Jibe Launches Mobile App at 'Launch' Conference

Polaris-backed company and former Dogpatch Labs resident, Jibe has had a very good couple weeks. As a reminder, Jibe uses Facebook and LinkedIn to better connect job-seekers and employees: " JIBE connects you to people you already know at companies you want to work for and increases your chances of landing a great job." First, TechCrunch announced that Jibe was seeing more than 1,000,000 monthly job views and signed up 25% of Fortune 50 companies.

And yesterday, Jibe announced their mobile application at the Launch Conference. InsideFacebook named it one of the conference's top "Top Facebook Integrations".

Amazon Instant Video Good for Google TV

It was my immediate reaction to hearing that Amazon Instant Video would be available: 1. Will it run on my Google TV? (check) 2. How quickly can I cancel my Netflix subscription? (immediately) 3. Does Amazon VOD work on the iPhone / iPad? (no) 4. Should I keep my Netflix subscription? (yes, for now)

I love this timely promotion by Google / Google TV... which is a product I will continue to rave about:

Google's Android Conveyor Belt

Watch the below conveyor belt of Android devices and you understand why the platform is growing... and winning. Even though I am an iPhone user (and I love it) - I'd rather bet on the cross-device platform vs. the hardware (with specific operating system). It's the debate of open vs. closed and this video captures that visually and very well. Props to Google for visualizing it in such a way and differentiating themselves at the Mobile World Congress expo in Barcelona.

Video is from Engadget (with more photos)

Amazon Marketing the Kindle for Valentines Day 2011... with Same Ads as 2010

Since its launch, I have followed Amazon's Kindle ads and campaigns. Today, you will notice that Amazon is marketing the Kindle for Valentines Day... and if you look back a year ago, you will also notice that the Kindle ads are almost exactly the same. Furthermore, the language is consistent with nearly every Kindle ad to date: it's their best selling, best-reviewed and most wanted / gifted product. It seems that, even after a year, Amazon is confident in wrapping the same messaging in seasonal units.

The Kindle ads for Valentines 2011:

The Kindle ad for Valentines 2010:

Innovating Around the Check-Out Rather than the Check-In

Couponing is a hot space and companies are finding success from different angels: Groupon for local deals, Foursquare and Facebook for check-in promotions, Shopkick for in-store 'gaming', etc. But the reward / redemption remains clunky and, rather than the check-in, we need innovation around the check-out. Here is a good example. I received the below Best Buy Rewards Card via my email - I have $35 of Reward Zone credits.

So I visited Best Buy to redeem it... with only my iPhone and the email. In theory, that should be enough - after all, Best Buy sent the email and it includes my Reward Zone number, which is sitting in their system (which cashiers and employees can access by name, phone number, card, etc).

But the cashier could not access the point balance at the register and could do not apply the coupon without having a hard copy of the certificate. She pointed me towards the computer section and had me use a public machine to print the coupon (this process required manager supervision and took 5-10 minutes). With paper in hand, I went back to the cashier and restarted the check-out process.

There are several ways to imagine a crisper process for the consumer and company. Of course the trouble is integrating across various systems that, for various reasons, do not speak to each other... That's the challenge and that's why focusing on the check-in is only part of the solution.

Blackberry App Advertising Two Years Behind Apple's

During today's NFL playoffs game, you may have seen the Blackberry spot featuring Blackberry's App World and the Urbanspoon application. The advertisement is well done and features small business owners (right in Blackberry's sweet spot) who use the Urbanspoon app to find new restaurants (seems like a reach?). However, the ad comes over two years later than Apple's iPhone Urbanspoon ad (featured in November 2008) and screams 'me too'.... which is exactly what Blackberry (and iPhone competitors) should be wary of: it's been available on the iPhone for years and, for various reasons, is probably a better application on the iPhone.

Blackberry should be focusing on one of two things:

1. Content and applications that are unique to Blackberry. For cross-platform applications, chances are they were available on the iPhone first... and that they are generally better on the iPhone.

2. Content and application aimed specifically at Blackberry's core competencies: business and email. This is why the Urbanspoon ad comes off as "me too" and off-brand. It's also why I don't understand the focus on Blackberry Messenger campaigns (which, by the way, seems short-lived with apps the rise of social group apps like Groupme, Beluga, Kik, etc).

Blackberry's January 2011 TV ad:

November, 2008 Apple iPhone ad:

Starbucks Cards: Game Mechanics Done Well

Last week I wrote about the "do's and don'ts of gamification"... in other words, how to effectively add game mechanics to your site / service. Thanks to the success of leaders like Zynga and Foursquare, companies across different verticals are layering game mechanics to their product. In my last post, I wrote that the key to successful "gamification" is to make surre that game mechanics [are] natural, rewarding and straightforward.

Here is a great example from Starbucks (who generally always does a great job on the social and marketing fronts).

You'll notice a few things with the below screenshots:

1. It is Natural: Starbucks has not created a new program here... rather, they have tied it in to the Starbucks Card system that has been around for years. This is just an incentive to register and actively use your card.

2. It is Rewarding: In fact, the Starbucks Card program comes from the "Starbucks Rewards Team" and card-holders are notified of their status, their rewards and their goals.

3. It Progresses: As you progress through various levels are membership ("black, green, gold"), you earn different rewards. Starbucks clearly defines your 'status', your rewards and what is needed to reach the next 'level'. Again, the program is straightforward and rewarding.

4. It is Accessible Email, Starbucks.com & Mobile: The program has several reach / access points. The emails are well crafted and targeted to the specific user's 'status' (notice below an email sent to a green member and gold member).

5. It is Social: Below you will also see an example of sharing your purchase and rewards in Facebook. The image is specific to your status / balance and is tied to a check-in via Facebook Places.

Starbucks email sent to a Gold member:

Starbucks email sent to a Green member:

What the check-in looks like on the Facebook feed

And the custom Starbucks Rewards graphic on Facebook

Streaming Netflix on your Gym's Cardio Machine? Awesome.

In December of 2009, I wrote about local fitness company Expresso - the maker of an interactive workout machines that I was blown away by. Here's the next wave - which should become more commonplace and eventually will be built into all sorts of machines. Our local gym (the Palo Alto JCC) has the iPod / iPhone connectors for their cardio machines. Those adapters charge your device while working out... but more importantly, they allow you to run media to the machines' individual screens (which can be attached or built in monitors - both examples are below). So, users can stream Netflix to their machine's monitor, access iTunes files, or supply a soundtrack to the native fitness application.

It's proof on just how prolific Apple devices are (this is not merely a mini-usb port).

It is also an indication of where fitness machines are moving - it is not difficult to imagine the machine being able to push content to your phone... or to a specific application.

And lastly, it is not difficult to imagine that this occurs via bluetooth in near future (just as it does in new cars and in products like the Jambox).