Posts Tagged ‘location based services’

May 2011 ChimpIt Leaderboard

Monday, May 2nd, 2011

Welcome to the May 2011 ChimpIt Leaderboard!

Action Highlights: mnaylor promoted to Supreme Solid Chimper in Waiting.  Nice!  Dustie64 gains on h.skrille. andrewkorab2000 appears out of nowhere. palonghorn87 and mnaylor leap to center of pack. owlspectre, lisajean, and coltice17 in 3-way tie for Top 10 elimination.

As an active Chimper, you have soared through the ranks of commoners and have landed a coveted spot on our whimsical leaderboard. Through a mysterious calculation, your Chimping has been scored and we have bestowed you with meaningless Rank, Level, and Title.  Some of you have even managed to attain a Level and Title above your Rank.  Well done, you clever Chimpers!  Keep on Pimpin’ da Chimpiin’ and don’t worry yourself over the “points”– they are for entertainment purposes only.  Thanks for being a good sport and a good customer.

We hope you continue to enjoy Smart WiFi and ChimpIt!

Rank

Username

Leaderboard

Level/Title

1

normo 155 L0 – Chimper

2

chefmuhs 90 L0 – Chimper

3

unless_spring 85 L0 – Chimper

4

h.skrille 75 L0 – Chimper

5

Dustie64 71 L5 – Supreme Solid Chimper in Waiting

6

andrewkorab2000 65 L0 – Chimper

7

palonghorn 55 L3 – Power Chimper

8

mnaylor 51 L5 – Supreme Solid Chimper in Waiting

9

owlspectre 50 L0 – Chimper

10

lisajean 50 L0 – Chimper

10

coltrice17 50 L0 – Chimper

–Less Networks ChimpIt Team

www.chimpit.com



Social Mobile: Do games work?

Sunday, April 10th, 2011

 

We’ve watched with interest as Loopt, FourSquare, and Gowalla experiment with games to incent interaction.  But one wonders whether the game is needed because the content is lacking?  In other words, what else do you get out of “checking-in” besides checking in?  It’s no wonder that we’re starting to see discounts, coupons, and recognition bolster the game model.  Along these lines, we’ve become interested in customer loyalty programs and their success at achieving their intended goals–customer recognition, increased customer interaction, and increased customer loyalty.

We thought this article on poorly conceived customer loyalty programs was terrific!  We agree, that there is a real risk that a loyalty program will engender loyalty to the program, not necessarily the company or the brand.  After much thought, we’ve developed a hybrid model with elements of gaming and customer recognition.  In essence, we have two programs, one where some of our most active users can publicly and informally compete for bragging rights, and another where we publicly recognize our outstanding users for their roles in helping us achieve our corporate goals.

We decided to use social media and published thank you’s on users’ Facebook walls to publicly recognize them for their loyalty and support.  We also included a gift certificate from Amazon.

Customer Recognition to Increase Brand Loyalty

Customer Recognition to Increase Brand Loyalty

Shortly after these were posted on customer’s walls, there was a bump in site traffic and downloads indicating that our customers’ friends appreciated our customer appreciation.

 

 

 

Simultaneously, we published a leaderboard  because we noticed that it encouraged competition among users who care about and enjoy a little competition.  Below is the first leaderboard.  No prizes are awarded, just bragging rights.  We’ll be watching over the next few months to see how the different programs work independently and together in helping us help our users enjoy the product and recommend it to their friends.

Welcome to the April 2011 ChimpIt Leaderboard!

As an active Chimper, you have soared through the ranks of commoners and have landed a coveted spot on our whimsical leaderboard. Through a mysterious calculation, your Chimping has been scored and we have bestowed you with meaningless Rank, Level, and Title.  Some of you have even managed to attain a Level and Title above your Rank.  Well done, you clever Chimpers!  Keep on Pimpin’ da Chimpiin’ and don’t worry yourself over the “points”– they are for entertainment purposes only.  Thanks for being a good sport and a good customer.

We hope you continue to enjoy Smart WiFi and ChimpIt!

Rank

Username

Leaderboard

Level/Rank

1

normo 155 L0 – Chimper

2

chefmuhs 90 L0 – Chimper

3

unless_spring 85 L0 – Chimper

4

h.skrille 75 L0 – Chimper

5

Dustie64 62 L5 – Supreme Solid Chimper in Waiting

6

owlspectre 50 L0 – Chimper

6

lisajean 50 L0 – Chimper

6

coltrice17 50 L0 – Chimper

9

palonghorn 48 L3 – Power Chimper

10

mnaylor 47 L4 – Mega Chimper

– Less Networks ChimpIt Team
www.chimpit.com

Social-Loco Startup Competition

Sunday, April 10th, 2011

 

Social-Loco Startup Competition

Social-Loco Startup Competition

 

Enter the Social-Loco Startup Competition for a chance to pitch your company to 100s of

social-location obsessed VCs, angel investors, executives and media at the 2011 Social-Loco conference in San Francisco. ENTER NOW!

Vote for ChimpIt as your favorite Social-Loco startup.  Click here to view our profile and cast your vote.

Social-Loco: the convergence of the social web, mobile and local-business

Sunday, April 10th, 2011
Social-Loco Conference

Social-Loco Conference

 

Social-Loco: the convergence of the social web, mobile and local-business

Social-Loco will dive into social and mobile web convergence, and what that means for SMB, big brands and consumers. Learn from real-world successes in daily deals, location based services and advertising, mobile marketing platforms and more. Executives from Groupon, Facebook, Google, ATTi, Microsoft and leading investors will address these topics in a highly interactive setting.

Social-Loco takes place on May 5, 2011 at the Mission Bay Conference Center in San Francisco.  ChimpIt will be demo’ing there and giving away our cool schwag.  Come on out to participate and meet us.  We’d love to meet you!

Read more and register

Layar: a tool to browse the world

Thursday, October 15th, 2009
Layas augmented reality

Laya's augmented reality

If you’re still at a loss as to the significance of augmented reality, Layar’s own explanation from inside the app explains it well: “Layar is a tool to browse the world. It enables exploration, more informed decisions, serendipity and fun. [...] While looking through the phone’s camera lens, a user can see houses for sale popular bars and shops, touristic information of the area, play a live game, etcetera.”

Layar aggregates all those little niggly bits of extra information you often wish you knew when visiting a certain new place–the best way to the train station from the point you’re standing on, where the best cafe is, and so on–and overlays it on the real world as viewed through your phone’s camera. And there is a whole lot more functionality that’s waiting to be realized. Layar’s code lets developers create their own informational overlays for the real world. As the Layar release notes, gaming is a significant potential exploit of the code, with everything from advanced geocaching treasure hunts to virtual shooters being obvious possibilities. There are all sorts of social networking uses too.

via Fast Company

LBS Apps for 2010 & Beyond

Sunday, August 2nd, 2009

WCA LogoThis month I attended my second WCA event, “On Deck–LBS Apps for 2010 & Beyond,” presented by the LBS SIG (Location Based Services Special Interest Group). For a biz dev guy, this event rated way higher than the first one I attended, Mobile SIG’s “Mobile Display Technology,” which was apparently a sweet event for the über techies of the mobile handset world.

LBS Apps for 2010 showcased some very cool apps for LBS enabled devices. Among the presenters were TourSpot, UrbanMapping, MotionMaps, DialPlus, Gokivo Navigator, zhiing, Aha, B4UGo, myGeoDiary, MADMaps, Google Latitude and geomob. NAVTEQ‘s Laura Diaz moderated the event from the famed PARC auditorium, which is apparently one big concrete bunker. I got bupkis for a signal on my Blackberry, while inside the auditorium. Nifty way to keep the phones quite during a presentation.

Interesting side note concerning PARC–I learned that in 2002, PARC was established as an independent company. After decades of giving away the coolest of technologies, PARC now seeks strategic partners to commercially monetize its innovations.

But PARC was by far the minor attraction. The presenters wowed the audience with impressive LBS smartphone gadgetry. Aha and B4UGO actually showed their products for the first time ever to the public. I found UrbanMapping, arguably one of the least sexy apps, to be among the most fascinating. What did I find so fascinating? The app can show parking data, including useful parking info for 3500 US and Canadian parking facilities–data collection at it’s finest. MotionMaps was much more the technical marvel, showing 3D maps that you can pan across and zoom in on with a mere twist of your wrist, using your device camera as a motion sensor. I should also give props to DialPlus, which brings contextually relevant caller data to your handset.

An interesting thing I’m reminded of, as I peruse the presenter websites, is that not everyone has ignored the Blackberry. In fact, I’ve seen far fewer than expected iPhones in the hands of developers at these WCA events. Perhaps the iPhone is as much (or more) an accessory as it is a truly good phone, from an LBS developer’s perspective.

This event enlightened me to the latest in LBS apps, while my last WCA event educated me to the struggles of maintaining acceptable battery life with ever increasing demands on mobile handset displays. As for WCA sponsored events, I’m looking forward to continued exploration and attendance. Obviously, LBS is highly relevant to Less Networks since we’re all about mashing up WiFi hotspots with social and LBS apps.

~roberto