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Kabam COO says mobile game companies have to get serious about Asia

Kabam COO says mobile game companies have to get serious about Asia

Above: Kent Wakefield of Kabam and Malathi Nayak of Reuters.

Image Credit: Michael O'Donnell/VentureBeat

SAN FRANCISCO — It’s time for North American mobile game developers and publishers to take their apps to the trade routes of Asia.

Kabam‘s chief operating officer, Kent Wakeford, said at VentureBeat’s MobileBeat 2014 conference that the growth of the Asian mobile device and mobile game markets is so compelling that Western developers have to move into them. That’s kind of a no brainer, but Western developers need more nudges, since they’ve given the Asian market lip service in the past.

“It’s a phenomenal market,” Wakeford said. “Asia will command over 50 percent of installs. Anyone is this room not thinking about Asia should be.”

He noted that in 2013, Asia had 820 million mobile devices. In the next four years, that is expected to grow to more than 1.9 billion. As for games, Asia’s $7 billion mobile market in 2013 was twice as big as North America’s mobile game market. And Asia is expected to grow to $12 billion, Wakeford said.

The challenge for Western game makers is that Asia is complex market. Android rules in places like China, but the market is fragmented across many different app stores. In different countries, different devices rule.

“You have firewall, hosting, and payment issues,” Wakeford said. “There are things you have to address to get in. But if you can, it’s a tremendous opportunity.”

Kabam found that 1 percent to 2 percent of its audience for games like Kingdoms of Camelot naturally came from Asia. Then the company started localizing its games a few years ago to different languages, and the result is that Asia now accounts for 10 percent of sales.

“It’s still not where it could be,” Wakeford said. “At Kabam, we are in the initial stages of taking those steps.”

Wakeford pointed to the success of other Western companies to show what’s possible. He noted that Plants vs Zombies 2: It’s About Time saw about 25 percent of its revenues come from China alone, based on the reported results.

“If done right, the opportunity is tremendous,” Wakeford said.

Other difficulties include the need to make the art style for a game appropriate. The Three Kingdoms mythology sells well as the theme for a game in China, but it has little meaning for Western gamers.

Then there are the mobile messaging networks like Line, Kakao and WeChat. They publish a limited number of games on their own mobile apps, and those apps can really take off in places like South Korea.

But they also take 20 percent of the revenue, on top of the 30 percent that the app store owner takes.

“If they take 20 percent, you can think of it as marketing,” Wakeford said. “If I get a company to do the marketing for me, I would be willing to do that.

Malathi Nayak, a writer for Reuters and moderator of the session, asked how long it would be before the Western companies made their mark.

Wakeford replied, “2015 is when you will see Western companies be on the top of the charts in Asia.

To plant more roots in Asia, Kabam created a $50 million fund to invest in Asian game developers, either to publish games in Asia or in Western markets.

Glu Games’ Eternity Warriors is an example of a Western game that has more than 50 percent of its revenues coming from Asia.

Last week, Kabam announced that it had a major deal with Warner Bros. to make games based on The Lord of the Rings and the Mad Max franchises.

Kabam's games have been published on mobile devices on the Apple iTunes App Store, Google Play, and Amazon Appstore. They have also been published on the web via Facebook, Yahoo, and Kabam.com. Kabam says it is the fastest-growing Internet media company in the San Francisco Bay Area, and it had revenues of $360 million in 2013, up 100 percent from a year earlier.

Investors include Warner Bros., Google, MGM, Intel, Canaan Partners, Redpoint Ventures, and Pinnacle Ventures. Kabam has more than 800 employees.


Screen Shot 2014-03-25 at 2.00.11 PMGamesBeat 2014 — VentureBeat's sixth annual event on disruption in the video game market — is coming up on Sept 15-16 in San Francisco. Purchase one of the first 50 tickets and save $400!


Kabam is the leader in the western world for free-to-play core games with 1st and 3rd party published titles available on mobile devices and the Web. The company is revolutionizing the video games industry by innovating in the business... read more »








The secret to mobile success is all about innovative ads

The secret to mobile success is all about innovative ads

Above: Living Social product VP Mike Bidgoli; Apploving co-founder and CEO Adam Foroughi; VentureBeat writer Mark Sullivan at MobileBeat 2014

Image Credit: Mike O'Donnell/VentureBeat

How can you leverage mobile to increase profitability for your company? Find out at MobileBeat, VentureBeat's 7th annual event on the future of mobile, on July 8-9 in San Francisco. There are only a few tickets left!

SAN FRANCISCO — Anyone hoping to make a splash in mobile needs to pay special attention to their marketing tactics.

That’s according to a discussion between Mike Bidgoli, the VP of product at Living Social, and Adam Foroughi, co-founder and CEO of AppLovin, today at our MobileBeat 2014 conference.

The two companies partnered a year ago to spice up Living Social’s mobile presence: It passes along users’ clickstream data to AppLovin, which it uses to retarget mobile ads featuring recommended products back to users. The ads push consumers directly into Living Social’s app so they can easily make a purchase.

According to Foroughi, the results have been a smashing success, with conversions doubling for users who see the improved ads (compared to those who don’t see them).

“Brands who utilize innovating marketing technology … are going to put themselves into position for success over time, they’re going to position themselves to be front runners in the mobile movement,” Foroughi said. “People focusing in desktop [marketing] are going to be left behind.”


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LivingSocial is a deal-of-the-day company headquartered in Washington, D.C. It is the fastest growing company in the e-commerce space and specializes in localized daily deals across more than 550 markets in 21 countries. The company re... read more »

Our mobile marketing platform drives relevant ads to your audience, refines and improves their performance, and delivers measurable results that yield the highest return on your investment.... read more »








Need directions? Yahoo software chooses the most beautiful travel routes instead of the shortest


Be prepared to surrender to computerdom more of that vanishing territory known as the uniquely human sensibility.

Researchers at Yahoo Labs in Barcelona have developed software that can determine the most beautiful route you should take.

Calculating the fastest route has been a key trick of computing for some time. But now a team of researchers from Yahoo and the University of Torino in Italy has developed an algorithm that chooses the most “emotionally pleasant” way home.

Photos along London routes from Google Street View and Geograph were tested two at a time on UrbanGems.org, with humans choosing the image that was more beautiful, happy, or peaceful/quiet.

The researchers then plotted the images, with scores representing their pleasantness, on a map. Their algorithm chose the most pleasant route among several alternatives based on beauty scores. Beauty has its price, of course, with the more pleasant routes taking an average of 12 percent longer in travel time.

Then, the team picked 30 Londoners to evaluate the paths the computer thought were nicest. The Londoners agreed with the computer’s choices.

Using fickle humans to evaluate beauty one by one could take an eternity. So the research team mined metadata from about five million photos on Flickr taken of the same places along the London routes. The number of photos taken at a given spot, positive-sounding comments, and other kinds of data were treated as endorsements.

They then carried out the London process in reverse for Boston routes. The software determined the most beautiful locations along Boston paths in Flickr photos and plotted the most pleasant paths via software. Several dozen humans were asked to test the choices. Again, the humans, apparently yielding their territory without a fight, agreed with the software’s choices of the nicest routes.

Mapping beauty by hand

“I just took a family road trip from Seattle to the Northern California redwoods and wanted to pass through various parts of the Oregon shore,” Current Analysis‘s director of software development research Al Hilwa told VentureBeat. “Neither my car's nav system nor my phones could handle the automated routing to optimize for scenery. I ended up mapping where I wanted to go by hand with Google Maps and user forums of best sites to visit and such.

“Had I had such software, it would have made the job a lot easier.”

Taking this into account, how close are we to having computers that can appreciate beauty?

“Probably far,” Hilwa assured us. “But an algorithmic assessment of beauty according to programmed human values will happen for sure, much earlier than the singularity.”

Forrester Research VP James McQuivey is sanguine about our new taste-makers.

This kind of “route personalization,” he told us, “is good practice for the holy grail of route personalization which will someday occur.”

On that day — all of which is possible once the data collection is automated, McQuivey said — “your GPS system can intelligently tailor your route based on dozens of competing factors, offering you two to three routes that provide whatever mix of routing you have demonstrated you prefer in the past.”

The route will also “incorporate crime statistics by time of day, traffic reports, panhandler sightings, tourist trap avoidance, shopping opportunities, chocolatier locations, and more.

“That’s why it’s vital that the [Yahoo] team move from human assessments of beauty to computer-based assessments of beauty, so it can quickly ingest more and more information to make the experience all the more personal to you and your preferences.”

And don’t forget to add the randomizer so the app can show us the best route for walking around aimlessly.

Via The M.I.T. Technology Review



Yahoo! Research Labs develops algorithms and technologies that help to improve the social and economic control of the Internet. It conducts research in various areas, such as data analytics, foundations, and search. The company builds ... read more »








HotelTonight chief explains why we’ll enjoy keyless entry and easy check-in at hotels

HotelTonight chief explains why we'll enjoy keyless entry and easy check-in at hotels

Above: Hotel Tonight's Sam Shank and Braintree's Aunkur Arya

Image Credit: Michael O'Donnell/VentureBeat

SAN FRANCISCO — People have talked about keyless entry and easy-check-in at hotels for a long time — and nothing’s happened yet. But HotelTonight founder Sam Shank believes it’s coming because it’s a lot more efficient, convenient, and secure.

The discussion on keyless entry focused on what is happening with the future of travel and hotels at our MobileBeat 2014 conference. Shank said that people increasingly want to handle transactions only on their mobile devices.

At the recent Google I/O event, the online travel company announced that its Android app will in the near future enable people to check into their hotel rooms using just its app. The express check-in feature bypasses checking in at hotel reception and replaces it with a two-tap process on the app.

The app tells you when your room will be ready and, if the hotel still uses keys, when you can go to the front desk and pick them up. The app takes advantage of near-field communications (NFC), where you can wave a phone in front of an NFC receiver to establish a communications link. You can hold the phone next to a door lock and it will unlock it in seconds.

“We are working with the best technology partners on this,” Shank said. “There is no reason we need a hotel room key. It’s an antiquated way of doing authentication. Can we help with the check-in process, especially with an independent hotel that doesn’t have a lot of resources.”

After all, nobody wants to wait in a line when they’re tired at the end of a day, Shank said.

“There’s no reason this can’t be done through a phone,” Shank said.

The feature is in pilot testing with select hotels on iOS, and it will roll out to more hotels on Android in the coming weeks. HotelTonight is also enabling better discovery of hotels via Google’s Places Autocomplete applications programming interface, which enables you to find nearby hotels with partial spellings in a search.

HotelTonight provides you with discounts on last-minute hotel bookings, and it has grown dramatically. A year ago, HotelTonight was in 100 destinations in 12 countries. Now it is more than 400 destinations in 27 countries.

“It’s been an amazing 3.5 years,” Shank said. “It’s about adding new cities and hotels. It’s hard when you go from adding one hotel a day to adding 100 hotels a day. You need different systems and quality control.”

Shank said he wants to deepen ties to the hotel industry, and he has been getting help from Barry Sternlicht, the CEO of Starwood Capital Group and former chief of the Starwood Hotels & Resorts Worldwide chain, which operates the W and St. Regis hotel brands.

Aunkur Arya, general manager of mobile for Braintree and moderator of Shank’s session, asked if Shank foresaw more deals with the likes of companies like Lyft and Uber, where someone could call for a car and get a hotel at the same time. If it’s about improving convenience for the consumer, it will probably happen, though the integration process isn’t an easy one.

 

 



HotelTonight is the ultimate way to book a same-day hotel stay via your mobile device. Founded in 2010, HotelTonight is the first hotel booking application that is made for mobile from the ground up. HotelTonight offers some of the ... read more »








Funding Daily: Suspiciously rich puppy edition

Funding Daily: Suspiciously rich puppy edition
Image Credit: chewydoosh13/Reddit


Get all the tech funding news of the day delivered straight to your mailbox! Sign up for Funding Daily and never miss a deal.


Here’s our roundup for all the notable funding news of the day:

RetailNext takes $30M

RetailNext, a company that specializes in providing data-analysis tools to retailers, has raised a $30 million late-stage round of investment. The company says that it provides e-commerce-style metrics for brick-and-mortar stores using sensors that track the physical activity of actual human shoppers. It counts 140 companies in 40 different countries as its customers, and it says it is adding 400 to 1,000 new stores to its analysis every month.

Read more on VentureBeat: RetailNext, making bricks-and-mortar a little more like e-commerce, raises $30M

Xapo grabs $20M

Can underground, offline lockers — protected by armed guards and biometric access — help solve Biktcoin's banking problems? At least one startup, Xapo, believes they can. Today the startup announced a new round of $20 million in funding, which Greylock Partners and Index Ventures co-led. The new investment, which brings the total thus far to $40 million, brings the startup’s valuation to $100 million.

Read more on VentureBeat: Xapo goes underground to lock down Bitcoins & emerges with a $100M valuation

Cloudian raises $24M

Hybrid cloud vendor Cloudian raised $24 million in new funding today — bringing its total financing to $44 million. The startup’s thesis is that cloud storage often works best when paired with onsite storage. That dual approach offers its clients the speed and scalability of cloud services like Amazon Web Services, CloudStack, and OpenStack while enabling enterprise-level companies to keep their most sensitive data on private servers.

Read more on VentureBeat: Cloudian's new $24M shows cloud storage isn't an all-or-nothing proposition

WordStream gets $12M

Search marketing firm WordStream announced this morning that it has raised $12 million in venture capital to keep growing and innovating. WordStream offers Internet marketing software for search engine optimization and pay-per-click advertising, helping companies optimize their websites, landing pages, and Google AdWords campaigns.

Read more on VentureBeat: Search marketing company WordStream raises $12M to grow, innovate, and give away more free stuff

Spark takes $4.5M

A startup called Spark wants to help you connect all of your stuff — home appliances and anything else you can put a chip into – to the Web, and it has just raised $4.5 million dollars to do it. The race to build a smart home is big, and Spark's tech stack may be able to widen the market. The stack involves two components, Spark Core and Spark Cloud. Spark Core is an Arduino-like system that makes it easy to connect products to the Web — an often costly process for appliance makers.

Read more on VentureBeat: Spark says it can 'connect' anything you own (pretty much)

FishBrain catches $2.4M

FishBrain, a mobile app and social network for fans of sport-fishing, has closed a new $2.4 million round of funding today. The Stockholm-based startup helps people connect with other sport-fishing fans as well as helps them improve their own fishing skills by gathering and managing vast amounts of meteorological and user data. The round was led by Northzone and Active Venture Partners.

Read more about the startup here.

GetYou raises $1.1M

GetYou — an app designed to help people see how well other people "get" them — received $1.1 million in seed funding today. The app stands to harness the power of first impressions in a potentially positive way.

Read more on VentureBeat: GetYou gets $1.1M in funding








Amazon tells Hachette authors it’ll give them 100% of e-book sales

Amazon tells Hachette authors it'll give them 100% of e-book sales
Image Credit: alexanderpf/Flickr

Amazon is trying to make a lucrative deal with authors affected by the ongoing fight between the online retailer and major book publisher, Hachette.

How good of a deal? How about 100 percent of the revenue from all Hachette-published e- book sales — at least for the duration of the Amazon/Hachette fight. The news comes from a letter that Amazon exec David Naggar sent to a small group of writers recently, according to a New York Times report. The offer is similar to one the company initially made to Hachette after the book publisher complained that the Amazon fight was really hurting authors by preventing them from collecting larger royalty checks.

Amazon previously started punishing Hachette after both parties failed to reach a new, more lucrative contract agreement back in April. The move led Amazon to stop offering preorders or discounts on Hachette books as well as yanking all the publisher’s books from product recommendations on its website.

As of now, it doesn’t look like many authors have taken the temporary deal, which could be because no one wants to take sides between a major book publisher and one of the world’s biggest (and as demonstrated) and most powerful online retail companies. However, we also don’t know how the terms of this temporary deal work either — specifically, if it applies to all authors, or if individual authors can agree to the deal.

We’re reaching out to Amazon for more details, and will update this post with any new information.



Amazon.com, Inc. (NASDAQ: AMZN), a Fortune 500 company based in Seattle, opened on the World Wide Web in July 1995 and today offers Earth's Biggest Selection. Amazon.com, Inc. seeks to be Earth's most customer-centric company, where cu... read more »








The U.S. military just revealed numerous studies on Facebook & Twitter data

The U.S. military just revealed numerous studies on Facebook & Twitter data
Image Credit: Korionov/Shutterstock

The military sees threats everywhere. That’s its job. In the last few years the military has felt increasingly threatened by social media, and social networks in particular.

New reports Tuesday reveal a large research project funded by the Defense Department’s military research department (AKA Darpa) that tested how people connect, and how ideas are spread, on social sites including Facebook, Twitter, Pinterest, and Kickstarter.

The contained numerous separate studies, all based on social network data.

One studied how Occupy activists used Twitter to communicate and organize. Another tracked Internet memes.

One study tracked Tweets and posts about celebrities like Lady Gaga and Justin Bieber to see how liking, following, and tweeting conveyed “influence” in social networks.

Still another involved researchers sending tweets and other messages to users to see how they would respond.

Just before the story of Facebook’s controversial “mood experiments” broke, Darpa published a list of all the studies funded under its Social Media in Strategic Communication (SMISC) program.

The DoD says the goal of the SMISC program is "to develop a new science of social networks built on an emerging technology base.”

The actual research was done by corporations like IBM, and universities like Georgia Tech and Indiana University.

The research has resulted in a massive database of tweets, posts, and other social media fare, all controlled by Darpa.

via


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