Networks such as Facebook, Twitter, Flicker, YouTube, etc.

The directory is provided as “info only” without recommendations or endorsements. I’ll appreciate though, if you can review the list, and leave your comments.

The page is dated December 20, 2008. It would be interesting to review it in one year time and see if it grew, shrunk or consolidated.

For the list PRESS HERE or press the LBSN Links button in the top menu.

Please leave your comments, and Link/share/quote/ping. For additional posted comments follow this link

Thank you for your support!

Location Based Services Value Chain – Part 3 – Business Models for Location Based Social Networking

Monday, December 15th, 2008

From conversations I had with friends and colleagues, I believe this will be the first of a series of “last parts” regarding business models for Mobile Location Based Services.

I’ll assume through this post that you have read the preceding articles (LBS Marketing Concept / Value Chain 1 / Value Chain 2 / Location Based Social Networks 2.5) as many of the keys for further business models discussions reside there.

In my first post I defined the “Location Based Service concept” as the company’s effort to transform geographical positioning information into valuable and relevant data for a customer, to make a profit. The question here is: who is the customer that is willing to pay for that data?

Tim O’Reilly defines in “What is WEB 2.0Data is the next Intel Inside and he presents a key question: Who owns the data? And I would add, What Data?

In the following Business Model the LBS service provider owns the data. I reviewed many Location Based Social Networking sites and in most cases “some kind” of lack of privacy is the base of their business model. Differently from carrier fee based pushed services (top – down), this model is based on bottom-up. The LBS provider enables a platform for people to interact for free. In this scenario the handset is usually subsidized by the carrier, interested in generating traffic. The free service is now growing in viral mode and at this point the customers should be called by their real function: “data collectors”.



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Location Based Services Value Chain – Part 2.5 – The Case for Location Based Social Networking

Sunday, December 7th, 2008

Why 2.5? Part 3 will address some specific business models. But before the “HOW” I would like to address some factors and analyze the “WHY” there is a case for LBSN.

We are witnessing a new evolution in the online world. The “WHO are you” and “WHAT are you doing” is rapidly evolving to “Who are you” “What are you doing” “WHEN are you doing” and “WHERE are you”. We can fairly say that the WWW became the WWWW

The When and Where pose many questions, most of them associated with privacy. For example:

1- How is the location captured: Automatic by the system, Others on demand, You on demand
2- What type of location notification: Descriptive text (i.e. “At gym”, “at Starbucks”), area in a map, zip code, exact address, a point in a map
3- How is the sharing: Reciprocal, one way, only on authorization
4- Location History: Movement patterns, Tracking, Monitoring
5- Location Ownership: Resale and/or disclose of the information

But the same concerns for privacy were raised before we published our family photos and videos to the world. The fact is that the accessibility of technology creates communities and services. The simplification of web page building facilitated the rise of communities like FaceBook, MySpace, LinkedIN and others. The commoditization and accessibility to digital cameras, camcorders, and webcams has paved the way to communities like YouTube and Flicker or services like SnapFish. GPS devices became a commodity, and soon GPS in a cellular phone will be as common as a camera. As a matter of fact, you can get your position without a GPS (see Google maps) and Location Based Services can simply be added as a feature to mass social networks like Facebook. Location Based Social Networking is not a question of IF, it’s a question of WHEN and the when is NOW.

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Location Based Services Value Chain – Part 2

Friday, November 28th, 2008

Have you read PART 1? I’ll strongly recommend reading part 1 first.

As mentioned in part 1 the main components in the LBS Value Chain are: the location based service provider or developer (LBS APP), the data carrier (a cellular provider like T-Mobile, AT&T, etc), and the customer.

As Part 3 will talk about Web 2.0 strategies for Location Based Services and particularly for Location Based Social Networking, we need to completely understand every piece of the puzzle. Otherwise your model will be leaking money (pouring in some cases). Moreover understanding the players and trends will allow you to craft long term solid strategies.

A more comprehensive value chain shall include:

Location Based Services complete Value Chain by Claudio Schapsis

Location Based Services complete Value Chain by Claudio Schapsis

MAPS: Most LBS applications utilize maps; therefore their cost shall be added to the equation. The map market can be considered a duopoly dominated by Navteq and Teleatlas.

Consider: those companies were acquired recently by Nokia and TomTom.

Ask: How can they affect your business by controlling the LBS market. Can your application change the map provider easily? Do they cover all the areas you plan to service? Can you grow to other markets (internationally)? Does your international strategy fit your provider’s existing maps? What are their plans of expansion? How are you getting charged? What layers of information are included in that charge? The list of questions doesn’t end here and is closely related on the type of service you are planning to offer.

MAP INTERFACES: If you want to use map providers like Navteq and TeleAtlas you will need to pay a premium price to companies that provide interfaces to those maps – such as Autodesk, Decarta, etc. Your applications can also be based on Google maps (TeleAtlas data) or Microsoft maps (Navteq data) API’s.

…Read the rest of the post

Location Based Services Value Chain – Part 1

Sunday, November 23rd, 2008

As I mentioned in my previous post, the main components in this chain are the LBS service provider or developer (LBS APP), the data carrier (a mobile operator like T-Mobile, AT&T, etc), and the customer. We can identify 3 basic types of relationships.

In the first one the LBS APP provides an application to the carrier and the carrier provides the service to their customers for a fee – or free of charge to encourage the use of data services. For example companies like Loopt are offering their LBS social networking services through carriers like Verizon Wireless, applications like Autodesk family finder, and others.

Location Based Services Value Chain 1

Location Based Services Value Chain 1

The main challenge for the LBS APP is to find one of the mobile operators willing to buy and offer the application through their network. Once the service is running, all the promotion, billing and collection is performed by the mobile operator. The LBS APP revenues can be smaller but the risks are reduced as the investment in infrastructure and operations are minimal. On the other hand, the ownership of the customer usually remains with the mobile operator, minimizing the LBS APP possibility to up-sale other products.

…Read the rest of the post

First post – Marketing and the Location Based Services Concept

Tuesday, November 18th, 2008

Back in business school, we learned about “The Marketing Concept” as the total company effort to satisfy customer needs at a profit.

Location based services are booming and as marketing professionals, we have real challenges on how to integrate these new technologies to our tool set together with Wikis, Blogs, Social Networks, Podcasts, etc. Are you ready for new ideas like Location Based Advertising?

From a business perspective, I would define the “Location Based Service concept” as the company’s effort to transform geographical positioning information into valuable and relevant data for a customer, to make a profit.

The Location Based Service concept, like the marketing concept has 3 components

1- Get Geographical positioning information. This can be accomplished in many ways. The obvious way is a GPS device through cellular network, IP address mapping, user input, etc. (will address this in future posts)

2- Transform this data into valuable information. Your kids are calling for a pickup at midnight; would you consider the same situation knowing they are at a friend house or wandering
…Read the rest of the post