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Startups

CNet Japan Startup Award nominees: Exploring e-commerce with Monoco, Rinkak, & Base

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This is part five of our CNet Japan Startup Awards nominee rundown. The rest can be found here. Search and recommendation are a tough nut to crack, especially when it comes to e-commerce. We are overloaded by information, and technology struggles to parse relevance that can match our needs. Users now expect sites and services to know what we want before we know we want it (see Amazon and Netflix recommendation algos, for instance). This is a problem that needs solving regardless of where you live, and it can be a huge opportunity for startups to address a real consumer need. Enter Monoco and Rinkak, looking to connect designers with consumers. Think of them as Japan’s answer to Etsy or Fab. Meanwhile Base is the local version of Squarespace, Shopify, and Strikingly. All three are doing interesting things in Japan’s e-commerce space these days, attempting to solve the same difficult issues that face e-commerce businesses abroad. Monoco Monoco is an e-commerce site focused on selling fashion and craft goods of limited quantities for limited times. The items are curated by buyers the around the globe, and since the site’s launch in April of 2012, it has acquired more than 87,000…

monoco-base-rinkak-wide

This is part five of our CNet Japan Startup Awards nominee rundown. The rest can be found here.

Search and recommendation are a tough nut to crack, especially when it comes to e-commerce. We are overloaded by information, and technology struggles to parse relevance that can match our needs. Users now expect sites and services to know what we want before we know we want it (see Amazon and Netflix recommendation algos, for instance). This is a problem that needs solving regardless of where you live, and it can be a huge opportunity for startups to address a real consumer need.

Enter Monoco and Rinkak, looking to connect designers with consumers. Think of them as Japan’s answer to Etsy or Fab. Meanwhile Base is the local version of Squarespace, Shopify, and Strikingly. All three are doing interesting things in Japan’s e-commerce space these days, attempting to solve the same difficult issues that face e-commerce businesses abroad.

Monoco

monoco

Monoco is an e-commerce site focused on selling fashion and craft goods of limited quantities for limited times. The items are curated by buyers the around the globe, and since the site’s launch in April of 2012, it has acquired more than 87,000 users, with more than 1100 designers worldwide.

Because of the quantity and time constraints, it could be easy to write off Monoco as just another flash sales site. But browsing through the site, I think this format makes sense.

When you first log-on, you are immediately greeted by professional grade, high quality images. The products are carefully chosen, often a unique spin on regular products like mugs, phone accessories, handbags, and clothing. It’s easy to lose yourself scrolling and scrolling as you browse the many product offerings.

On the product pages, prices are hidden unless you are a registered user. And this is a pretty clever way to subtly encourage user registration.

The limited sale period and quantity creates a sense of urgency for the user to purchase, and it cycles products to surface designers. It’s a different way to approach recommendation, increasing the site’s overall stickiness factor as users will check, and re-check the site to see new items.

In July, Monoco announced series A funding of an undisclosed amount.

Rinkak

rinkak-screener

Rinkak (the name means ‘outline of object’ in Japanese) is a 3D printing marketplace that is Japan’s answer to Shapeways. The site opened to the public in September.

They offer a platform for anyone with 3D data to sell their printed designs. Like Shapeways, they offer various materials like plastic, pottery and metals.

3D printing seems to finally be gaining traction beyond the scope of early tech adopters. Shapeways, founded in 2007, most recently closed a $30 million series C round led by Andreessen Horowitz, with a total of $47.3 million raised thus far. With a physical shop, distribution center in NYC, and an API to encourage 3D printing apps, they are clearly the 3D printing market place leader in the US startup space. Let’s wait and see what Rinkak will do similarly or differently. For more on Rinkak, check out our previous feature back in September.

Base

Often referred to as Japan’s Shopify, Base’s e-commerce site is the marketing platform for the founder’s true vision: a mobile payment solution platform. Base has raised a total of $4.73 million and has expanded its team from 12 to 20 people. The CEO states they have acquired 50,000 merchants in the past year, with a monthly growth of 10% when we last spoke with them.

It’s rapid growth shows Japanese small- to mid-sized merchants are looking for e-commerce solutions other than Rakuten and Amazon. 70% of Base’s user activity comes from smartphones — another clear indication that Japanese e-commerce behaviors are shifting.

You can check out the company’s brief promo video below.

Good luck to all three startups on Tuesday night at the CNet Japan Startup Awards.

CNet Japan Startup Award nominees: Travel startups Asoview and Trippiece

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This is part four of our CNET Japan Startup Awards nominee rundown. The rest can be found here. In the past few years, there has been a surge of travel startups in the US. Trippiece and Asoview are looking to disrupt the archaic and monopolized industry in Japan. Trippiece is the most similar service to Gogobot in Japan. Gogobot, as many of you know, is the most visited travel startup in the US, beating out AirBnB and Hipmunk in uniques so far in 2013. Where Gogobot solely relies on social graphs for trip itineraries, Trippiece highlights all user-generated content and is planning to take it one step further than Gogobot by securing partnerships with major travel agencies [1]. Launched in March of 2011, the company has so far acquired more than 50,000 users. But the CEO admits they have a long way to go to meet milestones on their roadmap. They have a repeat user rate of 30% to 40%, and with over 60% of their overall users accessing their site through mobile, they are meeting the needs of Japanese travelers. Japanese internet user behavior is rapidly shifting and consumers are now more mobile than ever before with analysts predicting…

asoview-trippiece-wide

This is part four of our CNET Japan Startup Awards nominee rundown. The rest can be found here.

In the past few years, there has been a surge of travel startups in the US. Trippiece and Asoview are looking to disrupt the archaic and monopolized industry in Japan.

trippiece
Trippiece

Trippiece is the most similar service to Gogobot in Japan. Gogobot, as many of you know, is the most visited travel startup in the US, beating out AirBnB and Hipmunk in uniques so far in 2013.

Where Gogobot solely relies on social graphs for trip itineraries, Trippiece highlights all user-generated content and is planning to take it one step further than Gogobot by securing partnerships with major travel agencies [1].

Launched in March of 2011, the company has so far acquired more than 50,000 users. But the CEO admits they have a long way to go to meet milestones on their roadmap. They have a repeat user rate of 30% to 40%, and with over 60% of their overall users accessing their site through mobile, they are meeting the needs of Japanese travelers.

Japanese internet user behavior is rapidly shifting and consumers are now more mobile than ever before with analysts predicting that by 2014, 60.2% of users will switch to smartphones. That’s almost a 150% rate of change since 2011. Trippiece, whose users are mainly mobile, is ahead of the game.

Asoview resembles the early days of Zozi, an adventure experience site. Asoview has over 460 partnerships, securing its biggest one thus far in Yahoo Travel. They are looking to fill the niche of unconventional travel activities such as skydiving and ice climbing, or also more mellow experiences like swimming with dolphins. Regrettably, there is no available information on profitability or user base right now for Asoview that we can pass on, but we’ll update you if we learn more.

We wish both Trippiece and Asoview the best of luck at the Cnet Japan Startup Awards on Tuesday!

Asoview
Asoview

  1. Includes JTB and other unnamed agencies. See CNet Japan, e27 for more information.  ↩

CNet Japan Startup Award nominees: Mobile news services Gunosy and Smartnews

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This is part three of our CNET Japan Startup Awards nominee rundown. The rest can be found here. News aggregation apps are a dime a dozen in the US. There’s Flipboard, Pulse, Circa, Prismatic, Zite, Summly, News360 and the list goes on. In Japan, there’s News Hub, @nifty, and now LINE News as well. Smart News (pictured below) resembles US-based Pulse, where content is segregated in tabs by category. The content comes pre-loaded but feeds can be added. After using Smart News, the experience of Pulse seems clumsy in comparison. The load times are also significantly faster on Smart News than on Pulse. I want to say Gunosy (pictured below) is the Flipboard of Japan but the only similarity is their popularity. Gunosy’s interface and content is structured like a newspaper, and there are tabs for the AM edition, PM edition and a location-based, real-time trend tab. Articles are separated in large, easy to read boxes with prominent call-to-action buttons. Like Prismatic, Gunosy curates content based on machine learning. It displays the kind of stories the user has liked, shared, or clipped in the past. What really sets Gunosy aside from all news aggregation services is its approach to ads….

smartnews-gunosy

This is part three of our CNET Japan Startup Awards nominee rundown. The rest can be found here.

News aggregation apps are a dime a dozen in the US. There’s Flipboard, Pulse, Circa, Prismatic, Zite, Summly, News360 and the list goes on. In Japan, there’s News Hub, @nifty, and now LINE News as well.

Smart News (pictured below) resembles US-based Pulse, where content is segregated in tabs by category. The content comes pre-loaded but feeds can be added. After using Smart News, the experience of Pulse seems clumsy in comparison. The load times are also significantly faster on Smart News than on Pulse.

smartnews
Smartnews

I want to say Gunosy (pictured below) is the Flipboard of Japan but the only similarity is their popularity. Gunosy’s interface and content is structured like a newspaper, and there are tabs for the AM edition, PM edition and a location-based, real-time trend tab.

Articles are separated in large, easy to read boxes with prominent call-to-action buttons. Like Prismatic, Gunosy curates content based on machine learning. It displays the kind of stories the user has liked, shared, or clipped in the past.

What really sets Gunosy aside from all news aggregation services is its approach to ads. The service separates ad types into three categories: business, fashion, health/beauty, and then behaviorally targets based on user habits. The sign-up and onboarding process for potential advertisers is automated and simple. They are one of, if not the global leader in this category 1.

Regarding both these news services, I’m really happy to see such a high calibre of product comings out of Japan.

gunosy-2 gunosy-2


  1. Gunosy’s ad service launched in November. We recently spoke with new Gunosy team member Shinji Kimura, who elaborated more on this aspect of their business. ↩

CNet Japan Startup Award nominees: Retty’s mobile advantage

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This is part two of our CNET Japan Startup Awards nominee rundown. The rest can be found here. Retty is a Japan-based restaurant recommendation site based on your Facebook social graph. It’s often compared with Tabelog, the Yelp of Japan, which has 25.77M desktop users and 22.97M users on mobile. But like Yelp, Tabelog has an outdated interface. Users are immediately overloaded with information from strangers. A lot of hunting and pecking is required to reach even the contact information of certain establishments, which is unfortunate. And yet it is also understandable for a site that has been around for so many years. In contrast, Retty’s strength lies with its mobile app and clean PC interface. Familiar faces greet you there because it is Facebook reliant. Tabelog may have millions of users but their text-based app is catered towards feature phone users. Smartphone users will find the gesture-based search and discovery of Retty far easier to use. Retty also maps of saved restaurants for a simple, visual search (see below). It can be easy to underestimate the power of mobile and how easily it can disrupt. So even if Retty only has a fraction of Tabelog’s users, it could ride…

Retty

This is part two of our CNET Japan Startup Awards nominee rundown. The rest can be found here.

retty-logo

Retty is a Japan-based restaurant recommendation site based on your Facebook social graph. It’s often compared with Tabelog, the Yelp of Japan, which has 25.77M desktop users and 22.97M users on mobile. But like Yelp, Tabelog has an outdated interface. Users are immediately overloaded with information from strangers. A lot of hunting and pecking is required to reach even the contact information of certain establishments, which is unfortunate. And yet it is also understandable for a site that has been around for so many years.

In contrast, Retty’s strength lies with its mobile app and clean PC interface. Familiar faces greet you there because it is Facebook reliant.

Tabelog may have millions of users but their text-based app is catered towards feature phone users. Smartphone users will find the gesture-based search and discovery of Retty far easier to use. Retty also maps of saved restaurants for a simple, visual search (see below).

It can be easy to underestimate the power of mobile and how easily it can disrupt. So even if Retty only has a fraction of Tabelog’s users, it could ride atop Japan’s astounding smartphone market growth to grow exponentially [1].

Retty is also experimenting with content marketing, most recently collaborating with a local service Tokyo Calendar, to publish a special magazine-like guidebook (similar to US-based Zagat). Retty tapped into their top users, including notable food bloggers, models, and business women to recommend bars and restaurants perfect for date spots. Obviously this is a pretty great marketing campaign to bring in new male users.

Retty also recently closed a $3.2 million series B round, having raised a total of $4.4M so far. With all this progress, I wouldn’t write them off just because they don’t have Tabelog’s user base. At least, not yet.

retty retty-map


  1. From April to September of 2013, 68.5% of users switched from a feature phone to a smart phone, according to research from Mobile Marketing Data Lab. Analysts also predict that by 2014, 60.2% of users will switch switch to smartphones — almost a 150% rate of change since 2011 (see eMarketer citing a July Hakuhodo survey).  ↩

This Japanese startup wants to open source its DNA amplifier

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This is part of our coverage of the Infinity Ventures Summit Kyoto 2013 At Infinity Ventures Summit Kyoto, we saw a few new startups pitching at the Launchpad event. One of the most notable was the very last to come on stage, as Shingo Hisakawa, the founder of hardware startup Tori Ningen [1], pitched a DNA amplifier device. This amplification step is a sort of prerequisite, I understand, for many biological experiments. Shingo posited the problem that DNA sampler devices typically cost $4000 to $10000. But his company wants to reduce that by 1/10, and then offer it open source. The details of how the device actually works were relatively complex (and I won’t venture to summarize it based on a simultaneous translation). But the results of a test sample, after they are processed, can be viewed in a Chrome browser, so it doesn’t require any special software. The hardware itself can be viewed below, and at the end of the video above. In my view, this was the most passionate pitch, the founder proclaiming that ’the internet is part of our own DNA, and we should use it to leave a legacy behind. They have already has started selling…

This is part of our coverage of the Infinity Ventures Summit Kyoto 2013

At Infinity Ventures Summit Kyoto, we saw a few new startups pitching at the Launchpad event. One of the most notable was the very last to come on stage, as Shingo Hisakawa, the founder of hardware startup Tori Ningen [1], pitched a DNA amplifier device. This amplification step is a sort of prerequisite, I understand, for many biological experiments.

Shingo posited the problem that DNA sampler devices typically cost $4000 to $10000. But his company wants to reduce that by 1/10, and then offer it open source. The details of how the device actually works were relatively complex (and I won’t venture to summarize it based on a simultaneous translation). But the results of a test sample, after they are processed, can be viewed in a Chrome browser, so it doesn’t require any special software. The hardware itself can be viewed below, and at the end of the video above.

In my view, this was the most passionate pitch, the founder proclaiming that ’the internet is part of our own DNA, and we should use it to leave a legacy behind.

They have already has started selling domestically here in Japan, but they want to bring it overseas as well. In fact, they are already selling in Malaysia, and hope to open a factory in China.

Update: I previously referred to the device as a DNA sampler, which is incorrect.

DNA amplifer


  1. He used to make aircraft, hence the name ‘Tori Ningen’, or ‘bird person’. He says the company is comprised of himself, his wife, and his cat.  ↩

Hairmo: Another Japanese startup that wants to match stylists and models

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This is part of our coverage of the Infinity Ventures Summit Kyoto 2013 One of the early pitches at the Infinity Ventures Summit in Kyoto was Hairmo.jp. What this startup proposed was not a unique solution: matching aspiring hair-stylists (or hair-stylist assistants) with models to style for practice. “We are not the first,” they said, “but none of the others have been successful.” Our readers may recall that we have already featured a few of them. They pointed out two issues facing any startup in this space. Customer’s level of trust in beauty salon assistants is low. (i.e. Some might even lie and say they are stylists assistants when they are not.) Difficulty in making reservations in a smooth manner. Hairmo claims to have cracked this problem, since they are funded by a company that already has a large network of hair salons, so by using this network they aim to solve this problem by implementing a sort of ‘authorized’ mark for stylists. The other problem is reservation, which they hope to simplify with an easy calendar, and a streamlined confirmation and payment process. Hairmo already has 5000 users, having benefitted from some TV features. “We want our assistants to…

This is part of our coverage of the Infinity Ventures Summit Kyoto 2013

One of the early pitches at the Infinity Ventures Summit in Kyoto was Hairmo.jp. What this startup proposed was not a unique solution: matching aspiring hair-stylists (or hair-stylist assistants) with models to style for practice. “We are not the first,” they said, “but none of the others have been successful.” Our readers may recall that we have already featured a few of them.

They pointed out two issues facing any startup in this space.

  1. Customer’s level of trust in beauty salon assistants is low. (i.e. Some might even lie and say they are stylists assistants when they are not.)
  2. Difficulty in making reservations in a smooth manner.

Hairmo claims to have cracked this problem, since they are funded by a company that already has a large network of hair salons, so by using this network they aim to solve this problem by implementing a sort of ‘authorized’ mark for stylists.

The other problem is reservation, which they hope to simplify with an easy calendar, and a streamlined confirmation and payment process.

Hairmo already has 5000 users, having benefitted from some TV features. “We want our assistants to become full stylists,” they proclaimed.

It will be interesting to see how they fare in this competitive area. But if you’d like to try them out, you can get their app over on the App Store.

Indonesia’s Touchten delivers games with a Japanese flavor

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Touchten Games is a startup gaming studio based in Jakarta. Since its launch back in 2009, it has introduced 17 gaming titles for Android and iOS platforms. During my recent visit to Jakarta for Startup Asia, Touchten’s co-founder and CEO Anton Soeharyo told me that his company has raised an undisclosed sum of series B investment from CyberAgent Ventures and other investors. Prior to launching the company, Anton attended Tokyo’s Waseda University where he learned much about Japanese culture and business. After graduating, he returned to Jakarta and launched the company. He explains: Our titles have a Japanese flavor because I love Japan so much, like Ramen Chain and the Sushi Chain. We hope our efforts will help people around the world know more about the Japanese culture. Remarkably Touchten’s Ramen Chain app was copied by a pirate developer and published as ‘Daren Ramen Shop’ back in October. It seems like it has already been removed from the appstore, but it was not a good situation for Touchten. On the bright side though, it did indicate that there was big potential for such a title in the South East Asian regions, since pirates deemed it worthy of imitation. Anton recently…

Touchten Games is a startup gaming studio based in Jakarta. Since its launch back in 2009, it has introduced 17 gaming titles for Android and iOS platforms. During my recent visit to Jakarta for Startup Asia, Touchten’s co-founder and CEO Anton Soeharyo told me that his company has raised an undisclosed sum of series B investment from CyberAgent Ventures and other investors.

Prior to launching the company, Anton attended Tokyo’s Waseda University where he learned much about Japanese culture and business. After graduating, he returned to Jakarta and launched the company. He explains:

Our titles have a Japanese flavor because I love Japan so much, like Ramen Chain and the Sushi Chain. We hope our efforts will help people around the world know more about the Japanese culture.

Remarkably Touchten’s Ramen Chain app was copied by a pirate developer and published as ‘Daren Ramen Shop’ back in October. It seems like it has already been removed from the appstore, but it was not a good situation for Touchten. On the bright side though, it did indicate that there was big potential for such a title in the South East Asian regions, since pirates deemed it worthy of imitation.

Anton recently married a Japanese national whom he has been with for quite some timenow. So he’s now enjoying good fortune in both his private life and his work life. Hopefully he can grow his business further and bridge the two startup ecosystems in Japan an Indonesia.

For those who are interested in getting in touch with him, startup incubator Samurai Incubate will be holding an evening meet-up event on December 12th in partnership with the Tech in Asia blog. Anton will give you a speech at that event, and will be available afterwords if you’d like to chat.

Japanese startup Smart Education begins global expansion with a new app

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See the original article in Japanese Education for kids is one of the hottest trends in Silicon Valley. Yet, there is no clear leading player in the global market. The situation is similar in Japan. But one standout app publisher is Smart Education, an educational smartphone app developer that creates applications for kids. The company reached the impressive milestone of five million downloads on 17th November. After hitting 4.5 million downloads back on October 8th, they added half a million more in the next month as part of a rapid growth spurt. It took the company two years total to hit five million downloads since the its first app Rhythm Book was released in 2011. The next step for Smart Education is expansion to overseas markets. To that end they have launched a new app series called Gocco, with the goal of marketing their services abroad. On November 21st, they launched the first app in the series, Gocco Zoo. The app will be globally available on the App Store, but especially directed at the North American market. To find our more we spoke with Daigo Ikeya, the president of Smart Education, and Kei Otagaki, producer in charge of Gocco. Otagaki…

ZOO01_iPad_E2

See the original article in Japanese

Education for kids is one of the hottest trends in Silicon Valley. Yet, there is no clear leading player in the global market. The situation is similar in Japan. But one standout app publisher is Smart Education, an educational smartphone app developer that creates applications for kids. The company reached the impressive milestone of five million downloads on 17th November.

After hitting 4.5 million downloads back on October 8th, they added half a million more in the next month as part of a rapid growth spurt. It took the company two years total to hit five million downloads since the its first app Rhythm Book was released in 2011.

130605_smarteducation_184x138

The next step for Smart Education is expansion to overseas markets. To that end they have launched a new app series called Gocco, with the goal of marketing their services abroad. On November 21st, they launched the first app in the series, Gocco Zoo. The app will be globally available on the App Store, but especially directed at the North American market.

To find our more we spoke with Daigo Ikeya, the president of Smart Education, and Kei Otagaki, producer in charge of Gocco. Otagaki previously worked at DeNA, and since 2011, he has been working as a producer and game design advisor at several overseas offices. In May of 2013, he joined Smart Education.

When Otagaki worked in San Francisco, he often visited the home of his coworkers, many of whom have kids. That experience made him start thinking about developing something for kids. Otagaki explained:

I was playing with the idea of developing apps for kids and considered different choices. But I decided to focus on developing something fast. I knew Ikeya and spoke with him about my idea. I realized that I could make what I want as part of Smart Education, so I decided to join the team.

Ikeya talked about that difference between the overseas and Japanese markets:

We hold the lion’s share of educational apps for kids in Japan, but the share by Japanese companies in the global market is only around 5%. We are just number one among this 5%. There are bigger players in the global market. […] We’ve been watching Swedish company, Toca Boca, who recently hit 50 million downloads. Their monthly sales is about 150 million to 200 million yen, about 10 times more than us. The difference of the market size reflects this gap. But this area has not been monopolized yet, and there’s still room to improve contents. We still have so much room to grow. In the Japanese market, we plan to provide a service with high-quality apps and a monthly subscription, building partnerships with powerful content-providers like NHK.

In order to expand globally, they need a competitive product, which they hope Gocco can be. Ootagaki says:

I’ve opened studios at different locations all over the world when I worked at DeNA. At the time, I realized that Japanese craftsmanship and attention to details is really high, and I thought it could be a competitive advantage globally. We’d like to present that through Gocco.

So why did they name the app Gocco? Ootagaki explained:

We had many name ideas, but in the end we decided to name it “Gocco“ after “Gocco-asobi”, meaning ”role-playing" in Japanese. We wanted something that sounds good and stays in people’s mind. When I got positive feedback from my friends in San Francisco, we decided on the name. We have already applied for the trademark in the US.

Their first app “Gocco Zoo” is a zoo- themed drawing app. Kids first select an animal which they can feed in the Care Room, after which the animal will change color. Kids can color the animal whatever color they want, and move to the next room and to color more animals.

ZOO02_iPad_E

Kids can also take picture of the drawing they made. While there is no function to share on social media, pictures can be saved on the device so that kids or parents can show friends.

He wanted to make the app totally text free, adding:

I put a high importance on UI from the beginning. I carefully considered how kids can navigate the app without confusing them. During this process, I let kids play with the app and observed where they had issues. This really helped me improve the app.

He notes that once a kid-friendly interface is finalized, it doesn’t require much adaptation for overseas markets.

It’s a freemium app, and users can pay for additional animals or drawing tools. In order to keep kids from accidentally buy them, they made the payment process a little complicated, requiring the user has to push the purchase button for more than 3 seconds to process the order. Otagaki says:

ZOO03_iPad_E

With iOS7, a kids category was added to the app store, and we applied in that category. Apple is currently improving this category, with specific points in their screening process, such as enforcing a clear statement on charging and privacy policies. We have cleared those conditions.

Smart Education has developed another app called Gocco Doodle, another drawing app. Pictures can be published on the internet for other kids to see, sort of like a kindergarten pin board.

Smart Education is planning to release Gocco for other subjects and themes like doctor or fireman. Ootagaki said:

We’d like to provide kids with virtual experiences in real society though playing with the app and expressing themselves creatively.

rakugaKIDS_1

They will focus on marketing Gocco in English-speaking countries, first seeing how customers in the US respond. They think that Gocco Zoo could have as many as a half million downloads monthly. Ikeya thinks this figure can even go higher, adding:

When we first released Rhythm Book in Japan, the number of downloads was higher than expected. If we continue to add new apps and make a synergistic effect, that number can go much higher. In Japan, we could increase the number of download this way without other promotions. Toca Boca uses a similar strategy to increase downloads, I think we can establish a similar eco-system.

If we are able to release new apps at constant pace, like twice a quarter or once a month, we can consider implementing a subscription system. Since Apple doesn’t allow game apps to charge users by subscription at present, we cannot implement such a system. But when Gocco builds a reputation, there may be more possibility of starting a subscription system.

Otagaki says that his plan of implementing a subscription system, which has been successful in Japanese market, is following the model of an online platform like Kodomo Mode, increase awareness and cross promotion among apps.

It will be interesting to see how Smart Education can challenge in this emerging educational app space.

rakugaKIDS_2

Japanese family photo service Kiddy now providing New Year’s cards

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See the original story in Japanese. Tokyo-based Compath.me, the startup behind the mobile family photo service Kiddy, recently announced it has started accepting orders to print and deliver New Year’s cards from their users. Kiddy is designed to help families share photos securely (see our previous review of the app) and since its launch back in December, the startup has acquired 35,000 households from Japan and the rest of the world. Together those users have uploaded over 1.4 million family photos, and that’s without any aggressive promotional efforts from Compath.me. According to the company’s CEO, Hiromichi Ando, there are few secure ways to share photos with other family members, such as grandparents who might live far away. Facebook or Twitter might show them to an unintended audience, and services like DropBox and Flickr may be too complicated for some grandparents. Of course, sharing pictures over e-mail is troublesome. With that in mind, Kiddy works as a photo-sharing cloud for families rather than a social network platform. It allows users to order printed pictures which can then be delivered in a physical form like postcards or photobooks. In other words, you can easily deliver pictures of your kids to grandparents who…

kiddy_newyearcard_screenshot

See the original story in Japanese.

Tokyo-based Compath.me, the startup behind the mobile family photo service Kiddy, recently announced it has started accepting orders to print and deliver New Year’s cards from their users.

Kiddy is designed to help families share photos securely (see our previous review of the app) and since its launch back in December, the startup has acquired 35,000 households from Japan and the rest of the world. Together those users have uploaded over 1.4 million family photos, and that’s without any aggressive promotional efforts from Compath.me.

According to the company’s CEO, Hiromichi Ando, there are few secure ways to share photos with other family members, such as grandparents who might live far away. Facebook or Twitter might show them to an unintended audience, and services like DropBox and Flickr may be too complicated for some grandparents. Of course, sharing pictures over e-mail is troublesome.

With that in mind, Kiddy works as a photo-sharing cloud for families rather than a social network platform. It allows users to order printed pictures which can then be delivered in a physical form like postcards or photobooks. In other words, you can easily deliver pictures of your kids to grandparents who might be unfamiliar with most digital tools.

Taking their service one step further, Kiddy now allows you to create and order a New Year’s card. In addition to the many designs available to choose from, they also provide Pensta style templates, a set of stickers especially popular among young women.

Nohana, a subsidiary of Japanese social giant Mixi, which offers its own photo printing service, also recently launched a New Year’s card print and delivery service.

While many social interactions are adapting to digital, seasons greetings using your own mobile photos is the niche where analog media can still offer some value.

Update: Kiddy was chosen today as a finalist for the startup competition at LeWeb 2013, a tech event happening in Paris this December.

Japan’s Toyro brings life insurance online, raises funds from CyberAgent Ventures

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See the original article in Japanese Toyro, a startup which operates an online insurance products platform called Insnext, announced that it has raised funds from CyberAgent Ventures, a figure in the tens of millions yen. Toyro is a startup founded by former members from Zynga Japan. They have formerly launched comap, a curation service based on location information. Their mission was to fill people’s information gap in some way, and after researching many industries, they found that a particularly severe information gap in the life insurance and pharmaceutical industry. The CEO, Kazuhisa Sase utilized his network in the financial industry that he built while working for Opt, an e-marketing company. Subsequently this launched a new life insurance service. Toyro had been running the service without having raised any funds. They were approach by CyberAgent Ventures only 15 minutes after their first service location curation service “comap” was launched. And they got along right away. Subsequently, and as mentioned above, Toyro would go on to raise tens of millions of yen from CyberAgent Ventures as they launch this new service, Insnext. In Japan, life insurance is considered as a kind of service where customers feel they are talked into buying. But…

See the original article in Japanese

Toyro, a startup which operates an online insurance products platform called Insnext, announced that it has raised funds from CyberAgent Ventures, a figure in the tens of millions yen.

Toyro is a startup founded by former members from Zynga Japan. They have formerly launched comap, a curation service based on location information. Their mission was to fill people’s information gap in some way, and after researching many industries, they found that a particularly severe information gap in the life insurance and pharmaceutical industry.

The CEO, Kazuhisa Sase utilized his network in the financial industry that he built while working for Opt, an e-marketing company. Subsequently this launched a new life insurance service.

Toyro had been running the service without having raised any funds. They were approach by CyberAgent Ventures only 15 minutes after their first service location curation service “comap” was launched. And they got along right away. Subsequently, and as mentioned above, Toyro would go on to raise tens of millions of yen from CyberAgent Ventures as they launch this new service, Insnext.

In Japan, life insurance is considered as a kind of service where customers feel they are talked into buying. But Toyro believes that it is important for customers to compare different insurance products on their own and choose the best one to fit their own life plan. Insnext is a service reflecting that vision.

シミュレーション結果

One of the more interesting functions provided on Insnext is a life simulator. Users enter their annual earnings, their amount of savings, and how many children they have. Then a projected chart of their future savings and some financial advice will appear, as well as their expected lifetime earnings and expenses. In addition, insurance services needed to prepare for potential risks will also be displayed. And on the next page, users can compare different kinds of life insurances.

Typically when an insurance sales representative suggest a product to customers, they start with laying out on an ideal life plan with the customer. Therefore, Insnext focuses on their life simulator as a way to lead users to the best choice.

Regarding their monetization plans, Sase, the CEO of Toyro, tells us;

佐瀬社長

In the insurance industry, you need a license to sell services/products. We are currently studying to attain this license. Insurance products are hard to sell without having face-to-face communication with a customer. […] We plan to help users narrow down their choices, so we can then collect customers on Insnext, and proceed with final contracts in partnerships with real insurance agencies.

I think more insurance companies will intensify their online platforms, so it could become normal for people to look for insurance on the internet. In order to stay ahead of this trend, we will start our insurance agent business in 2014. In April we aim to start working using agency agreements with a few insurance companies.

Focus on users

Existing insurance companies have a tendency to focus on selling the most profitable products possible. But Toyro aims to focus on users and operate their service according to their mission.

Someday, I’d like hear our customers to say “I started thinking about my life plan seriously because of Insnext."

By building a user-focused service as part of its new system, Insnext aims to earn a place in the insurance industry where it can hopefully thrive.