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What to do if Facebook beats your app to launch

Put yourself in the shoes of a platform innovation director or apps development honcho at a small to mid-sized company. You figure you can carve out a scorching-hot niche for yourself by being first-to-market with a platform-agnostic mobile app letting OSX or Android users immerse themselves in 360 degree virtual reality video content, including games. […]
Mark McDonald

Put yourself in the shoes of a platform innovation director or apps development honcho at a small to mid-sized company. You figure you can carve out a scorching-hot niche for yourself by being first-to-market with a platform-agnostic mobile app letting OSX or Android users immerse themselves in 360 degree virtual reality video content, including games.

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You pride yourself on keeping your ear to the ground, but it can still be an unpleasant surprise when you come across news like this.

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As the app market has evolved, itโ€™s become more difficult for developers or publishers to succeed in the middle. Maybe youโ€™ve lived through that scenario yourself: a Facebook, or a Google, or an Oracle, BigMachines or Salesforce arrives on the scene with an app or platform that might not beat you to market but theyโ€™ve plainly got a much bigger sword to swing – with all their resources arrayed against you.

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Donโ€™t give up. You might not even realise all the weapons youโ€™ve got in your arsenal or the steps you can take to turn the situation to your advantage.

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Admit the reality

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As soon as a big dog shows up, companies are forced into the โ€œchallenger brandโ€ position, so admit it to yourself and get a firm grasp on the strategies and virtues a challenger can deploy successfully, like nimbleness and the ability to take risks.

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Embrace agility

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We instinctively assume the big dog on the block has the advantage, but their very size makes them vulnerable. Even a Facebook has inertia to overcome in making mid-course adjustments when changes might damage their business model or affect profits.

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A small app developer or marketer can afford to expedite innovation or upgrades much more readily.

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Dig For deeper opportunities

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If they invade your niche, identity a sub-niche your larger competitors may overlook.

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You might be able to add features that provide value for a certain user segment, features that bigger competitors donโ€™t view as profitable or broad enough in their appeal. If that niche pans out it gives you a base to build from.

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Take risks

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The team behind sports news app GameOn arenโ€™t just taking on kingpins like ESPN – theyโ€™re hoping to tempt sports fans away from Twitter, SnapChat and even cable companies.

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But each new feature upgrade has been judiciously gradual, and theyโ€™ve successfully focused on building from niche fan bases that are underserved, like the global audience for cricket.

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Maximise your backend

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An app is more than whatโ€™s resident on the device; most need to offer 2/47 backend services like messaging, sharing, syncing or other web-based features.

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That can be an advantage for the little guy according to Brent Simmons, a long-time indie developer whoโ€™s been a partner in Q Branch, maker of note-taking app Vesper.

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โ€œItโ€™s easy to think that only the big players can create compelling online services that scale. But Cloud-based backend services are levelling the playing field,โ€ he says.

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โ€œThe tools and technology have progressed so far, so fast, and the price keeps going down.โ€

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Customer service

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Itโ€™s the โ€œshopkeeperโ€™s advantageโ€ of knowing and engaging on a more personalised level with customers.

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Donโ€™t discount the power of smallness when it comes to the relationship you have with the people you serve, particularly if youโ€™re in the B2B/enterprise space.

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Having a more intimate, one-to-one rapport with them matters a lot – especially if theyโ€™re SMEs themselves whoโ€™ll especially appreciate the attention and responsiveness.

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Partner up


A smaller firm can tie in with other companies that provide a good fit and cloud-based business apps provider Zoho did exactly that.

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When Zoho found Google had invaded its category, it partnered with 1&1 Internet in an arrangement that put its office productivity apps in front of the web-hosting giantโ€™s 10 million plus users.

Zoho went a step further, and launched new apps like its Zojo CRM in Googleโ€™s own apps marketplace, where it became one of the most popular in its segment.

So itโ€™s not impossible to compete with a Facebook or other goliath when they invade your app category, but it takes focus, ingenuity and hard work when they ratchet up the challenges facing a developer.

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Donโ€™t forget that when Goliath faced David, the smarter, more agile and innovative competitor won. The big guy never stood a chance.

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Mark McDonald is the co-founder and co-CEO Appster, a leading mobile app and product development company with offices in Melbourne and San Francisco.

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