Tag Archive | "API"

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Meet Craiggers: It Blows Craigslist Out of The Water

Posted on 04 May 2011 by admin

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If you’ve ever used craigslist before then you know, it’s just not very good. That’s not to say you can’t find what you need on there. The site is full of amazing deals and goods and services of all kinds, but navigating it involves opening new browser tab after browser tab, going back and forth and generally losing your way.

For those of you who are tired of the craigslist user experience from circa 1996, head on over to craiggers, the site that lets you interact with Craigslist the way you ought to.

As the craiggers' tagline says, the site is simply "craigslist data, better than craigslist!" It allows users a number of simple functions you've likely unconsciously wished for for years but didn't even realize you were desperately missing. For example, the site separates navigation into a number of columns, so you don't need to open listings in new tabs or hit the back and forward buttons all the time. Click on a result and it loads in the same page. Hit the down arrow or click on a different entry and it loads in the right most column without ever leaving the page.

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Beyond navigation – which is quite an improvement already – craiggers adds on a new layer of functionality when it comes to searching. No longer do you have to search simply within a single geographic area. As the site points out, "there are cases when searching outside your immediate community benefits both seekers and providers," giving the example of searching for a stolen bike or adopting a dog. When you search on craiggers, you can specify that you want to see results from neighboring locations and it will show you those as well.

Furthermore, if you wanted to search craigslist repeatedly, say for a job or an apartment, craiggers will not only let you save the search to repeat later, but it will also send you an email notification twice a day of results.

craiggers: An Example for Developers

For those of you out there interested in more than simply craiglist searches, there’s another interesting aspect to craiggers – it was built using the 3taps API. We first wrote about 3taps last month when the company launched at the Data 2.0 conference, explaining how the company wanted to "democratize the exchange of data."

Through the 3taps API, data from craigslist, eBay, Indeed, Etsy, Amazon and a host of other services is available in real-time, making mash-ups like this possible. Craiggers was built by the 3taps team as an example of the potential of its offering and we think it makes quite an argument.

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Mobile Dev News Round-Up: AR on Android, API for Instant App Making & More

Posted on 02 May 2011 by admin

Appnation 150x150It’s been a big week for mobile app developers, thanks, for the most part, to the AppNation conference held in San Francisco. From Qualcomm’s AR platform to Opera’s new developer program, many of these mobile announcements made headlines across the Web. Others, however, flew a little under the radar.  Below we’ve rounded up some of our favorite stories from the past week, including those from the event and elsewhere.

Qualcomm Releases AR for Android

Qualcomm commercially released its augmented reality platform for Android this week, and revealed the first app to be built with the technology. This showcase app, “Mavs AR,” is a game built in collaboration with the Dallas Mavericks. To use the app, you simply point your phone at your Dallas Mavericks ticket to see a virtual game appear. The platform offers high-performance, interactive 3D experiences, says Qualcomm, and integrates with the Android SDK and NDK. It also supports development using the Unity 3 game development tool. The platform is available for download now at: http://developer.qualcomm.com/dev/augmented-reality.

Mavs

Opera Launches Appcelerate Program for Mobile Developers

Opera Software launched Appcelerate at AppNation, a new program to help mobile developers promote their apps through the Opera Mobile Store. Developers can now target their content to various channels, geographies, handsets or operating systems. Opera is also offering, for a limited time, matching co-marketing funds for qualified developers. Pay-per-download campaign pricing means you only have to pay when an end user downloads your app. Developers can learn more about the program here.

Appcelerate

Xtify Launches Retention Tool for Apps

Developers can use Xtify’s new user retention tool called RETAIN to keep app customers engaged with the application by sending customized messages at pre-configured times. For example, a message could be sent out to a user who hasn’t launched the app in 2 weeks, or who installed the app 30 days ago. Developers can also use it to send other messages, like welcome greetings or requests to “rate the app.”  RETAIN supports iOS, Android and BlackBerry applications and is currently available for free.

Xtify retain

GetJar Goes Social to Aid in App Discovery

Independent app store GetJar added a social element to its mobile Web store, allowing users to connect with their Facebook friends within the store. Users can then see what each other are downloading, and can also share their download activity back to Facebook. With GetJar’s My Apps feature, users can also see their history of downloads in the mobile version of the store.

Appsgeyser Launches API

Appsgeyser launched an API at AppNation, which allows power users to create hundreds (or thousands) of mobile applications at once. Currently in private beta, the API lets developers create apps using existing Web content. To demonstrate the technology, YoWindow, a company that had previously developed Web-based weather widgets, transformed that content into over 100 apps in less than 2 hours. Appsgeyser launched in February 2011 and already has over 17,000 apps created through its service, with more than one million installs and 100,000 active daily users.

Sencha Releases JS 4

Sencha says it’s working to close the gap between what you can deliver within a Web browser and what you can deliver in a native application. With its release of JS 4, that gap is smaller. The biggest software release from the company in the past 2 years, JS 4 makes it easier to develop cross-platform apps using the Sencha JavaScript framework. Highlights of the release include major enhancements to the drawing and charting capabilities of Ext JS (including plug-in free charting, sans Flash), comprehensive cross-browser support, theming, and an improved data package.

Appsbar App Building Tool Launched

Appsbar is new free tool for building mobile applications using a “wizard” format that walks you through each step of the app building process. The tool is meant to fill the gap between the expensive, professionally-produced apps and the overly-simplified apps that exist today. App creators can customize their apps with background colors, fonts, or their own images, plus as many or as few functions and pages as they choose. Currently, Appsbar supports iPhone, Android and Windows phones. You can see some of the end results of using Appsbar over on Appsbar’s Facebook page.

Appsbar

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The New Startup – Just Add APIs

Posted on 02 May 2011 by admin

realtidbits_logo_transparent4.png Realtidbits is the model of the new startup. It did not start with the Web site. It started with an API. That’s representative of a new trend. You don’t launch a Web site anymore. You go straight to the API and create a service.

The API represents what Sam Rami of Apigee compares to the evolution of the 20th century supply chain. In the post-war economy, the supply chain changed our geographies. It transformed how we delivered goods to the market. With the advent of the modern highway, we created hubs that connected transportation systems which converged at central points. Through this we saw the emergence of a new commerce based culture.

Today’s transformation is to a digital economy that is loosely joined. It is increasingly connected by central hubs which serve as distribution systems for different services.

These hubs are increasingly APIs, which power new services like Realtidbits. Through this we are starting to see startups that are simply the result of networks that offer infrastructure elements.

In this case, Realtidbits is using the Echo stream server to serve real-time feeds for Web site forums. The idea is actually pretty smart. Forums have been around for ages but most are antiquated. They’re static and sit idle but thousands of Web sites still rely on them for discussion groups.

EchoStreamServer is the hub for the service. Over time, the founders at Realtidbit will add more APIs for badges and other social layers. For its part, Echo’s Chris Saad says the company seeks to be similar to a utility that provides electricity. Instead, Echo serves data for information products.

RealTidbits is an example of a modern application, All categories, topics, posts and conversation flow into the forum in real-time. It has the features you would expect from a social application, including tags, analytics and a custom CSS.

What’s different about it is the Echo API integration. Our question – what kind of intellectual property can be created with an instant API startup? It doesn’t seem like much if you all do is glue pieces together to make a loosely joined service. The RealTidbit team says they will do development on top of the API which helps differentiate it to some extent.

Then there’s the question of the APIs. If they go down so does part of the service. We see APIs taken down all the time for any number of reasons.

Still, such an infrastructure allows organizations to quickly establish a service. It’s like the instant startup. Just add an API.

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3 Awesome Twitter Apps Built in 3 Days Using Infochimps API Calls

Posted on 20 April 2011 by admin

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Last month at SXSW, Infochimps, the self-described “Amazon of data,” unveiled thousands of new API calls. The API calls, or plug-and-play bits of code that developers can insert into their applications, were released in hopes of soothing the headaches inherent in making data-dependent applications.

This weekend, a few developers took three headache-free days to make three awesome Twitter apps built on the Infochimps API calls.

Check ‘em out.

Plum.ly – search Twitter bios, locations & names

If you search on Twitter, the results you get come from what a person says in their tweets. It doesn’t search their bio. Plum.ly allows users to keyword search across anyone’s Twitter bio and returns results according to TrstRnk, the Infochimps’ Twitter-influence score. It lets users search not only the bio, but also the name and location. For example, if, like me, you wonder who else made the reverse migration, you can look for “Austinite in San Francisco.” It even allows users to quickly look at these results and see who these people are communication with on Twitter and look at the conversations they’re having.

Steve Odom put it together using the Strong Links, TrstRank, Conversations, and Qwerly API calls.

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TweetDegree – follow the right people

Say you meet someone involved with the Android developer community and you want to meet more people like them. How would you go about that? One way would probably be to look at the people they talk to and communicate with most, right? TweetDegree does just that. It helps you to quickly find the people they follow and Interact with on Twitter. Just enter a name, and it shows the various levels of interaction from there.

It uses the Infochimps Strong Links and TrstRank API calls and was built by Taecho group.

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TweepleFight – measure Twitter topics in microBeibers

Everyone loves a good fight, right? Infochimps’ own CTO, Flip Kromer, built this Twitter-based battle that allows users to compare the relative frequencies of words or phrases using Infochimps’ Twitter People Search API. Far more interesting, though, is how it makes these measurements – in “microBeibers.” What in the world is a microBeiber?

*µBb (microBiebers) — Each microBieber corresponds to one-millionth the popularity of Justin Bieber in user profiles. For example, about 10,000 users mention “bowling”; as a fraction of the 200,000 who mention “Bieber”, that’s 5.3%, or 53,000 µBb.

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I guess we can’t take down the king himself.

For more about the Infochimps’ API calls, read Sarah Perez’s full write-up from SXSW.

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Google Releases Compatibility Package to Address Fragmentation Issues

Posted on 04 March 2011 by admin

Yesterday, Google launched a new tool for Android developers that will help to address the fragmentation issues facing those who want to build apps for a diverse range of Android devices, including older handsets. This tool is a static library called the “Android Compatibility package,” and it’s an extension of the Fragments API (application programming interface) built into Honeycomb. Android 3.0, code-named Honeycomb, is the tablet-optimized version of the Google’s mobile operating system now powering tablets like the Motorola Xoom and Samsung Galaxy Tab 10.1, among others.

The Fragments API introduced in Honeycomb aims to make it easier for developers to extend their tablet applications to other devices, including those with different screen sizes and resolutions. It also addresses a number of pain points with Activities, says Google in a blog post from a few weeks ago, where it detailed the changes.

The new Android Compatibility package takes Honeycomb’s Fragments API and makes it available to applications running on older versions of Android. It means that apps compatible with Android 1.6 or later can use fragments to create tablet-compatible user interfaces.

Fragmentation issues have arisen on Android because of how fast Google pushes out new code. In fact, there are currently two different versions of Android out there right now: Android 2.3 (Gingerbread) for smartphones and Android 3.0 (Honeycomb) meant for tablets. Google has said that those two separate versions will be merged in a future release of Android.

Google keeps track of the distribution of the various Android versions here on its Developers site. Android 1.6, which is as far back as the new library can address, is still running on 6.3% of Android mobile devices. Android 1.5, which will now clearly be left behind, is on 3.9% of devices. Meanwhile, Android 2.1 (31.4%), Android 2.2 (57.6%) and the newest, Android 2.3 (0.8%) take up most of the pie chart below.

Chart feb2011

The Android Compatibility package is available through the SDK Updater here.

 

 

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Google Releases API for goo.gl URL Shortener

Posted on 11 January 2011 by admin

Google logo 150x150 More Google API news: the company just announced an API for its URL shortening service goo.gl. You can now use the API to integrate goo.gl URLs into your own projects. It’s a RESTful JSON API and the documentation is here. Our resident hacker Tyler Gilles notes that it’s pretty simple – it has only four methods. But you won’t need much more than that.

goo.gl competes with other URL shorteners such as Bit.ly. We compared goog.gl with other URL shorteners when it launched in 2009. An Independent study by WatchMouse found that goog.gl was the both the fastest and most reliable URL shortener tested. Google cites another study by Pingdom that confirms WatchMouse’s findings.

Now that goo.gl has an API, the biggest thing now lacking is the ability for companies to create customer URLs (like our own rww.to).

Google is also promising more security for the shortener. A Twitter worm spread last month by using goo.gl URLs to mask malicious links, but it’s not the only URL shortener that’s been used for nefarious purposes. Twitter started its own t.co shortening service in part to curb malware on its service.

Disclosure: Watchmouse is a ReadWriteWeb sponsor

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What Web Developers Should Know about Mobile Safari’s iOS 4.2 Update

Posted on 23 November 2010 by admin

With the release of the iOS 4.2 update yesterday, the major focus was on all the new features iPad users would receive – folders, multitasking and a unified inbox, to name a few. It also offered two major new features for all iOS users (iPhone, iPad and iPod Touch) – AirPlay and AirPrint, the former for streaming content between Apple devices and the latter for printing from mobile devices to networked printers.

However, flying under the radar a bit, was an update to Apple’s mobile Safari browser. And for Web developers, this update may be the most important of all.

Web developers, especially those turning to HTML5 as the platform for building mobile applications, will be interested to learn that mobile Safari now includes several major changes regarding its support for HTML5 and W3C standards, including added WebSockets support, accelerometer support, new JavaScript data-types and better SVG support.

These features are just now being officially documented by Apple, but Maximiliano Firtman, a mobile consultant and O’Reilly book author, detailed the changes on his blog prior to Apple’s release of its own documentation.

According to Firtman, he has detected the following changes:

  • Accelerometer & Gyroscope support through the DeviceOrientation API
  • WebSockets API from HTML5
  • Updated HTML5 Form Support
  • Partial XHR-2 Support
  • Print Support
  • New JavaScript data types
  • New DOM events
  • Enhanced SVG and Canvas support

The first item in that list – accelerometer and gyroscope support, is perhaps one of the most notable of all in terms of Web development. Until now, iOS Web developers didn’t have access to the accelerometer sensors or the magnetometer or gyroscope on some devices, writes Firtman. Now Apple is allowing access to both the accelerometer and the gyroscope APIs in iOS 4.2.

You can see an accelerometer demo in this video below (test yourself at http://ad.ag/wjmtgt):

Also, with support for WebSockets, developers of chat and other real-time applications can reduce AJAX periodic calls, explains Firtman, by using this W3C HTML5 API.

HTML5 form support has been updated, there are new supported DOM events and Canvas and SVG support has been improved, too.

Firtman’s post is filled with details on this and all the other new features Web developers will want to know about. It’s a must read (along with the official documentation of course) for all iOS developers.

(Via Mark Pilgram, John Gruber)

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Why Twitter Is Massively Undervalued Compared To Facebook

Posted on 16 October 2010 by Leo Pang

Editor’s note: In this guest post, Naval Ravikant and Adam Rifkin argue why Twitter is undervalued. Naval was an early investor in Twitter and owns Twitter shares; Adam does not. They have not discussed the content of this article with anyone inside Twitter. The views expressed are their own. They can be found on Twitter @naval and @ifindkarma.

Twitter was valued at one billion dollars in its last round of financing, but we believe it may in fact be severely undervalued relative to Facebook because Twitter’s value proposition is less obvious.

Facebook has utterly dominated the definition of the “social graph” to the point that conventional wisdom in Silicon Valley says that they have “already won social.” Few analysts seem to notice that the particular definition of “social graph” promulgated by Facebook—people you already know in real life—is not the only possible social graph. In fact, Facebook’s future revenue will actually be built on top of another social graph: the social interest graph, aka Pages & Likes.

Twitter’s social interest graph is potentially a huge cash machine that will lift the company out of the red and into the black . . . (Naval certainly hopes so).

An interest graph differs from the “people you know in real life” social graph in that it is:

  • Built on one-way following rather than two-way friending
  • Organized around shared interests, not personal relationships
  • Public by default, not private by default
  • Aspirational: not who you were in the past or even who you are, but who you want to be

It should already be clear that the interest graph lends itself brilliantly to commerce.

This explains in part why Facebook is potentially very lucrative: it owns the somewhat-buried interest graph constructed through all of the shares coming from our Facebook friends. As its News Feed grows, so will Facebook’s version of the interest graph.  The interest graph makes itself most explicit in Facebook Pages, which also works on the principles of one-way following, shared interests, public streams, and aspirational relationships.

But Twitter is in theory even better positioned than Facebook to capitalize on the social interest graph. Its keys components are:

  1. The composition of the social graph
  2. The value of the data flowing through it
  3. The volume of the data

By excelling at all three, Twitter is demonstrably superior to Facebook Pages, at least, along specific axes related to revenue potential.

1) Twitter’s social graph is inherently interest-based.

Facebook, as we noted earlier, maintains two separate graphs from the user perspective: a social graph and an interest graph. For most Facebook users, the former is vastly more important than the latte—no one joined Facebook so they could follow Justin Bieber’s Fan Page. Twitter’s graph by contrast is fully interest-based: people use it to stalk celebrities, not to stalk ex-girlfriends from high school.

Twitter’s graph reflects the power-law distribution of human nature. Social hierarchies are rigid and constraining, and slow down the flow of information. On Facebook, unless you are one of his 5,000 closest personal friends, you aren’t going to find out what Mark Zuckerberg likes. But on Twitter, when Demi Moore tweeted at a suicidal kid, she used the power-law distribution—aka celebrity—to help save a stranger’s life.

Twitter’s interest graph seamlessly accommodates whales, including celebrities, professionals, and increasingly businesses. By contrast, it is downright painful to maintain concurrent presences on the dual Facebook graphs—Facebook’s lack of tools to automate Profiles and Pages wastes energy, goodwill, and time. Twitter has no such ambiguity, and as a result it is growing its own kind of lightweight business-related engagement.

2) Twitter connects strangers, creating more value for all.

Twitter data is all assumed to be public by default. Therefore it can be indexed, crawled, searched, and aggregated. Value can flow across the graph to people who don’t know the original poster.

When strangers communicate with each other, they are much more likely to be short-term transactional: ask questions, report news, flirt, buy something. Friends communicate more over the long term, building a relationship over time. Therefore, from an advertisers’ perspective, a Tweet is much more likely to be valuable than a Facebook share.

Businesses make money by connecting strangers. Even on Facebook itself, the most promising applications are there to connect strangers—Zynga, Zoosk, BranchOut, TopProspect. Facebook itself has struggled to allow strangers to connect in commercially-relevant ways: even now, Pages don’t allow users to talk to each other so much as potentially allow businesses to blast news or cupcake offers at their followers.

A follow is the ultimate opt-in. There is no clearer statement of interest on the Internet today, because you are giving permission for that person or entity to push data at you as much as they want as long as they’re interesting to you. Interested intent + Opt-in = The dream of every marketer.

3) Twitter’s usage model encourages volume.

Facebook Pages are rarely visited after an initial “like.”  Community behaviors have not developed around Facebook’s interest graph. Many users consider all Facebook Page messages to be of low value—akin to spam—and therefore do not welcome higher volume.

You can pick up a follower from anywhere on Twitter, and they can drop off at any time, so you must keep the quality and flow of messages high to be successful. Other users on Twitter won’t put up with your lame tweets just because they went to junior high with you . . . you have to find some interesting “hook” to grow your audience, and you must keep the flow of information coming to keep them, not just place mirrors beside mirrors to make it seem like beautiful content goes on and on.

Now that we’ve analyzed the massive potential value of Twitter, it’s time to address the undeniable operational and structural missteps by the company to date. To take advantage of these opportunities, Twitter must fully embrace three things: third-party developers, Google and Microsoft, and the Open Web.

1) Embrace third-party developers.

Unfortunately, Twitter has lost its way with developers. Six months ago it was a critical piece of infrastructure that everyone wanted to use as the messaging layer for their applications. Now Twitter has turned its back on third party developers because the company thinks it is necessary to own the major clients (web, iPhone, Android, iPad). Hopefully the elevation of Feedburner’s Dick Costolo to CEO signals a shift back to the correct strategy: Don’t monetize the client, monetize the feed.

Here are three things Twitter could immediately do to mend fences with developers in a way that’s also good for the company:

  • Embed ads in the search results and tweet stream API calls so any startup using the recently-opened firehose can monetize for Twitter and themselves too.
  • Make the client attribution published with each tweet more prominent again to promote different Twitter clients.
  • Open the graph API so any startup can innovate on the basis of Twitter’s extremely high-quality follow-based interest graph. For instance, one could imagine building a very accurate spam filter using Twitter’s graph.

These moves would not hurt Twitter at all, and in fact would kickstart their platform efforts versus Facebook Connect. And they’re very much compatible with promoted tweets, promoted accounts, and promoted trends—and the accompanying tools.

2) Embrace Google and Microsoft

Twitter has significant common interests with these two companies. They can help Twitter solidify its infrastructure foundation, invest a half billion dollars to make sure the company has the cash to scale, promote Twitter heavily as the open social network, and help Twitter monetize hugely as full-fledged partners.

3) Embrace the Web.

Twitter has the ability to power the open Web versions of Facebook Pages and Facebook Places, and that’s where the real money is. Don’t make brand advertisers have to think—provide a clear, open alternative to Facebook where they can promote their own Websites and brands instead of on Facebook Pages, and the dollars will start to flow.

The real money comes from two places: search and brand advertising on an open alternative to Facebook.

Memo to Twitter: with search, do not grow a brain. Partner with the best at Google and Microsoft (see Facebook-Bing), and you’ll get great AdSense, AdWords, display ads, and mobile ads without having to run all the infrastructure—and manage all the people!—to do it. They should be willing to give you 70% of the revenues now that you’re doing a billion searches a day.

Let’s say you can’t yet get the dime per search average that Google has spent a decade optimizing. Even if you only average 2 cents per search, that’s $20 million in revenue per day. Your cut? $14 million a day. That is real money: roughly $400 million a month, or $5 billion a year. And it grows as your number of searches and average revenue per search grow.

In addition to that, look to brand advertising increasingly moving online. TV money wants to move to the Internet, but right now Facebook Pages are the only place brand managers can make big spends. Come up with a cost-per-follow model similar to Facebook’s $1-per-like model. Heck, maybe even rev share with the consumers who are following, and give new users a tangible answer to the oft-expressed question, “Yeah, Twitter, I don’t get it… WTF?Who really cares?

If Facebook’s revenues are $2 billion and its valuation is $35 billion, then a Twitter with a potential $5 billion in annual revenues is massively undervalued.  Twitter employees and investors understand the potential, as evidenced by the fact that there are currently many unfilled bids on the Sharespost secondary market for shares at a $4.5 billion valuation.  If Twitter can improve its execution and learn to play well with others, this valuation will prove to be laughably low.

Top image: Mistersweaters; photo: Paula Anddrade

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Tracking the Buzz in Google Reader During VMworld

Posted on 04 September 2010 by Leo Pang

buzz-in-reader.pngThe API team over at Google Buzz have been buzzing to say the least. If you recall the long lost Twitter feature known as Track whose disappearance spawned numerous impassioned pleased for return you’ll appreciate the latest from Google Buzz.

Last week the Google Buzz API team updated their blog to announce the general availability for Track as well detailed error messages. This means that you can get started with Track right now in Google Reader.

Some examples:

Here is the XML returned for the VMworld example

To illustrate this, I decided to add the “vmworld” example for my trip to VMworld 2010 and discovered a host of references that I can peruse in Google Reader.

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As you might expect, you’ll get the statistics as well:

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Also, as you might expect with a conference the size of VMworld… I’m already behind!

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What are some of your favorite Google Buzz queries that you’ve added to Google Reader? Let us know in the comments below!

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Developing Your Business By Marketing Your API

Posted on 30 August 2010 by Leo Pang

handshake_august10.jpgLast week, Alex Williams posted a list in ReadWriteWeb’s Cloud Computing channel of the “!0 Common Mistakes Made by API Providers.” Alex’s post points to some of the problems that occur in both the technical and the business realms of API development. In the case of the latter, he lists “Poor Community Management” and “Not Recognizing the API as a Core Line of Business” as common business-related errors.

The API has long been seen as a cornerstone of BizDev 2.0, a term coined by Hunch co-founder Caterina Fake. But parallel perhaps to the misconception that “if you build (a product), they will come,” is the notion that simply because you’ve developed an API for your business that you have, in fact, upgraded your business development to that 2.0 level.

Hunch’s VP of Business Development, Shaival Shah has written a post along these lines today, with suggestions on how to “Cannabilize Business Development by Popularizing your API.” As Shah writes, the challenge isn’t simply to build an API: “the great challenge is how to market your API so that people know a) that it is available, b) how/why to use it and 3) what value they can generate from it.”

Shah stresses the marketing of the API and gives the following as goals for doing so:

  1. Developing market awareness about your service and about the availability of your API
  2. Nailing three partner use-cases that are reusable across the market
  3. Establishing metrics for success and developing analytics so you can preserve future monetization options

As Shah notes, the idea of a “self-service” API may be a misnomer, particularly at the beginning, when there are still a lot of “hand-to-hand deals” in order to get those initial partnerships established. From there, Shah invokes the “bowling pin strategy” – finding a niche, then leveraging that to knock down surrounding markets.

Shah argues that this API-oriented business development should be less sales- and more product-oriented. And in the end, suggests Shah describing his own goals for his biz dev role at Hunch, this will “cannibalize” the business development function by popularizing the API.

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