Get Headup to shine on your browser

May 31st, 2009, By talk

Our in house designer Eran (AKA EranSun) released our first official Firefox Persona

Now you can customize your browser with the lovely Mr Headup icon…


Mr Headup - now available as your browser persona

Mr Headup - now available as your browser persona

Enjoy : )

How to promote and market Firefox addons – Part 1

May 19th, 2009, By talk

As the “marketing guy” for a company that has a Firefox addon as its first public product, naturally I’m interested in the promotion and marketing of browser extensions. Surprisingly, despite the steady increase in addon development over the years, I was pretty hard pressed to find materials about the effective methods for promoting them.
After doing some research and reaching out to members of the Mozilla community I was finally pointed by Mr. Rey Bango, add-ons community lead for Mozilla, to the Google group for Mozilla extension developers where I again posted my request for help. The next day I got a response from community member Eric Jung who suggested that I contact the developers of successful addons and ask them what their secret was.

A little Chutzpah goes a long way

As audacious as it might sound I actually followed Eric’s advice. I used the AMO site’s search features to discover which Firefox addons had been downloaded the most times over the years, and then sent invitations to their developers asking them to share their marketing hints, tips and insights on the group’s message board.

We are the champions my friend... (photo by www.ericcastro.biz)

"We are the champions my friend..." (photo by www.ericcastro.biz)

Despite the fact that I’m usually a pretty optimistic guy I was expecting this venture to be a complete failure. I was sure none of the people and companies I’d approached would bother answering my call so you can imagine how amazed I was when within a week of my initial invitation ALL the non-enterprise developers I’d invited to the discussion answered and shared their hard gained insights…

In my next post I’ll list the tips shared by these developers and disclose their identities, but before I do I’d like to take a minute to discuss just how popular Firefox addons really are and what commonalities are displayed between the most successful ones out there:

How popular are Firefox addons?

At Mozilla’s last “all-hands” Mr. Nick Nguyen gave the following presentation regarding the future of addons.mozilla.org (AMO) which tells us some pretty interesting things about the addon phenomenon.
According to Nguyen:

  1. The AMO site is home to over 3.5 thousand public addons.
  2. The AMO has served over 1.3 billion downloads.
  3. Currently there are over 160 million addons installed.
  4. The top 5% of all addons account for 80% of all downloads.
  5. 50% of the traffic to the AMO site is from the US and 40% comes from Europe.
  6. 53% of AMO visitors are English speakers. 10% are German speakers.

What do successful Firefox add-ons have in common?

Far from me to claim that coincidence is causality. I’m also a big fan of the quote:

There are three types of lies – lies, damn lies, and statistics.

…attributed to Benjamin D’israeli, Alfred Marshall, Mark Twain and other famous dead people.
That said I’d like to list a few commonalities I’ve observed while researching this topic:

Being featured helps

One of the most fascinating statistics Nguyen’s slides present is that 99% of the top 5% addons have been on the AMO “featured” list. Addon developers would do well to familiarize themselves with the AMO’s guidelines regarding the selection of addons for this list.

2006 was a good year

Looking at the top of the chart it’s hard to ignore that a disproportionate number of the top addons were first published in 2006. I realize that unless time travel becomes a widely available soon this isn’t really helpful. It’s worth noting that second best year for popular addons is 2007. Together these two statistics suggest that good addons are a little like wine – they require patience and they age well. If immediate gratification is your thing the addon game might not be for you…

Addons are a one man show

Most of the top addons on the AMO were developed by a single developer. In fact the top four addons, together accounting for a staggering 200 Million downloads which are nearly 15% of all addon downloads, were written by three developers who’s insights you’ll find in my next post…

Why headup is a browser add-on and not a website

December 22nd, 2008, By talk
As a browser add-on we're always available

As an add-on we're always available

Recently we’ve been asked by quite a few users and pro-bloggers:

“Why is headup a browser extension and not an website?”

It’s actually a very good question especially since our current version only works with Firefox therefore limiting us to servicing only the Firefox user community.

A method to the madness

The reason we chose to be an add-on is related to our mission of giving our users a truly semantic web experience that is related to the content they are browsing, but is entirely independent of the mechanism displaying it. Choosing to be a browser extension, or “add-on”, frees us from the restrictions inherent in traditional page based web browsing, and allows us to concentrate on realizing for our users a truly semantic web experience.

Travel without moving – Browsing without leaving the page

In Dune, Frank Herbert’s visionary science fiction novel, Guild Navigators move spaceships through space in a process described as “Travel without moving”. We can’t offer you this experience yet, however thanks to the fact that we are a browser add-on, we can let you browse a wealth of content that interests you, without ever leaving your page of origin. Check out this video to get a better understanding of the headup experience:

SemantiNet Introducing: headup from SemantiNet Ltd on Vimeo.

Well that’s all for today. As always feel free to contact me via @headup on twitter, or directly (miked[at]semantinet[dot]com) for headup invitations.

: )

All the best,

Mike

Creative Marketing – headup.com

headup Ubiquity mashup

December 14th, 2008, By admin

headup Ubiquity mashup

I was really excited when I found out about Ubiquity. It’s an experimental browser extension from Mozilla labs that connects the Web with language. It’s both a development platform and an interface.

Like headup, Ubiquity also aims to enrich browsing experiences. Still in prototype version Ubiquity already has great value for Firefox users because of the way it processes natural language commands. It only took me about a couple of hours to start using Ubiquity to perform actions such as googling, wikiing and sending emails. I even used it to get restaurant recommendations, movie reviews, and driving directions.

The reason I had started playing with Ubiquity in the first place was because we’d gotten quite a few requests to add a search box to headup and I was curious to see if I could use Ubiquity’s API as a solution.

Ubiquity is really cool!

Ubiquity has such a great platform that it was really very easy for me to write a “headup – Ubiquity” command. If you have the Ubiquity add on installed you can now use it to open headup on any topic you like. All you need to do is hit Ctrl + Space to open Ubiquity, and then enter “headup [phrase]” to start headup on the topic [phrase].
For example to open the headup panel with results relating to New York city simply click Ctrl + Space to open Ubiquity and then type “headup New York”. You’ll be served with headup’s results for New York city – videos, photos, bands playing scheduled to play there in the near future, etc.

Ubiquity

Get it while it’s hot

In order to enjoy all this techy goodness all you have to do is install the Ubiquity add-on and add the headup command by visiting www.headup.com/ubiquity.html

Mashups suggestions welcome

I’m always on the look out for new and groovy stuff to mashup with headup and would love to hear any suggestions you might have. If you have any ideas please contact us via twitter (@headup), leave a comment here, or email us to feedback@headup.com

If you already downloaded Ubiquity – you can add the headup command to your Firefox by going to: www.headup.com/ubiquity.html

If you come up with more suggestions about how other technologies can be connected to headup, or would like to tell us about other ways in which Ubiquity can be mashed with headup – do leave us a comment here or email us to feedback@headup.com

Further reading/downloading headup & Ubiquity:

To download headup: http://www.headup.com
Ubiquity: http://labs.mozilla.com/2008/08/introducing-ubiquity/

Eylon Yogev.
eylony@headup.com