January 18, 2012

Access Facebook on your Mobile Phone Without Internet or a Data Plan (in India)

Filed under: Facebook,tp — Tags: , , , , — jeetu @ 5:30 pm

Fonetwish lets you access Facebook on your Mobile Phone Without Internet or a Data Plan in India for Rs 1 per day, unlimited

Do you have an old mobile phone, like the Nokia 1100, that has no browser and can do little more than make phone calls? Or are you stuck in some remote place where there’s no Internet or no other form of data (EGDE/GPRS/3G) connectivity is available?

Not a problem. You can still use your Facebook account in India by dialing *325# (or *fbk#) from your mobile phone – this service requires no data plan or Internet and it will even work on phones of the Stone Age. Here’s a quick tour:

Use Facebook without the Data Plan

Facebook India has partnered with Fonetwish to bring Facebook on every mobile phone without requiring any apps or even the Internet.

You dial the *325# number, then enter your Facebook username and password and you are in. You can then send number based commands to access various features of Facebook, chat with friends who are online, add new people to your friends list, and more.

I played with the service for some time and it was a nice experience overall. If there were a Unix-like shell interface for Facebook, it would be much similar. Fonetwish says that this service is currently available for Airtel, Aircel, Idea and Tata Docomo users in India.

It may be too much work to read your Facebook news feed stories one by one but this is a good option to quickly update your Facebook status or for chatting with friends who are online. The price is reasonable too – you just have pay a subscription fee of 1.00 per day for unlimited usage.

via Use Facebook on your Mobile Without Internet or a Data Plan.

February 4, 2010

PayPal Stops Personal Payments Sent To and From India

Filed under: Misc — Tags: , , , — jeetu @ 8:53 am

Posted at Quick Online Tips

by QuickOnlineTips

Today Paypal reversed advertisement earnings from a top advertising network from our PayPal account citing that they had “stopped allowing personal payments to be sent to or from India.” Here is the email we received explaining why the payment was returned back.

Your payment of 123456 has been sent back to the sender of the payment. We reversed this payment because we have stopped allowing personal payments to be sent to or from India.

If this was a payment for a purchase of goods or services, and not a personal payment, then you may contact the buyer and have him or her resend the payment as follows:  (a) click the Send Money tab, (b) select “Goods,” and (c) provide a shipping address.

If this payment was a personal payment such as a gift, then we have requested that the sender find another payment method until we restore personal payments to and from India. We are trying to resolve this issue as quickly as possible and we’re sorry for any inconvenience. Thank you, PayPal

Here is what the Paypal send money screen looks like

Advertisement earnings or affiliate commissions are not personal gifts. So if your affiliate payment money transfer or advertising income payment has to be done, it means the payer needs to select Goods as the reason for payment, or the funds will be sent back if your PayPal account lists you are based in India.

Update (Feb 4): Anuj from Paypal has confirmed in the comments

Personal payments to and from India have been suspended while we address some questions from our business partners. You can still make commercial payments. We’re trying to resolve the situation as quickly as possible and we’re sorry for any inconvenience this may cause.

Update (Feb 5): Binary Turf managed to get a paypal customer support reply.

Personal Payment – Send Money for India Accounts

· India customers are no longer able to see the option to send a Personal payment on the Send Money page

· They can continue to use other payment options, such as eBay checkout.

If this was a payment for a purchase of goods or services, and not a personal payment, then you may contact the buyer and have him or her resend the  payment as follows: (a) click the Send Money tab, (b) select ‘Goods’, and (c) provide a shipping address.

If this payment was a personal payment, such as a gift to a friend or family  member, then we request that you find another payment method until we restore personal payments to and from India.

Although India customers are unable to send Personal payments, they are still receiving Personal payments from Non India customers.

· In order to stop ALL Personal payments TO and FROM India accounts, we have started reversing Personal payments sent by Non India customers starting today. (the only exception will be in cases where the buyer has included a shipping address – we don’t want to delay any shipment of goods)

· Emails will be sent to both sender and recipient to let them know why the money was returned and what options they have to proceed forward. (see attached for  examples)

· We are also in the process of implementing a change on the website to automatically stop the payment from processing, rather than waiting to reverse the payment. We will send you additional updates as soon as we have more details.

The Personal payment option on the International Send Money page has been updated and India has been removed from the ‘select a country’ drop down list.

· If the payment was for a purchase of goods or services, and not a personal payment, then the buyer may resend the payment to the seller by following these steps on the PayPal website: (a) click the Send Money tab, (b) select ‘Goods’, and (c) provide a shipping address.

Update: Paypal has put up an official blog post with the same content as above.

  1. Report Fake Phishing Paypal Emails and Spoof Sites to Paypal
  2. Google Adsense Payments by Western Union Quick Cash
  3. Buy Beer for WordPress Bloggers: New Paypal Donation Idea
  4. Gmail Blocks PayPal and Ebay Fake Phishing Emails
  5. Parents Can Gift Free PayPal Student Accounts to Teens

Original article: PayPal Stops Personal Payments Sent To and From India
Copyright 2009. Quick Online Tips. All Rights Reserved.

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November 14, 2009

India is morphing into a global R&D hub, but can it ever take on Silicon Valley?

Filed under: Misc — Tags: , , , , , — jeetu @ 7:01 am

Posted at TechCrunch

by Vivek Wadhwa

mapWhen Americans think of the Indian technology sector, they still perceive a nation of call center workers and low-level computer programmers administering databases and updating websites. But while the West was sleeping, Indian IT morphed into a giant R&D machine. Indian companies that started out doing call center and low-level IT work have climbed the value chain to become outsourced providers of critical R&D in sophisticated areas such as semiconductor design, aerospace, automotive, network equipment and medical devices.

This is happening as multi-nationals set up their own R&D operations in India and partner with local shops. Both the Palm Pre smart phone and the Amazon Kindle, two of the hottest consumer electronics devices on the market, have key components designed in India. Intel designed its six-core Xeon processor in India. IBM has over 100,000 employees in India. A large number of these are building Big Blue’s most sophisticated software products. Cisco is developing cutting edge networking technologies for futuristic “intelligent cities” in Bangalore. Adobe, Cadence, Oracle, Microsoft and most of the large software companies are developing mainstream products in India.

Equally important are the arrival of Indian multi-nationals who are tackling global markets, such as Tata with its dirt cheap Nano car that the company is now positioning for a European market entry and Reva, which recently announced it was planning to build an electric car factory in New York state to address the U.S. market for electric vehicles.

What has been missing to date in India, however, is early stage venture activity and the type of grass-roots entrepreneurism that is the hallmark of American capitalism and Silicon Valley. In that respect China is way ahead of India with many startups taking advantage of huge government incentives and reeling in talented native Chinese returnees to serve as CEOs and CTOs. Note that Kaifu Lee, formerly Google’s top guy in China, was able to launch a $100 million startup incubator focusing entirely on the mobile sector — and he was flooded with business plans within days of opening his doors in the Middle Kingdom.

On my recent trip to India I started to see new signs of life in tech entrepreneurship.  Many of the startups that Sarah Lacy and I met were really smart and hungry. Some were even doing things better than their Silicon Valley counterparts. Not all of these startups are developing breakthrough technologies but many of them are solving problems that U.S. companies have thus far failed to solve and doing it with fewer resources.

tika powderOne of the most interesting companies I met is in the mundane business of developing offset printer ink. Their ink is made from vegetable oil and is entirely bio-degradable. The offset printing industry consumes 1 million tons of petroleum products and emits 500,000 tons of volatile organic compounds every year. An IIT-Delhi incubated startup called EnNatura developed a printing ink which emits no volatile compounds and is washable. And the overall cost of their solution will be significantly less than all present compounds when produced at scale. I can see a company like this growing into a billion dollar global business.

Another interesting company was LiveMedia. This is an out-of-home advertising company that has 4,500 screens in 2,200 destinations with a total reach of 50 million people. Of course, you can find exactly these sorts of TV screens in thousands of places across the U.S. Unfortunately, it has been very hard to make real money selling advertising on these networks. LiveMedia appears to have cracked that by creating specialized content that is more engaging and interactive than a box droning CNN or the Disney Channel. LiveMedia content includes games, quizzes, horoscopes, a few short animations, and other content that is both cheap to produce and easy to play along with or understand. LiveMedia has also perfected context-relevant advertising spots keyed to the crowds at the screen location.

LiveMedia is in the process of building out a partnership with Alcatel-Lucent Bell Labs India that would give the network even more interactive capabilities. Bell Labs has developed a content management and routing system, dubbed Mango, that makes it much easier and efficient to deliver high-bandwidth, high-quality video and interactive content over existing networks. In the developing world, everyone wants a TiVO-like capability to share, store and manage content. But existing GPRS or EDGE-based cell networks are not up to snuff. And the broadband infrastructure still lags behind that of the most developed telecom networks in places like Japan, Korea and Scandanavia.  A product like Mango is tailor-made for VC investment to get it out of the lab and into a spin-off company.

This is partly why so many U.S. venture capital shops have opened up branches in India. In fact, the two lead investors in LiveMedia are both U.S. venture capitalists including the respected Valley firm Draper Fisher Jurvetson. But India lags in home-grown venture capital activity. As I have previously discussed, VCs follow the innovation. So the lack of native VC in India is notable in that it implies a critical mass of activity remains lacking, as well.

For example, in the first nine months of 2008, total early stage VC investments in India totaled $678 million, according to the Global India Venture Capital Association. In the U.S. over that same period early stage investments tallied $5.2 billion according to the U.S. National Venture Capital Association – and that number is not entirely reflective of the real situation. The economic downturn hit the U.S. much harder than the Subcontinent and VC activity in the U.S. fell faster and harder. Regardless, a 10-fold difference between early stage venture activity clearly illustrates the capital is not there yet.

So when will there be enough innovative startups to support an explosion in venture capital? I’d argue, sooner than you realize. During my week in India I spoke to close to 100 startups. A few of them had products or prototypes that would easily compete in Silicon Valley. Some of the leading lights of the legacy Indian IT giants are also moving quickly into VC. Infosys founder Narayan Murthy recently sold millions of dollars of shares in the company in order to launch a venture capital fund targeting investments in India.

The dynamics of entrepreneurship are the same in India as in America. Company founders usually come from the ranks of experienced business executives and are middle-aged. They get tired of working for others and want to make an impact and build wealth before they get too old. Given that there are now hundreds of thousands of R&D workers in India who are gaining valuable experience and are getting old, it is simply a matter of time before they begin to hatch their entrepreneurial plans. After all, their colleagues who migrated to the U.S. now start nearly one in six of Silicon Valley’s tech firms.

I’ll bet that in 5 years, if you stacked up a TechCrunch 50 of Indian start ups versus a comparable number of U.S. startups, it would be a pretty even match. That’s pretty amazing considering the relatively short length of time that the Indian startup scene has existed. And it’s a good lesson for America that the barriers to starting a company are lower than ever before—and some ambitious engineer in India will eat your lunch if you don’t get your prototype built and perfected ASAP.

Editor’s note: Guest writer Vivek Wadhwa is an entrepreneur turned academic. He is a Visiting Scholar at UC-Berkeley, Senior Research Associate at Harvard Law School and Director of Research at the Center for Entrepreneurship and Research Commercialization at Duke University. Follow him on Twitter at @vwadhwa.

Crunch Network: MobileCrunch Mobile Gadgets and Applications, Delivered Daily.


September 7, 2009

How can India Have 1000 Startups ?

Filed under: Misc — Tags: , , , , , , , , — jeetu @ 9:36 pm

Posted at God in Chief

by godinchief

1000
Last week I was at an interesting round-table organized by Welingkar’s Education on “Seeding Entrepreneurial Startups & Social Businesses in B School Campuses”. They had put together an interesting group together there were VCs, University Professors, Consultants, Entrepreneurs, Startups, representatives from IITs, IIMs, representatives from TiE & students pretty much the entire eco system was present in one room. The discussion and part interesting, part practical and part academic which was kind of expected given the room was full of people trying to figure out how we can teach MBA students to become entrepreneurs and now to ignite the passion etc. etc. Facebook, Google, Yahoo and a lot of other major companies came about as campus startups.

Folks from IIT and IIM very cheering up the fact they they now have 4-5 startups coming up every year to which i brought my point. Do you really think we should be happy with 4-5 startups coming from the Dozen IIT and IIMs and the thousands of MBA schools in the country ? NO WAY

According to me if we really have to be serious about startup space in India we need to have at-least a 1000 startups over the next 5 years. Here is the math if we have to aim for 200 startups a year for the next 5 years and these 200 startups are coming say from the
5 Metros Mumbai, Delhi, Bangalore, Hyderabad, Chennai @ 30 per year
5 Cities Kolkatta, Chandigarh, Indore-Bhopal, Jaipur, Ahmedabad doing 10 each year.
Other cities too can contribute say total 5-10 per year

Now based on established startup funding models it is clear that most western startups operate at a $25k to $50k seed funding level and therefore it is fair to assume that a typical seed round in India can easily be in the 10 Lakhs $20k range. Which make a total funding requirement over 5 years of 1000×10 Lakhs = 100 Crs. approx $20 million.

That’s not such a big sum in the funding world however the challenge is how to actively manage, guide and mentor these 1000 startups and what kind of an organization is actually equipped to do so. My answer is simple what about the local entrepreneurs. If corporate funding is able to combine with local ‘Angels’/ Entrepreneurs say 50:50 where 5 lakhs comes from central fund and 5 lakhs comes from a local angel who is the lead on the startup and takes active personal interest in developing the idea and mentor the startups. The startup get the advantage of personalized mentoring as well as access to the larger network of contacts and knowledge which can help take them to the next level

At the same time I may be totally wrong too maybe India just needs a 100 high quality startups ?? which much higher funding ?

While I am still working to develop this idea further taking inputs from friends, incubators and investors across the globe would be happy to get your ideas and how we can get to 1000 startups in India ?

April 14, 2009

ecommerce in India – The Real Challenges?

Filed under: Misc — Tags: , , — jeetu @ 2:08 am

Posted at Pluggd.in

by sinha

[Three part series, contributed by Anshul of Designgrill analyzing the state of ecommerce in India]

India is yet to witness a breakthrough ecommerce success story particularly in online retail. There are number of barriers, most of them out of your control, which makes this space difficult to conquer. Travel and Matrimony ventures are doing relatively good and we will see why the case is so.

A successful business requires a lot of auxiliary services which supports the main business. Internet based businesses are no different. In effect, the companies providing these services necessarily become your business partners and that too, interestingly, in revenues and not profits. If you are a garage based startup, sorting these things out will be bigger challenge than getting visitors to your site. You will have to invest significant amount of time and energy in just setting up basic things.

India still hasn’t developed a matured ecosystem which will help small, low on fund startups to grow. At some point or the other, you will have to get your hand dirty and make efforts to put all these auxiliary services in place. Not only you have to look for services with minimum service level but also make sure that it doesn’t put a hole in your pocket.

An eBusiness is a normal business with internet as a medium. This doesn’t change basics of the business but instead you have one more responsibility to make it work on the internet.

Following are some of the infrastructural barriers responsible for slow growth of eCommerce in India. Some of these even present new business opportunities.

  1. Payment Collection: You could end up giving a significant share of your revenue here (~4% or more) even when you get paid by netbanking. With a business of thin margin, this effectively means you are parting away with almost half of your profits. Fraudulent charges, chargebacks etc. all become merchant’s responsibility and hence to be accounted for in the business model.
    To add to it, you still don’t get that world class service which gives a seamless experience for users. They might be greeted by a poorly designed landing page of your gateway which will ask a million questions even if user wants to pay by netbanking. This might lead to low conversion rates.
  2. Logistics: You have to deliver the product, safe and secure, in the hands of the right guy in right time frame. Reaching this Holy Grail with not spending too much is a dream for Indian ecommerce initiatives. Regular post doesn’t offer an acceptable service level, couriers have high charges and limited reach. Initially, you might have to take insurance for high value shipped articles increasing the cost. Low value articles will have significant shipping cost which will make them costly.
  3. Vendor Management: However advanced your system may be, you will have to come down and deal in an inefficient system for inventory management. This will slow you down drastically. Most of them won’t carry any digital data for their products. No nice looking photographs, no digital data sheet, no mechanism to check for daily prices, availability to keep your site updated.
  4. Taxation: Octroi, entry tax, VAT and lots of state specific forms which accompany them. This can be confusing at times with lots of exceptions and special rules.

Finding a solution to these problems requires experience – meaning the ride will be very bumpy for a garage startup.

Travel industry doesn’t have a problem of logistics. Their vendors have very advanced reservations system in place already which will tell you about real-time pricing and availability. They have long been accepting card payments and it’s now part of their business model. All the taxes levied to them are usually easy to calculate as it comes from their vendor itself. This domain is already conquered.

The challenge left is in the area of selling tangible goods. What’s your take on these issues?

Part 2: Understanding Payment collection systems [April 16th]

Part 3: Misunderstood Indian Internet User [April 20th]

Must Read: ecommerce in india: IRCTC still contributes 1/3rd – Something to worry about?

Forum Discussion: Challenges to ecommerrce in India | Comparison of Payment Gateways in India | Payment Gateway – USSD Processing

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» Do check out Indian Startup Directory | Indian VC Directory and Active Startup Discussion Forum

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ecommerce in India – The Real Challenges?

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April 8, 2009

What Globalization? Indian Govt. wants Google/Yahoo/Microsoft to Host Indian Email accounts ending with .in, servers in India

Filed under: Misc — Tags: , , — jeetu @ 9:43 pm

Posted at Pluggd.in

by sinha

Globalization is a state of mind – and if you are an Indian with ‘global’ email id (i.e. the ones not ending with .in), you might expect certain changes owing to the recent amendments to the IT Act.

The amendments passed by Parliament require internet behemoths like Google, Rediff and Microsoft — which provide free email services — to set up Indian servers. Not just that, they may also have to provide Indian email accounts for Indian nationals.
Internet users will have email accounts ending with ‘.in’ instead of ‘.com’ – ToI

While this is repercussion of the Mumbai terror attack (terrorists used BlackBerry mobiles and Blackberry refused to part with information critical to the investigation), changing the domain names does not make sense at all.

Infact, many of these companies tend to transfer email accounts (i.e. data) to respective geographical servers – to serve users better (and faster).

Earlier, Indian government asked govt, officials to avoid using Yahoo/Gmail and Hotmail and even banned social networking sites/picture sharing sites for Indian diplomats.

Very recently, I met a state governor and asked him on email id he checks frequently, and his reply states the infrastructure of government’s nic.in platform – he was using Yahoo email id for all purpose, though he had the official nic.in id – which was so damn slow and unreliable that he used to check it once in few months (and had even directed all important emails to be sent to his internet id).

Government cannot kill globalization just because there are security threats – they need to upgrade their own infrastructure to combat such threats (it took them almost 6 months to crack Blackberry).

What’s your opinion?

» Do check out Indian Startup Directory | and Ever Interesting Startup Discussion Forum

What Globalization? Indian Govt. wants Google/Yahoo/Microsoft to Host Indian Email accounts ending with .in, servers in India

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March 9, 2009

DoT asks BSNL and MTNL to stop 3G Services, Auction date Updates..

Filed under: Misc — Tags: , , , — jeetu @ 12:17 am

Posted at Pluggd.in

by sinha

Citing security concerns from Intelligence Bureau, DoT has asked BSNL and MTNL to stop 3G services till call monitoring services are made available to the intelligence agencies.

As per agreement between IB and DoT, for call interception the necessary equipments should be made available to the agency by the concerned telecom service providers with the cost being borne by the security agency. – source

Auction Date

BSNL is planning 3G launch in 700 cities and as far as private operators are concerned, the wait is still not over. Govt. has setup GoM (Group of Ministers) to decide on the issue of pricing of 3G spectrum auction and the number of players to be allowed in a circle (source).

If the auction date slides further, do not expect 3G auction to happen under current government – and that means, super delay of atleast 6 more months.

Share/Save/Bookmark

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November 9, 2008

Indian Startup Map – Which cities are startup friendly?

Filed under: Misc — Tags: , , , — jeetu @ 6:14 pm

Posted at Webyantra

by Amit Ranjan

Wonder which Indian cities are the most startup friendly? Which city offers facilities, manpower, infrastructure, environment etc to startup folks, so as to enable them to kickstart their ventures? While this is by no means a scientific poll, the Tata – NEN hottest startup awards (which incidentally has completed its public voting phase) offers valuable insights on this question. Check out the Indian startup map – this shows the various Indian cities from which the Tata-NEN awards have got their nominations.

Bangalore – 48
Delhi – 34
Mumbai – 36
Chennai – 24
Hyderabad – 14
Pune – 9
Ahmedabad – 5

The interactive map is housed on the Tata-NEN page on Livemint. Check it out here

Notwithstanding the somewhat controversial way in which voting and nominations for the awards have progressed, I think the above data is a reasonable representation of the city-wise representation of Indian startups. Although I am surprised by the omission of cities like Kolkatta, Trivandrum etc. Surely we should have seen a few nominations from those places.

Question to readers – In your opinion, is this map/data a true representation of where Indian startups are coming up? Which cities are under or over represented? And can you think of reasons why this may have happened?

October 30, 2008

Pune all set to become the 7th Indian metro city

Posted at Trakin' the india business buzz

by Sriram Vadlamani

There are total 6 metro cities in India. Delhi, Mumbai, Kolkata, Chennai, Bangalore and Hyderabad. The population in these cities has already saturated and most of these cities are crumbling under their own weight. Their perennial problems are crumbling infrastructure, population (most of it migrants) and lack of skilled resources. All these problems have led to the hunt for 7th Indian metro. ASSOCHAM has analyzed four tier 2 cities to come up with the 7th emerging metro city in India. Ahmedabad, Chandigarh, Pune and Lucknow are the 4 cities looked at.

What makes a metro a metro? These are 8 parameters on which a city is rated as metro.

  1. Business environment
  2. Infrastructure availability
  3. Real estate cost & availability
  4. Educational institutes
  5. Employment opportunity
  6. Social infrastructure
  7. Financial services
  8. Transportation facility

Of the four cities which were analyzed Pune ranked first for the first five parameters and came up 3rd for the last three parameters. Its overall standing is number 1. Ahmedabad came close 2nd to Pune to being a possible 8th metro. Of the 4 cities Pune has 26 malls and multiplexes, 25 star category hotels,100 (approx) public and private educational institutes.

Pune also has a 80.73 % literacy rate and skilled population. Lucknow  has scored high on the connectivity and transportation facility. Pune came 3rd because of its geography (lack of railway junction). Pune has 3 national highways and an international airport which placed it above Chandigarh.

The one parameter missing in classifying a metro is the political climate. For a city to be truly a metro, it has to attract different cultures, foreign investment  and people from all parts of the country. For these things to happen the political climate in the city or the state is very important. It is true that political climate is cyclical. But if we take the current scenario in Maharastra (Mumbai) the climate is not very conducive for business in general. Ahmedabad and Gujarat has its share of woes. The two cities which stayed away from any political controversies by large are Chandigarh and Lucknow. If we introduce the political climate parameter the ranking would be different. But I still think Pune would come out first as it has taken care of the first 5 parameters. I just hope ASSOCHAM never have to include the political climate as a parameter in their future study’s.

Possibly related posts:


Comments

  • October 31, 2008, Strong Resume Blog writes: [...] Pune all set to become the 7th Indian metro city [...]
  • October 31, 2008, kamal writes: Rightly said Mr. Author.

    Political climate is very important as far as Indian cities are concerned. Because goverment has done little to insulate the very growth environment and policies from domestically opportunistic and internationally idealistic ( Ultimately Cheap mix) politics.

  • November 1, 2008, Arun Prabhudesai writes: It will be nice to say “I live in a Metro now” :)
  • November 1, 2008, Hottest Indian Startups review : Trackcut – Social networking meets mobile writes: [...] modes of tracking your location and provide information based on that. Let us say you travel from Pune to Chennai, and you have trackcut’s mobile application installed on your phone. The moment [...]
  • November 3, 2008, j sarkar writes: Maharashtra govt. should issue notification, at the earliest, to make Pune formally a metro city. proud to be puneite.

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October 1, 2008

Startup News: Zook Launches Zook Alerts While MouthShut Launches Employee Feedback Platform

Attend the WATBlog Panel On “Digital Media in The Next Decade” on 16th October – Register Now!

Web Startup News

mouthshutMouthshut.com the website which is a platform and community for feedback and rantings as well as ratings for brands/products/services has now launched another platform for employee’s to express their anger or their love for their employers/companies. Mouthshut has launched a new platform – Employers.

According to mouthshut this new platform would provide:

1) Feedback to jobseekers looking for a prospective employers

2) Feedback to companies on their brand image among current/ex employee’s

Why this might work much better now?

This might work because of the slowdown companies might be hiving people off which will cause a sense of frustration among quite a few who need a platform to express themselves. Just recently cleartrip.com layed off 42 people and im sure such a platform would have been interesting to those people.

PS: We had done a WATShow with Faisal Farooqui the Founder of mouthshut.com and asked him whether his business was all about pulling down companies and negative feedback. Check his answer at WATShow.

Mobile Startup News

zookZook the mobile search startup by Ziva Software has introduced a new feature called zook alerts (its like google alerts for mobile) which allows users to setups specific alerts for stuff like lets say you want to keep a track of which movie is going to come next in a specific theatre. Zook Alerts are available for a number of different categories – deals/coupons, movie show times, events, weather, traffic updates, cricket news/scores, etc.

Zook was recently in the news for tying up with retail deals aggregator open2save and now it has launched zook alerts for deals as well which could possibly be their most used information services going forward. Zook was also one of the first companies to be showcased at proto.in

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