Tuesday, April 28, 2015

[lecture] Growth Hacking by 고영혁 from 쫄지마 창업스쿨 (translation: Don’t be Afraid Entrepreneurship School)



Subject
쫄지마 창업스쿨 (translation: Don’t be Afraid Entrepreneurship School)
Place
Maru 180 B1F, Seoul
Time
April 28, 2015 (Mon) 19:30~21:50
Speaker
고영혁 (Dylan Ko)
Host
Asan Nanum
Focus
growth hacking concept, how-to, case


  1. Lesson
    1. concept: intersection between engineering and marketing
    2. component: analytics in the center, and others (viral growth, landing page optimization, SEO, product management, on-boarding, analytics, PR, etc.) around
    3. essence: increase conversion by consistent measurement and analysis
    4. steps to growth hack
      1. step #1: create PMF (product market fit) in product market
        1. PMF is similar to lean startup’s MVP (minimum viable product)
        2. conduct interactive prototyping by observing interviews closely for their quantity and quality
        3. use tools (e.g. Optimizely for A/B testing)
      2. step #2: generate leads
        1. focus on passionate and targeted first 100~1,000 users
        2. know user cohorts
      3. step #3: maximize word-of-mouth
        1. add share buttons to assist users wanting to spread news to fulfill their rewards such as emotional or monetary
        2. read the Buzzfeed case (e.g. link)
      4. step #4: retain customers and optimize
        1. watch closely customer experience and conversion: e.g. 5% increase of customer retention generates 30 % increase of company profitability (source: Bain & Company)
    5. prep for growth hacking based on data analysis
      1. metrics: standard (i.e. base), milestone (e.g. from a to b, try one scenario, then move to next scenario), stock (i.e. snapshot) and flow (i.e. change over time)
        1. quantity vs. quality
        2. investigative vs reportive
        3. void vs. actionable: void (e.g. click, page view, visit (reach), unique visitor, follower/friend/like) vs. actionable (e.g. when growth rate speed changes from 4.4 to 3.4, find bottleneck)
        4. number vs. rate
        5. predictive vs. summarized
        6. relational vs. causal: relational (e.g. relationship between soft drink and umbrella during rain season) vs. causal (e.g. b/c of a, b occurs)
      2. CLV (customer lifetime value)
        1. use this concept in service planning
        2. life in CLV means from the start and end of the user in using service
        3. determining factor: decreasing AC (customer acquisition cost)
      3. Dave McClure’s AARRR
        1. acquisition: focus on user acquisition cost
        2. activation: registration rate, email readers rate
        3. retention
        4. referral
        5. revenue
      4. A/B testing: control other factors when modifying an independent factor
      5. cohort analysis: pay attention to various factors more than one factor influencing users’ exit (e.g. on x and y axis: put member date on x and exit date on y)
      6. The Stages of Lean Analysis
      7. look at checklist
    6. case
      1. non-Korean example
        1. LinkedIn: allowed service appearing organically on Google’s SERP (search engine result page)
        2. YouTube: used embedding links
        3. Airbnb: used spam mail to craigslist users by solving users’ pain point
        4. Hotmail: inserted a tiny ad at the bottom of message
        5. PayPal: included logo on eBay’s search result page
      2. Korean example
        1. 젤리버스 (Jelly Bus)
          1. finding market: pivoted from photo-editing to photo-collaging
          2. marketing: visited mad users’ posts and added replies, generating viral through loyalty users
          3. l10n with SEO: localized translations by using words appeared on Google SERP
          4. metrics: MAU, monthly app usage frequency
          5. tool: Appstatics for hot app downloads
        2. 요기요 (Yogiyo)
          1. PMF: minimize order and delivery process and touch interactions, and list just contact info and address
          2. paid attention to rate at each funnel process
          3. targeted minimizing CAC per channels
          4. took advantage of IPTV ad by matching users between app and IPTV
          5. created a success team tracking all data and provided feedback to each member (e.g. asked about meaningful data)
          6. minimized delivery failure to zero by changing map structure
          7. iterated test -> action -> optimize
      3. c.f. implement user’s developed feature in your service
    7. know-how
      1. analyze first experience thoroughly to see how new users came, what happened environmentally, how users moved, etc.
      2. create growth hacking culture from the top and spread within organization
      3. communicate within departments of development, planning, marketing and design team
      4. list up success and failure history structurally by sharing which change influenced what, what environment was there when something happened to find out cause and effect
      5. reuse success patterns by listing up rules from success history
      6. customize dashboards to meet your needs
      7. talk about performance through metrics within your organization by creating stories by metrics
      8. divide measuring subjects? until you can’t divide
      9. focus on causality not relation-ability?
      10. share small success within organization
    8. tools
      1. Fanpagekarma.com to investigate competitors to know e.g. demographics and topics
      2. Social Lead Freak to target users
      3. bit.ly for link tracking
      4. http://www.usertesting.com/ for outsourced user testing
  1. personal takeaway
    1. AC is the most important number to minimize
    2. growth hack everything

Tuesday, April 21, 2015

[conference] GDG Korea Android Conference


Subject
GDG Korea Android Conference
Place
Campus Seoul
Time
April 18, 2015 (Sat) 13:00~18:00
Speaker
Host
Google
Focus
Android UX/UI design
  1. UX/UI Guidelines for Android 2015 [임성혁@Apps&Games Solutions Consultant]
    1. lesson
      1. basic
        1. Iconography: with transparency, xxxhdpi in resolution folder
        2. Notification: white notification icon (rule: transparency and white color with shape, 20x24 size], stacking (e.g. putting new messages together)
        3. SDK Version: target to the most updated version (e.g. 21.5.1) v. minSdkVersion, targetSdkVersion, maxSdkVersion <- modify within manifest
        4. Graphic Assets: screenshots resolution (include tablet screenshots 7 or 10 inch), hi-res icon, graphic image, feature graphic, promotion video (minimize uninstall rate from users)
        5. Localized Assets: language and images (localized explanation in description language and screenshots)
        6. Google Play Policy: keyword spam (e.g. too many usage, irrelevant keywords/description), app title (e.g. Android Mediaplayer), fake ratings & reviews (e.g. do you want to rate this app? rate and gain 500 coins), affiliate spam (e.g. contracted with such and such company)
        7. Permission: identity, contacts, location, SMS, phone <- include explanation
      2. Apps
        1. What feature in app: brief description before main app
        2. Sign in: various login options
        3. Tabs: scrollable tabs (i.e. swipeable tab menu)
        4. Touch Feedback: various status (e.g. long press, click, etc)
        5. Tablet Optimization: combination multiple views into one, compound views, orientation changes, full feature set for tablet users
      3. Games
        1. Play Game Services: auto sign-in PGS (log-in image -> play games log-in page; back key and cancel=> ?), entry point, achievements (at least 5) and leaderboard, manual sign-in PGS
        2. Back Button: dismiss pop-ups (when back button is selected), pause and resume (for time frame required)
        3. Tutorial: enable to skip (because too long; put icon about read again tutorial button)
    1. personal takeaway
      1. read Android and iOS UX guideline

  1. 테스트코드에서 코드 커버리지까지 [정승욱 (Steve Jung), Robolectric Contributor@Toss Lab]
    1. lesson and personal takeaway: for startups, time is more important than money

Sunday, April 19, 2015

Saturday, April 18, 2015

[Fireside Chat] Startup Grind Seoul Hosts Bedy Yang (500 Startups)


Subject
Startup Grind Seoul Hosts Bedy Yang (500 Startups)
Place
Campus Seoul
Time
April 15, 2015 (Wed) 19:00~21:00
Speaker
Bedy Yang, Managing Partner@500 Startups
Host?
Startup Grind
Focus
areas investors look into

  1. lesson
    1. areas 500 Startups looks into: vision, LTV, # of average user, scalability (online or offline doesn’t matter), team dynamics, knowledge of investors, preparation to questions
  2. personal takeaway
    1. research the speaker, come prepared with questions
    2. study design thinking, design centered design


Tuesday, April 14, 2015

[conference] 실리콘밸리의 한국인: 글로벌 IT무대에서 활약하는 우리들의 이야기 (translation: Koreans in Silicon Valley: Our Action Story on Global IT Stage)



Subject
실리콘밸리의 한국인: 글로벌 IT무대에서 활약하는 우리들의 이야기
(translation: Koreans in Silicon Valley: Our Action Story on Global IT Stage)
Place
Naver Green Factory Connect Hall
Time
April 14, 2015 (Tue) 9:00~18:30
Speaker
list (link)
Host?
Naver, Startup Alliance, K Internet
Focus
start-up, career, innovation

  1. 실리콘밸리101 - 당신이 알고 싶었던 실리콘밸리의 모든 것 [음재훈 Jay Eum, Co-Founder & Managing Director@TransLink Capital]
    1. lesson
      1. how to determine good company: use common sense
      2. VC’s life: fundraising ⅓, investment ⅓,
      3. advice on hardware startup
        1. front-end: design, app
        2. back-end: data, cloud
    2. personal takeaway: use common sense to choose a startup to work for


  1. Y Combinator에서 배운 스타트업 엑셀러레이션 [하형석 Hyungseok Dino Ha, CEO@Memebox Corp.]
    1. lesson: growth focus, growth only
      1. one question weekly asked: how much % growth for the past week
    2. personal takeaway: you can’t succeed if you keep sitting around


  1. 영어를 잘 못하는 창업자가 실리콘밸리에서 일하는 법  [이수인 Sooinn Lee, Co-Founder@Locomotive Labs]
    1. lesson and personal takeaway: CEOs need to learn how to be CEO e.g. CEO Bootcamp


  1. 하버드와 MIT의 수재들 디자인으로 리드하기  [이혜진 Hyejin Lee, CEO@THE MEME design]
    1. lesson:
      1. Good to Great: good is the enemy of great, who is more important than what
      2. Meet your new you and converse with him/her
    2. personal takeaway: in choosing where to work, among other lists to consider, choose who instead of what


  1. 촌놈, 미국에서 글로벌 기업의 사업부를 이끌다 [오태호 Taeho Oh, Global business executive specialized in mobile and multimedia@Dolby Laboratories]
    1. lesson:
      1. business culture
        1. passion, not emotion
        2. productivity via email, conference call
        3. work more than it looks
      2. the way of thinking
        1. always ask why
        2. work together; debate
        3. say it’s mine
      3. to be a leader
        1. communication by ongoing practice
        2. build a great team
        3. be confident
    2. personal takeaway: always ask why and be confident


  1. 실리콘밸리와 한국 스타트업의 문화 차이  [Mike Kim, Global Partnerships@Woowa Brothers]
    1. lesson: best time to be in Korea for startups
    2. personal takeaway:
      1. list up what I learned from Google
      2. list up what kinds of problems I have solved
      3. list up experiences per domain experience, communication capability, teamwork


  1. 나도 할 수 있다는 혁신 - 맨주먹으로 시작하기 [권기태 Kitae Kwon,Technical Manager@TSMC]
    1. lesson:
      1. bootstrapping: customer funded company by income, savings, credit cards, second mortgage, etc.
      2. how boostrapping? e.g. through hacking
      3. excel in execution: the only key for success
      4. radical experiments: ready -> fire -> aim (reason: cost of fail < opportunity)
    2. personal takeaway:
      1. experiment, experiment and experiment fast!!!
      2. build your product from starting with smaller projects

Sunday, April 5, 2015

[personal UX/UI review] Jura's automatic coffee machine


Case: Jura's coffee maker
Positive: contextual menus on machine screen; see how the menu screen changes from normal (photo above) to in progress (photo below) 

Positive: displaying "visibility of system status," the first principle of the 

"10 Usability Heuristics for User Interface Design" by Nielsen Norman Group so that users can know their coffee brewing status 




Friday, April 3, 2015

[lesson] 미국무부 경제부문 차관보 Charles Rivkin


At Startup Alliance, just attended a talk by Charles Rivkin, an Assistant Secretary of the State. So many good lessons relearned. 
1. Don't take no for an answer. 
2. Failure reveals character. 
3. Read and comprehend Korean/English faster on spot to address issues. 
4. Cultivate a manner of respect.