Podcasts about second everyday

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Best podcasts about second everyday

Latest podcast episodes about second everyday

App Masters - App Marketing & App Store Optimization with Steve P. Young
App Masters Greatest Hits: Episode 9 with Cesar Kuriyama (Part 2)

App Masters - App Marketing & App Store Optimization with Steve P. Young

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 6, 2025 25:14


Get ready to explore the stories behind some of the most iconic and innovative apps that have shaped the mobile landscape!We're here with App Masters Greatest Hits—a 10-episode series where we'll journey back in time to uncover the successes, challenges, and game-changing moments that made these apps truly distinguished.In this episode, we're joined by Cesar Kuriyama—actor, producer, TED speaker, and CEO of 1 Second Everyday, the popular video diary app. Cesar shares his journey into the app world, from turning an idea into reality to securing funding and launching his business.Here's what you'll discover:✔️ The journey of getting funding & backers✔️ Process of kickstarters✔️ Different app ideas and strategy used to make them successTune in for some inspiring insights!

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App Masters - App Marketing & App Store Optimization with Steve P. Young
App Masters Greatest Hits: Episode 8 with Cesar Kuriyama (Part 1)

App Masters - App Marketing & App Store Optimization with Steve P. Young

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 27, 2025 20:44


Get ready to explore the stories behind some of the most iconic and innovative apps that have shaped the mobile landscape!We're here with App Masters Greatest Hits—a 10-episode series where we'll journey back in time to uncover the successes, challenges, and game-changing moments that made these apps truly distinguished.In this episode, we're joined by Cesar Kuriyama—actor, producer, TED speaker, and CEO of 1 Second Everyday, the popular video diary app. Cesar shares his journey into the app world, from turning an idea into reality to securing funding and launching his business.Here's what you'll discover:✔️ The process of building a successful app✔️ How to raise funds and attract investors✔️ Validating ideas before taking the leapTune in for some inspiring insights!

Talking Too Loud with Chris Savage
Passions and Personal Projects with Cesar Kuriyama

Talking Too Loud with Chris Savage

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 15, 2022 44:37


1 Second Everyday has previously reached #1 on the app store. While attending art school, Cesar studied visual effects, animation, and becoming a 3D artist. Links to learn more about Cesar:Cesar's LinkedInFollow us: twitter.com/wistiaSubscribe: wistia.com/series/talking-too-loudLove what you heard? Leave us a review!We want to hear from you! Write in and let us know what you think about the show, who you'd want us to interview on future episodes, and any feedback you have for our team.

write 3d passions personal projects second everyday cesar kuriyama
Practical Positivity
Episode 163: The importance of finding joy in your everyday

Practical Positivity

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 17, 2022 10:02


Today's episode is all about the importance of finding joy in your everyday, and was inspired by a thought I had after watching back my 1 Second Everyday video at the end of 2021… I hope you enjoy it!   CONTACT SOPHIE:   Coaching - The Joyful Everyday Join The Choose Joy Club The Monthly Pep Talk newsletter - sign up now Blog - www.sophiecliff.com Instagram - @sophiecliff Email - sophie@sophiecliff.com 

Sub Club
Maddie Kirby, 1 Second Everyday - The TikTok Marketing Playbook

Sub Club

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 11, 2021 52:55


Watch the video version of this show on YouTube »Maddie Kirby is currently the Senior Social Media Manager for the video journal app, 1 Second Everyday. Maddie started her social media marketing career at Ozwest. Ozwest is an exclusive distributor of Zing branded toy products and the Ozwest toy line in the USA and Canada.While working at Ozwest, Maddie started growing her personal social media presence. Maddie has almost 400k followers on TikTok. Since joining 1 Second Everyday in 2019, Maddie has been instrumental in leveraging TikTok to organically drive millions of downloads.Maddie has a bachelor's degree in advertising from the University of Oregon, and has also worked for companies such as Bytedance, Inc., Egg Strategy, Transition Productions, and Atomicus Films.In this episode, you'll learn: How to promote your app with user-created content Clever tricks to get your app noticed Why TikTok is a great place to market your app A great strategy for growing your app's follower count Links & Resources Maddie and David's App Promotion Summit USA panel discussion Cesar Kuriyama's Twitter Cesar Kuriyama's TED Talk David Smith on The Sub Club Podcast Widgetsmith app Maddie Kirby's Links Maddie Kirby's TikTok Maddie Kirby's LinkedIn 1 Second Everyday's website 1 Second Everyday is on Twitter 1 Second Everyday's Instagram Zing Toys website Follow us on Twitter: David Barnard Jacob Eiting RevenueCat Sub Club Episode TranscriptMadison: 00:00:00I like to think of them as content buckets or pillars. You pick three and stick with those for a little bit. Try a few ideas in each bucket. See what's working, what's not. Scrolling through the app is the best way to kind of keep on top of things. And then you have to be able to think really fast and post really fast because these trends come and go. Jacob: 00:00:39Welcome to the Sub Club podcast. Our guest today is Maddie Kirby, Senior Social Media Manager at 1 Second Everyday. She began her career in social media marketing at toy company, Ozwest.While working there she also started growing her personal social media presence, accumulating almost 400,000 followers on TikTok.In 2019, Maddie joined 1 Second Everyday where she has been instrumental in leveraging TikTok to organically drive millions of downloads.Maddie, welcome to the podcast.Madison: 00:01:08Thank you. I'm excited to be here.Jacob: 00:01:10I'm also here with David, my guest, which I forgot to introduce in our freaky Friday intro swap.David: 00:01:16I usually do the introductions, but that was great. Jacob.Jacob: 00:01:19Hey, you know what? I'm very, very, very versed at...David: 00:01:21You gotta mix things up. Jacob: 00:01:23I'll pass back to David because he's the one who preps all the questions. David: 00:01:29Nice. Maddie and I were on a panel together earlier this month, at App Promotion Summit, which is a great thing to watch. We can link it in the show notes.It was four of us on the panel and it went really quick, but she shared a lot of really interesting stuff about what she's working on in social media marketing, and working with 1 Second Everyday on their TikTok presence.So, I wanted to bring her on the podcast to actually give her time to talk a little more about it in the context of promoting apps, because she's been on a couple of other podcasts where they're talking more specifically about social media.I'm super excited to have you, Maddie.I do want to dive in. We typically do have more developer focused guests, you know, people that are doing the coding or focused on user acquisition, spending 50K a month on Facebook. And so that's another reason I was excited to have you on the podcast is to just get a really different perspective.I think that there's a lot of potential in social media marketing. But not a lot of people talking about it in the app space and then...Jacob: 00:02:40Or just knowing how to do it, right?How do you even start, especially if you're a developer-turned-promoter. I think a lot of app creators tend to do the things you were talking about. David does technical channels about buying ads on Facebook or whatever, where's a lot of leverage in social media stuff. If you can do it. David: 00:03:02Yeah, absolutely. So, I did want to start with, you got your start in social media marketing, not with an app, which is another thing. It's like you came to the app marketing with such a different perspective, which I think is is really good. There's too many people who are just so narrowly focused in the kind of existing playbook for marketing apps.So, are there any lessons from your time at of all the places a toy company? Any particular lessons from being at a toy company that you think helped you grow and learn this form of marketing and specifically that apply to subscription apps?Madison: 00:03:41Yeah. I don't know if it's necessarily a lesson or lessons that I've learned. But I think coming from the toy industry, which is also an industry where people don't leave it. They have a lot of people that started in the industry and then just stayed there forever. You have a lot of people that aren't really thinking beyond just what they are normally, what they're used to, I guess, is what I would say. Jacob: 00:04:05Is what they're used to, like ads on Nickelodeon.Madison: 00:04:08Yeah, it's definitely commercials. Like when they were still talking about TV and trying to transition out of that, that's really funny that you brought that up, but that's kind of what we were talking about at the time. So I got really lucky and I had a great manager who really wanted me to push people outside of their boxes.And I feel like I wouldn't have found TikTok unless I was at a toy company, because we were so focused on trying to connect to Gen Z and young people. And I heard some kids talking on our public transportation about TikTok, which was musically then. And I was like, oh, and I just had like my feelers out about it because I was just so focused on kids at the time, and like trying to find this like cool new way that we can connect to them. And I downloaded it and I was a content creator, too. So I thought it was super cool. Getting onto TikTok at that time and super early, I feel like wouldn't have happened without being in the toy industry. Also then I was able to take that into 1 Second Everyday and already had experience, which I feel like a lot of people don't really have TikTok experience coming into a company.David: 00:05:16Yeah, that's really cool. and so then what, what was the leap like? what, what, yeah, how'd you land the gate hit 1 Second Everyday and decide to jump into that the app. Madison: 00:05:24I was using 1 Second Everyday already, before even looking for a job. so i had already, and i had known about the company the company is amazing and they have a lot of great benefits and they care so much about the people. in the company itself and it's small and, remote. so i was already hoping that they would have a job opening.Right. And I, so I didn't necessarily have my sights set on an app. really. it was just, i was interested in 1 Second Everyday, cause i use it. and i also like it because it's content creation and i have a background in that. so i feel like i was able to kind of have this weird experience coming into it. David: 00:06:04Yeah, i do want to pause real quick and maybe talk a little bit about the app. and i should have researched, i should have read up on this before the podcast, but it'd be fun to just ask. 1 Second Everyday has been around like 10 years, right? like this is the, like, i think i bought this as a paid app in, in 2009 or 10 or something.So tell us a little bit about the history of the app itself. and what the app does.Madison: 00:06:30Yeah. so our founder has been recording his life for 10 years now, which is a really long time. and they started on kickstarter actually. and he did a ted talk and that's how a lot of people initially found us was through his TikTok, where he had left the ad. for a year he left his job to go record his life, his 30th birthday.And yeah. it's, it was amazing and people really connected to it. and it's like a very simple idea. and then he did his ted talk about it and then that's how he launched the app. and now it's just kind of built slowly up, through that. really just being able to have him connect with people. caesar's an amazing person and a really great storyteller and people were able to connect to him first.And then that's kind of how he built a team around him to slowly.Jacob: 00:07:22I love the, i mean, i think, you know, when you talk about. user acquisition or, or, you know, ultimately that's, you know, what marketing or whatever is, right? you want to get people into your business, your app or whatever. it always feels so much easier when you start with the story, right? when you start with like the narrative, the story, then you add in the business or the product later, right?Because now you have a foundation. i was, i was on the 1 Second Everyday reading the timeline, right? it's all very clean narrative, right? like this person has this story whenever, and then everybody can join in. humans are very narrative driven. right? so we'd like to be part of something that like that like makes sense, right.That like has an arc to it. so i think it's, i, and i think that downstream that's going to help will help makes apps like once every day be successful is they have this like something that makes sense. and they don't have to just go out and like, oh, you need 50,000 users spend $50,000. right. you actually have a little bit of like organic story there.David: 00:08:21Yeah. and speaking of. no worries. so while you were still at the toy company, you started building your own social media presence. so you had, your own personal TikTok account, but then also built up several others. what was it like again, this, as you said earlier, this was a musically at the time before it even became TikTok before he even blew up.So you're really early to this really cool platform. how did, how did you build these, accounts.Madison: 00:08:49I started off at, on vine and then of course, vinyl. yeah, i know i had started it and then i had a harambe bay vine blow up. and then a week later they announced that the app was shutting down and i was devastated because i was like, here's my shot. i got it. and then, so i was looking for my next place to go cause i was a youtube kid growing up.So i've always wanted to make videos and i, and i love it just naturally. and i had some friends invite me over to this app called flipagram, which is actually kind of funny because that was a. competitor to 1 Second Everyday at the time. and i didn't even know about 1 Second Everyday yet. and so i was a paid content creator over there to be using their app, and then got on to TikTok and started just posting random, funny videos.And at the time things were the algorithm wasn't really developed, then it was more you post and then whoever likes your stuff is really important. so if you have somebody really cool and like, that likes your video, your video is going to blow up. and i just had two popular twin girls had liked my video and i had all these people coming over and said that these girls had liked my video and they saw it on their platform or their account.And then that's how it started. it just started like going up and getting followers. and now, i have, an account where i play guitar. i decided to take up learning electric guitar. and so i built. an audience of 11 k on there in two and a half months. so i'm really like addicted, i guess. Jacob: 00:10:28So, yeah, so, so, and do you, do you, you know, i dunno this is more about like personal, just like brand and like building these, these properties. i mean, i do think it's, it's, it's the skill, like, you know, we're talking about developers building their own social media properties. it's like, okay, you got to have a shtick.Right. i don't know what you'd call it. right. like could learn guitar. so do, do you carry them over from your other properties? you try to like bootstrap them or you're just like, nope, totally greenfield. i'm just going to like, be a guitar person now and like make it a thing. is that, is that more how it goes or.Madison: 00:10:57I mean on my other account, my comedy account, i guess it's always been a really hard thing to kind of stick with one thing that you're into. and some people are really good at that. yeah. definitely not the best when it comes to my own stuff that i, like, i just want to do whatever and kind of see if that works, but that's kind of morphed over time.And then with guitar, i was just like, i'm just going to record myself, playing guitar and see what happens. and it did well.Jacob: 00:11:24Oh, so you don't, you don't, you don't like plan out like, oh, i'm going to do a funny heran bay guitar thing. it'sMadison: 00:11:29No, i just do it. it's a lot of it's like improv and going for it and just seeing. i think that being on the platform for so long, i kind of know what's going to do well, and yeah. and sometimes you'll put, you know, five seconds of effort into something and it does really well. and then other times you put, you know, an hour of work into something and it doesn't do well.Jacob: 00:11:50This is me and my twitter game. So you need to give me some advice because like i can, i still can, 11 years in, i, sir, out 13 years in on twitter, i still can't predict what's going to do well.Madison: 00:11:59Yeah, exactly. David: 00:12:01So you've kind of been talking about your, your personal accounts. but these things that you're saying, i would assume also apply to company accounts. okay. i would assume growing a company account, you just need to have a similar amount of exploration. so how how have you taken those lessons from your own personal accounts and then systematize them to, to grow a company account and then even pushing back on, on not overly systematizing because you have to keep experimenting.Madison: 00:12:37Yeah, that's a really good question. i think how i tackle it now, since i've been on so many accounts, because i grew one, back at the toy company too, for the stop motion animation toy, and that's kind of my first dipping into that. and we grew really fast. like it's like at a half a million now for followers—t but, i think hat's kind of when i was realizing that there's buckets to these things.And like, i like to think of them as like content buckets or like pillars and you like pick three, like i'm going to do behind the scenes videos. i'm going to do, some kind of. app walkthrough maybe for 1 Second Everyday purposes and then fun trends and stick with those for a little bit, try a few ideas in each bucket.See what's working, what's not. and then kind of maybe if the behind the scenes stuff is not working as well, then we won't make as many of that stuff. and then just scrolling through the app is the best way to kind of keep on top of things and make sure that you're experimenting with new stuff, because people are always thinking of really creative ways to make new videos and have these like wild ideas that you don't think could ever relate to 1 Second Everyday but they can, and then you have to like, be able to think really fast and post really fast because these trends come and go. so that's kind of like my system, i guess. Jacob: 00:14:01How do, you avoid the. what did that steve buscemi meme that's like, hello, fellow kids. how did, how do you, because that's always my fear too, is like, especially as i get older, it's like, if i'm trying to be hip on twitter or whatever, like, it feels like there's this uncanny valley that brands can really easily get in to and you see it with like bad social media.Right. is there is, there is a solution just hire people who are actually good at social media or like, or is there like a framework for not becoming the steve buscemi meme?Madison: 00:14:30I think the biggest thing is don't try to make anything that you don't understand already. like don't try to guess. i think i learned that. Jacob: 00:14:39I canceled this, the, the, the sea shanties revenue, cat, collab, because yeah, i still don't understand it.Madison: 00:14:47Yeah, it's i think i learned that on my personal account. specifically just as i age and everything. and you get like these young kids on there that are like, wait you're, you're a millennial. that's really old. and then they just kinda like it pierces your heart a little bit. and you're like, oh god, that hurt really bad, but okay, thanks for reminding me.And it's okay if they do that, it's actually kind of funny and you can lean into it. but don't try to be gen z i think is the big thing when you're trying to relate just as i wouldn't try to be boomers either. Like you wouldn't try to be somebody else. so it's being yourself, knowing what you know, and like, not trying to guess at it, and you can talk to that generation, but they might just tell you, like, stop, get off the platform or something. i don't know. but there's always people that you can find within the platform that will relate to you too. that's a big thing David: 00:15:41How much of this do you think is kind of product social media platform fit? i guess. so my question is like, can you shoehorn a product that wouldn't necessarily work on social media, into social media marketing. so revenue cap being a good example. you know, we are, you know, sharing some videos on twitter and stuff like that, but it doesn't feel like TikTok would be a good platform for us to invest in marketing wise, as opposed to. Jacob: 00:16:18Cause because we're an infrastructure tool. David: 00:16:22As opposed to, you know, it sounds like even at the toy company, the stop motion animation product was what really hit on social media. did you try other, products within the toy company that didn't hit? or do you have any kind of thoughts on that kind of product platform fit? Madison: 00:16:41That's a good question. we specifically got on to TikTok because of the stop-motion toy. and i think it definitely makes it easier when you have a content creation tool, because we had an app that went with that toy too. and, and really it's all about entertaining people at the end of the day on TikTok and if you can't make entertaining content with your product, then it gets harder. i don't think we tried with other products. we did do a cross-promotion where we would have like a stop-motion toy playing with our other toys that we had kind of thing. and that was a fun way to do it, but we had different strategies for other toys, like influencer marketing or unboxing videos as well.But i think that anybody can be on TikTok but i also like to ask people, why do you think that you can't be on TikTok and people will say, well it's because kids are on there, it's a kid's platform. and it's really not at all. it used to be, it used to be people just lip sinking. and that's what i had started out doing.And i was terrible at it. i'm like this sucks. i am not, this is not a good platform for me. and it's really just transformed into a place where anybody can kind of find their, their audience and, and maybe with revenuecat it might be a thing of just trying to explain what you do in a really fun way and unique way to make people excited about it.Jacob: 00:18:03There are other developer brands that find success on there. right? there's like a certain language or that, that works. it's just like, hey, you know, for us. and so it's, and i think for any, any, you know, as an app, i think to going back to your point, david, about products, network fit, right. apps in general.Sit. well, i was thinking about 1 Second Everyday and TikTok, right. you're pointing a camera at your face at something. right. so like you're already, like, they were very like products in some ways. so it's like very smooth transition. but for most apps, it is right. you're there, you're on your phone.You're doing stuff you're probably bored like here. like, let me tell you about some other application you can use. it's a smooth transition. but then like i still. yeah. thinking about, i mean, we have this problem now that'd be the podcast we do. it's one thing. but then like, you know, for, for blog content and other things, it's really hard to come up with stuff that matters.Right. that like, like you were saying, maddie, like, so that, that, that, that, that's funny, like you care about, right. that that's what you want do. cause like, at the end of the day, if you're just trying to like chase the meme, it's gonna come off as hokey. right. it's going to come off as like an ungenuine. so. but i think app developers. yeah. i mean, i, i, it feels like we've heard like this whole tick talk as an app distribution mechanism really has kind of something that surprised me too. like it, it blinds, i mean, it's like we, and not just the first order of like we're selling ads on TikTok, this like second order user generated content stuff, which i think is just fast.Madison: 00:19:35Yeah. and i, i think that again, it's, you just have to figure out how you can be on the platform if you want to. and there's really nothing to lose with it too, because it doesn't cost money to be on there and try things like you can have a podcast format on there and you can take clips of a podcast and put them on there.And people have a lot of success doing that, or just having their, reply with the video feature. there's a lot of different kind of structures that people it's not just. making skits or trying to use popular. Sounds popular. sounds do well, but maybe that's not for you. i think it's, brainstorming, trying things, seeing what sticks and if it doesn't stick, then try something different.And if that doesn't, then you can focus your energy somewhere else and realize that, you know, you gave it your best shot and maybe there's a different kind of opportunity that, comes up later or a new feature that's introduced later that works.David: 00:20:29On the, on the trend chasing, what are some examples of that with 1 Second Everyday that you feel like came off? well, and, and kind of, how do you, how do you attach yourself to a trend without that? hokiness cause it sounds like you've succeeded at that, but i imagine that it is a hard thing to do.So any tips on how to do that? well, Madison: 00:20:50We kind of get lucky sometimes. and i, that is kind of like how TikTok works is luck. and i hate saying that. David: 00:20:58Favors the prepared though. Madison: 00:20:59Yeah. i mean, it's good that we were onto it. it definitely helps, to be able to, to see what's going on out in the world, but we just had, a wall street journal article that was about this too, about TikTok in 1 Second Everyday.And how there's this trend going on on, tech talk, where people are making 1 Second Everyday type video. and there's a lot of trends out there that show it's like the 27 video challenge where you have 27 videos and you set them to a song. that's very, we say that's one. when i see vibes, when we ever like share it inside of our slack channel Jacob: 00:21:34I mean, the thing is, is like bad posts. nobody sees, right? like, Madison: 00:21:39Yeah, it's kind of, it's like such a tiny thing and that goes back to the luck part of it. and i think being able to, jump on a trend, it's like, you could have a great video and people think it's awesome and you show it to your friend and they think it's great. and it just doesn't do well at the time.And you could post it two months later and it'll do that. Maybe not for a trend it's randomness and kind of like just how the algorithm works with wanting to reward you sometimes. but i think where we've done well with, jumping on a trend too, is we had a, a video that took off with, one of my coworkers made, she, she helped me make it.She was just standing there with her phone and was having somebody else zoom in on her that said i recorded 1 Second Everyday of my life for the last year. and then it just rotated through like really, really fast imagery of the year. and that was the trend of people showing it, but it was like this, we just kind of twisted it a little bit to make it about 1 Second Everyday, but don't ever make it like an ad.It shouldn't be, it shouldn't feel like 1 Second Everyday is posting it. and that's really cool. we were getting a lot of positive feedback on the posts because people were like, okay, what's the app that you use.Jacob: 00:22:56Yeah. Madison: 00:22:56And, and that's not a bad thing. people think that's a bad thing to have people ask that, but it's actually not.It just means that they think that some random girl posted a video, not a brand.And I prefer Jacob: 00:23:07On your brand account though Madison: 00:23:08On our brand account. we get that all the time. Jacob: 00:23:11I mean, that's a good sign of success, right? Madison: 00:23:13Yeah. people don't really read the, they don't read the captions. maybe i'm not sure what it is, but they don't Jacob: 00:23:21Yeah. it's really understated on TikTok, Madison: 00:23:24Yeah. Jacob: 00:23:24Kinda like floating in the Madison: 00:23:26Yeah. i feel like it's a great thing. when people have no idea that it's coming from a brand, even when it's posted on a brand account and that's, i would say with trends, it should feel like that it shouldn't feel like, like i'm trying to think of an example. like if oreo cookies made a thing, it shouldn't feel like they are just trying to sell you cookies.It needs to be entertaining. it needs to tell a story. you can't just find an easy way to do it and hope that it works.Jacob: 00:23:55So how, how so you've had success with first party content? i have you used like user generated stuff as well. have you tried to, i've seen it a lot of apps do this where they'll, i, we know if we've had it on the podcast, people before who have had like TikTok influencers make videos and then use those as ads.Have you experimented with any of that?Madison: 00:24:13We haven't used any as ads—something that's kind of weird about 1 second, everyday too. I mean, it also just has to do with us being a small team, with not a lot of money to spend on ads. so we really lean into organic because organic has also done really well for us. so why would we spend a bunch of money? Jacob: 00:24:31It's too usually Madison: 00:24:32But my, yeah my manager who used to be the social media manager when she started at 1 Second Everyday started a thing, where they added a feature actually to get more spikes monthly. and that was to make it so that people could mash their month and share their month on social. and then they had a giveaway that went with it and we still have that giveaway.And that gets hundreds of people to enter by sharing their, their, their month essentially, of 1 Second Everyday and that just keeps that going and just feeds into it. and then the more people that post about us. the more people that download and then the more people that can then post about us again.So it's just keeping that stream.Jacob: 00:25:15Did you have, it does again, post to tech talk as well as like other platforms or is it like specifically. on TikTok.Madison: 00:25:21Uh that's for instagram, actually Jacob: 00:25:25Oh, really? cause like take that, sorry. i'm th this is i'm totally like a tick tock idiot, but like you can't actually like post videos into TikTok, right? or,Madison: 00:25:34No. You definitely can. yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, no. and we, we share user-generated content all the time on instagram, and we're trying to do that on TikTok as well, but it's, it's not the same because you can't really just share a one second everyday video from a random person. that doesn't mean as much as trying to kind of make it more of that TikTok format or putting a little bit of context behind it so that people understand. David: 00:25:58So, and, on the, on the panel we were on, you talked about, how well it's done for y'all at 1 Second Everyday. can you, rehash what you already said, but on here, tell us more specifically about a couple of the posts that went viral and then being able to see the direct results on, in downloads.Madison: 00:26:22Yeah. So we started arctic talk, in december because we wanted to be able to launch it before the new year, which is our biggest time of the year, because that's usually when people don't. and then, because it's the start of the year, that's a great time to just start a thing for your life and then they'll wait a year to post it.And so usually we see like this massive spike because everybody wants to post their year. but this time, what was different is that i think it was the day before the new year a girl, i was just randomly scrolling through TikTok and a girl had made a video that was like, hey, i have an idea. what if we just recorded 1 Second Everyday of our life, and then we would have a life movie, and then i went, oh, that's our app.And it hadn't even been, i don't think it was even at 1 million views yet. and so i was like, i got to do a duet right now. and so i filmed a duet where i just was walking through the app. as she's explaining this idea and people even thought that we made the app because of her idea, like how did you guys do that?So fast. so then people thought it was like this new cool app. and, it started this like microtrends, through ticks hawk and her video. i think it reached a lot of millions of views. i think it was like 13 million or something crazy. and then ours got, like a million views and then everything after that for a couple of days, it's like a million on our own account because then everybody started translating her video into their own country languages.And so you had hundreds of people copying her video and just ending up on everybody's feed. and then everybody that had already downloaded 1 Second Everyday and knew about it was commenting inside of those videos saying, hey, download 1 Second Everyday. so they were doing our job for us really. Jacob: 00:28:11You know, and that's a sign of a great product, right? Madison: 00:28:14Yeah, it is. it's like we, we talk about it cause we go and it's again, kind of a lucky circumstance of having this girl think of this idea. that's really similar to our app, but also we were able to capitalize on, on it even more because we do edit with it. and then we were able to grow an audience that to like now we're at, i don't even know what we're at 20 k or something on a TikTok, but we grew really fast within that time.And then. kind of going back to being able to see download spikes is we got a number one in the app store that day for the first time ever had never had that happen. and it just, i mean, it blew the other numbers just away dramatically. and then, now we're able to see these little spikes every month when a TikTok is posted from somebody.We had one in france and you'll see all the downloads that happened in france. just. and then we had one in argentina and that spiked and uk. so being able to like, see that and also just learn from them, like what kind of videos are they posting? super simple them just saying I've been recording my life for this long people just think that's cool. cause they're like, you did what you recorded your life for four years. what, how do i do that? and then you tell them how they do it. and then they just, they're all like talking in the comments. it's really cool. and, but we haven't seen them. at all on the other years, it's only this time that we've seen these like massive monthly spikes too.David: 00:29:46Didn't, y'all hit number one again in may or something. Madison: 00:29:49We did for a different country. And i think that was argentina, which we had never done before. David: 00:29:55Nice. Madison: 00:29:56Country, but you could connect it back to one second.David: 00:29:59Wow. Jacob: 00:30:00We've seen, i mean, we had david smith on the podcasts a couple of weeks ago. and his app, would just meth, like exploded because of that. and like, he, it was just, somebody made a video, right? david, that was a story for his, like, it wasn't, it was the same thing. it was like not, they didn't pay for it, somebody to just like, show how to do a cool thing with this guy's app.Well, i mean, from our perspective, we talked about it on the podcast at the time, but from our perspective, we, we provide his infrastructure for purchases and we were like, what the hell is happening? like, it's, it's, it's amazing. i mean, i don't know it was like computer brain guy, but like what this like interconnected, like we've really like shortened the loop for like the, just like minimal.Energy to like move around. right? like people can like spike this stuff. and it's yeah, it's, it's it's mind blowing the capex cause we've seen it also, not just, we've just been, we've seen other apps too. like, you know, it's hard to move the needle for our infrastructure because we're thousands of hours.But in TikTok and like some of these, and to a lesser extent, instagram can still like drive events that show up on our graphs, like what the hell is happening? we had one, it was a paid one car, like a kardashian driven one that obviously it's different because you're paying an influencer. but, but, but yeah, it's, it's, it's incredible.And maybe back to your point about it being organic, right. versus, or like earned, you could call it too. right. it's earned as organic. watching it and being there, you know, for, for us, the first party, like to, to take advantage of that, i think is as important as trying to be like, you know, creating your own content.Right. it'sMadison: 00:31:39Yeah. Yeah. I mean, it wouldn't have gone as well if we didn't have, a presence on the platform too. and i think that just goes to show that you should just be on the platforms and have a voice on the platforms for that moment. you shouldn't be just jumping on. i think there's probably like examples of that with other brands, like, the cranberry juice, like ocean spray stuff that happened.I don't think they had a presence on TikTok, but then they caught on real fast. but just imagine if they already did have a presence and then people would want to be posting about them more. but i think, yeah, just having a presence on there too, when that's all happening Jacob: 00:32:17Oh, i was trying to place the meeting. that was the guy with the skateboard,Madison: 00:32:19Yeah, that's the skateboard.Sorry. yeah, yeah. no, it's, it was really cool to see that all happen and, and be able to show numbers because everybody, i mean, on the team, has everybody in general has opinions on TikTok. and when you're able to actually just correlate these things with numbers, some people, the people that are number of people were just like mind blown.They love it. feel like this is great. Jacob: 00:32:47It sounds like the algorithm is very capricious though. it sounds like it's very kind of, even, even you even suggested that there's like intentional randomness, like progressive randomness.Madison: 00:32:57There's yeah, there is. but then there's also, i've made a video like the four years that i had captured kind of video where you have something playing in the back, like the app i have in the background and me just sharing my story. i've done that three times, i think. and every time it's done. So you, it, it also rewards you for doing the same thing over and over, which isn't a good thing and that's how you can get trapped, but it is a nice thing to lean on when you're like, we need a spike.Let's do this kind of video. David: 00:33:27Did you follow the, the widget smith and homescreen customization thing that blew up in the fall.Madison: 00:33:34Hm.David: 00:33:35Okay. i was just going to get your thoughts on that, but, yeah, i mean like, like jacob said, he blew up on TikTok inMadison: 00:33:43I know, i know what you're talking aboutDavid: 00:33:44Okay.Madison: 00:33:45I, yeah, yeah, yeah. when everybody was customizing their screens to make it like a theme and everything. David: 00:33:50Yep. yeah. and so that's what jacob was talking about a minute ago was that widget smith was, was kind of the center of all of that and, and, they use revenue, cat. and so it just blew up. But but that was kind of, just this crazy viral wave where, what i thought was so cool about how that happened. and, we talked about on the podcast, i want to go super into it, but, she basically gave it to tutorial of how to use the app, which is like the best onboarding you could ever hope for. you know, it's like, it is a complex thing to like go set up a widget. and, configure all these, this stuff to get the widgets, to show up correctly.And it it's all a hassle that you would typically, as a developer have to think, oh man, i need to onboard the user. i need to convince them that it's worth all of this hassle to get some reward out of it. and then she goes and like, i forget it was like 45 second video, maybe even 32nd video. it was like, here's how you do it.Damn like, or actually i think she said like, she showed that like homescreen at how cool and aesthetic it was. and then, then she showed how to do it. and then she, it was like, she, it was like this perfectly scripted marketing. onboarding thing of telling you how to do it, telling you the result, telling you it's worth doing, telling you, you know, it's worth the hassle of going through these steps and then showing you the steps.It was just amazing how it wasn't an ad. it was totally user generated, just ended up being the absolute perfect ad because it was user generated. and because it was user-generated she felt like she needed to explain it all and like tell that story. so yeah, it was just a, it was just a really fascinating little blur lip.And then, and then, you know, a lot of apps have been going viral because of TikTok. since then, i forget there was another, another one recently that was like super random, like some kind of calculator or something that got into the top 100 in the app store. Madison: 00:35:50Oh, that's cool. David: 00:35:51Yeah, so it's just crazy. Jacob: 00:35:53Have, you all, thought about product changes to try to incent that behavior, to like try and encourage folks to make video as a aside from you mentioned the like sharing thing, but there seems like there could be other ways to kind of. plant some more of those viral spikesMadison: 00:36:07Yeah. something that we're working on. i don't know if i'm actually probably allowed to say what it is because it's not yeah. even secret. We have things planned where we're thinking about it. yes, we do. we think about ways that we can incorporate it in the app. and we want to think about more ways. i mean, we've had.TikTokers that have influenced product changes to just even the ability to flip, like mirror their video. i don't know if you know what that trend is, but there was this, effect they had on tech talk that would mirror your face and it makes it look bizarre when you flip it for some reason it's a psychological thing.And so then everybody was telling us that we need to have a mirror button so they can flip it back the correct way. and we made that change when people were really happy. so we definitely listened to everybody on social about stuff. and yes, we do think about product changes and are trying to think about more for the future to encourage people to post, but definitely making sure that there's no, paywall with that too.Jacob: 00:37:12You know, if you want to make hay off of like organic or viral or something like that, it has to be, i've worked on several like viral, organic or viral cheri features like stuff like this, the only ones i've ever had be successful are the ones that are like core to the product, which means like, you have to think about it early.Right? you have to think about. early on. i mean, you can add stuff later, but like, unless it's like consequential or like it's easy or interesting, like it's not actually gonna get to that viral coefficient. that makes enough of a difference. but, but doing the product work in some ways, it's going to be higher leverage than like trying to make your end video.Right. Madison: 00:37:50Yeah. Jacob: 00:37:50Making the product more shareable. uh Madison: 00:37:52Yeah. We have those conversations and people try to loop in the marketing team to, and pick our brains about, hey, we heard about this product request and we want to know on a scale of one to 10, how important is this for the success of the app? and like, how much is it going to affect it? and we'll talk about it and be like, well, that filter is not really that important.You can hold off for like next summer or something. it's, it's having those conversations. they're really important. i think everybody on the team talks together about the features. David: 00:38:24What do you think are, are some other ways, and specifically going back to the algorithm that, that helps you stand out. yeah. like so aside from trend chasing, i know the like popular songs is one thing, right? because if you use the background audio from a video that was trending, the kind of audio trends separate from the video, right.Or separate from topics and things like that. are there any other kind of tips and tricks to, to help your video stand out? even if you're not, you know, doing specific kind of trenches.Madison: 00:39:03That's a difficult one. cause that kinda comes down to like you and your personality and what makes you different as well. and that's a really hard one that can take a long time to kind of flesh out. but if you're not trend chasing, it's kind of playing around with features in the app and kind of seeing new ways that you can play with it.I know i had a video on my own personal account that was using their voiceover effect that they have, where the text is read out by a woman. and i would misspell the names of like popular celebrities on purpose. and i found out that i could actually drag the misspelling out of the video. you couldn't see it, but it would still do.It and then i could put the actual person's name so i could make it seem like this voice is just completely butchering these names in the worst way. and it went viral. just like thinking of these like random ways that you can use these features or like tricks is really important and it's super fun.And people love it so i think, yeah, just diving into using the app itself. there's so many features that go on and new ways that you can use them. and that's how you stand out just kind of making like a little bit of a tweak to something Jacob: 00:40:15So i'll, you know, just to look into the future because if it, you know, having seen, having seen myspace and then now, then facebook become cool and not cool. and twitter, i think twitter is not cool anymore.Probably i don't know. now i'm on there. so now it's my social media of choice and i take talks.The rising. cool. like, do you have any, like, i mean, imagine you're in a multi-decade career of doing something along those lines, do you, do you think about, or imagine like what, what might be next? or like what the kids, what the kid on the bus might be talking about in, in, in five or 10 years?Madison: 00:40:50All the time. yeah, but they're, i mean, i have been on new platforms all the time too, and they just flop sometimes you'll think it's a great thing. but it's often because people think they're putting out something different and they're really not. it's just the same thing, but looks a little different, different colors maybe, or you can't force people to use an app.You can only get people to like naturally kind of come over there. and a lot of companies will pay people to come and use their app. Yeah. to try to get people to come over there and generate fake viewers or a fake users really. and that doesn't work either. so i do think about it a lot. i haven't quite seen that yet for what the new thing is.I think TikTok has stayed around a lot longer than i thought, because i remember talking about it with people at vidcon a couple of years ago, where we went, when do you think vidcon is going to go? just because we were all scared because of. vine when that i mean, dropped it affected so many people and it impacted them in a positive way too, because some people had already set their sights on, youtube or doing TikTok it's either you chose short form content or long form. so just being ready, don't have all your eggs in one basket. it's kind of like the big thing and be looking and just be aware of what's out there. it doesn't mean that the thing will be the next big thing. it just means you should be aware of it in case it does become a thing Jacob: 00:42:17Yeah, i would say like taking your company brand onto very unproven platforms is probably not a great use of time. right? like you want to wait until there's something there.Madison: 00:42:26Yeah, i think it's with, smaller teams. it's definitely us trying to think is an hour going to really be worth it, or is it really more well-spent if it's an hour of me making some tech talks in my apartment, probably the tech docs right now,David: 00:42:42Yeah,Madison: 00:42:42Of a random thing, but it's. David: 00:42:44But but how do you approach it set then? because there is value in the experimentation. i like seeing what's next. so do you kind of think okay, i'm going to waste. two hours this week, checking out new. i mean, you probably don't timebox it like that, but there is some value in that experimentation. how much are you time?Are you spending on that experimentation? it sounds like that's, i mean, that's kind of been a theme of this whole conversation is try this, try that, see what sticks, see what happens. so, and there's value in that. so how, how much, how do you kind of view that time? that you're. throwing stuff against the wall.Okay. Madison: 00:43:25It can really range and not just depends on what apps are out. there are a ceo caesar's awesome at being in the loop with the tech world and kind of seeing what platforms are being talked about on twitter. so twitter still is a relevant thing for people talking. yeah, it is. Jacob: 00:43:42Early millennials, Madison: 00:43:44Yeah, Jacob: 00:43:45Out of anything relevant, Madison: 00:43:46Exactly. like, he sent us apps that were like, whoa, this is really cool. and even if it's not something that blows up, it can still help us with our app too. and like internally. yeah. we're like, that's a really cool onboarding video. i've never seen anything like that. that's super helpful.And that, that's just the team being curious about stuff. and i think that's so important. also, if you're in social media, you should just be, i mean, on social media and i am definitely on social media way too much, but that's what i do with my own time too. i'm not like making an account for 1 Second Everyday on every new platform that exists and like trying it out.I'm trying it out on my own own time sometimes like on my own account. and that's the best way is just to see how you like it and how it's working for you and your friends to you. i can't remember what the app was called. it's like paparazzi. i think maybe that's what it's called. Yeah. Jacob: 00:44:42Now went viral for four days or Madison: 00:44:44Right. went viral for four days or whatever. and it was great. and we were like, well, this is so cool. that's like one of the onboarding videos that were like, this is awesome. it's got like the, the phone was vibrating and stuff while you were like going through this onboarding experience. so it was so cool.We didn't stick with it, but that's also because we're like, we don't have as many friends as like a bunch of kids do. so maybe that's a different experience in their world. maybe they're all talking about it more. yeah, i think just getting on it and seeing it can be a valuable thing and using it for your own time and actually creating content on the platform is important.Jacob: 00:45:20It's not too dissimilar from how developers use new, like coding tools. right? like you try it for side projects. i mean, it's one channel for revenue. cat's talking about our own growth is like, we want to make sure. selling into bigger older companies. it's a little, sometimes it's taken longer route. we'll do it now, but like it's much easier to win.Like yeah. they'll like inconsequential or less consequential side project. and then, you know, ramp that into something bigger later, right.Madison: 00:45:45Yeah.Jacob: 00:45:46That is sometimes a better place for that experimentation. David: 00:45:49It's funny. i would say here. an app developers perspective. so we have the tools guy, the social media person at me and me is the app, focus. So exactly what you were saying is, is how you want to prove out your own app. like i've had apps where i send out a beta and people stop using it like a couple of days later.And so, you know, when you go onto this social media platform and you're trying it and your own personal use just drops off. then it's clear, it's not a sticky where most people would get on TikTok. it's like they're hooked and they're going. Jacob: 00:46:22Will not open the damn thing.Is to get, like, i got twitter enough in my life through ruining it. like i don't David: 00:46:29Yeah. Jacob: 00:46:30Other one. yeah. David: 00:46:31But for, but for the developers out there, you know, when you send out a beta, you know, your beta people might not be your exact target market, but you should have some level of like stickiness. in, in the app signs of product market fit. but anyways, i do want to talk a little bit and we need, we're getting short on time, but, you're launching a new community, feature with a community manager. or tell me about that. because i actually don't know all the detailsMadison: 00:47:01Yeah. I think you mean brand ambassador program, is that correct? that's what you're talking about. cause i kind of, i, yeah i had announced that on the panel that day that we were launching that and we. had over to just like 200 applications for people to join our brand ambassador team. and we have a marketing team of three people to manage that team.So we had to narrow it down a lot, unfortunately, but we had, you know, over 200 people submitting videos of why they wanted to be on this team. and this team is for us to be able to connect with people in the community, to kind of just start a brand ambassador program, because we've always wanted to do that.It's been talked about forever, so we just made the leap and we narrowed it down to, 26 people and announced them last week. and so we're getting them all onboarded and ready to go. and we've got like people from all over the world that are ready make some content about 1 Second Everyday but that's kind of the thing is they get, you know, connections with us and can have impacts within the app as well as like free merch and things like that, that are really fun.And then. we get some content from them in exchange, which is kind of like user-generated and hopefully we'll be successful and we'll see some like, really cool things from them. we're just excited to see what they create. David: 00:48:24So, so the, so the, goal is, is to be more directly connected with some of the people who are already creating content in the space. and then, and it's not a paid gig. it's, it's a, they, like you said, they get paid in, in, in merge, and, but i imagine that that's not. Jacob: 00:48:46March. you can't put a dollar value onMadison: 00:48:48Right? yes. Yes. exclusive. David: 00:48:50What, what, i mean, what was the pitch to them specifically?Madison: 00:48:54Yeah. The pitch to people, in general, was to be a part of the community to identify as a 1 Second Everyday fan, which we've got a lot of big super fans out there, who've been using the app for eight years to, you know, a year and they just love it. And they just want to be a part of that and really kind of make their own with it.If they're a writer, they can submit a blog post if they want. If they really like social media, they can focus on TikToks to make for us to post and kind of help give them shout outs. They just really want to have experience some of these kids are, some of them are like kids that want marketing experience.Some people are older that are just like, I love this app so much. And I promise I will make the coolest videos for you. And here's like what I do. And they're just so jazzed about it. And they're going to get like the younger people that are newer to the app, really excited, guided. So we're just excited to see them interact and everything.And then get content and like new ideas because I'm just a one person making stuff for social media. And I want to see kind of what people naturally make. We're not trying to force them to make anything. We're not telling them that they have to make this kind of video. It's just whatever they want to do.And then they can discuss within the community. Jacob: 00:50:11So, I'd like to take this opportunity to announce the RevenueCat brand ambassador program.David, figure out the details.David: 00:50:18Oh, thanks. Jacob: 00:50:19I don't know what this is just the sort it out for me.David: 00:50:22No, this is blowing my mind though. I mean, and again, the whole reason I wanted to have you on the podcast is you just are thinking so differently. I know brand ambassador is it, I just I've seen brand ambassadors. I know the general idea, you know, but I just never would have thought it could work for an app.So it's so cool that y'all are just trying this new thing and having users help with your marketing.Madison: 00:50:46Yeah. David: 00:50:47Then being so like thrilled to do it. That's just incredible. Jacob: 00:50:49So much better too, than like a bunch of like stale Facebook ads degenerated on Fiverr, right?Madison: 00:50:59Yeah. That's mostly how people find out about our app is through word of mouth and people posting about us. So it only made sense. And we knew it was the right time because we had all these people asking if we had a brand investor profile. And that's kind of like how we sold it to the team too, is being like, hey, people are asking, people are interested. This is the time to do it. And just try it. There's nothing to lose. Let's go for it. See what happens. And then hopefully from there, we'll be able to just keep growing it.David: 00:51:30Yeah. Madison: 00:51:31Like awesome connection with our user base.David: 00:51:34And what's been so cool about doing this podcast and talking to so many folks is that different things just click for different people. So, if you're listening to this podcast and you have an app that isn't content heavy, you know, maybe social media is not the perfect fit for you. And maybe you're not going to be able to have brand amabassadors and things like that.But the point is you don't just have to buy ads on Facebook. There are so many different avenues to explore, and this is one really cool way to do something different, and to very cost-effectively grow without just dumping money into ads. So it's so cool. And we do need to wrap up. Is there anything else you wanted to share?We're going to put links to your TikTok and 1 Second Everyday. But anything else you wanted to share as we wrap up?Madison: 00:52:23No, I think that's it. Thanks so much for having me. I had a really fun time talking about all this with you guys. This is my passion, so it's great to chat.David: 00:52:33Well, thanks so much for your time. This is super insightful.Jacob: 00:52:36Yeah, thank you. Madison: 00:52:37Thank you.

Atelier-Talk

So findest du uns:https://www.atelier-talk.com/https://www.instagram.com/ateliertalkhttps://stephanie-huellmann.com/https://www.instagram.com/stephaniehuellmannhttps://www.ninagebke.com/https://www.instagram.com/with_love_nina/So kannst du direkt Kontakt mit uns aufnehmen:art@stephaniehuellmann.comhello@ninagebke.comAuf unserer Webseite findest du viele Fotos zu den Projekten, von denen Nina und Steffi sprechen!Nina sprach am Anfang der Episode von ihren Familienprojekten, dazu gehören mehrmals im Jahr das "Day in your Life" Projekt. Ausführlich schreibt sie darüber noch etwas auf der Website, wie es dadurch u.a. dazu kam, dass sie ihr Business gegründet hat und wie sehr es ihr schon immer darum ging, Frauen, Mütter, bei sich selbst angefangen, ins Bild zu bringen und ihre täglichen Mühen, die Anstrengungen und die Liebe und das Miteinander zwischen Müttern und Kindern in den Fokus zu stellen.Steffi hat von ihrem 100-Tage-Projekt erzählt und zeigt Bilder.Ein 100-Tage-Projekt kann man für sich selbst jederzeit beschließen und beginnen. Wenn man sich einer Community anschließen möchte, dann gibt es die Möglichkeit, dies über die offizielle Webseite zu tun. Dieses Projekt wird auf Instagram intensiv beworben und unterstützt und kann viel Spaß machen. Schau mal unter dem Hashtag #100dayproject oder #100dayproject2021, dann findest du viele aktuelle Beiträge.Auf Atelier-Talk.com teilt Steffi auch noch einmal Gedanken über das 100-Tage-Projekt.Ein Beispiel aus Steffi's aktuellem 365-Tage-Projekt “Unsicherheiten” (das mit dem Kaffeesatz!) findest du auch auf der Website - was das mit Steffi macht, und wohin es sie vielleicht führen wird, erzählt sie in der Episode.“Ein Tag am Strand” ist ein Beispiel für eine ihrer Arbeiten als in sich abgeschlossenes Projekt.Nina hat ausserdem von folgenden Projekten erzählt:- "1-sec-a-day": die App, mit der man Videos von einer Sekunde aneinander fügen kann, heißt “1 Second Everyday” und man findet sie unter diesem Titel im App-Store und natürlich auch bei Google Play.- analoges Fotografieren: Nina fotografiert immer noch gerne analog und hat im letzten Jahr das Projekt "analoger Sommer" gemacht, diese Bilder sind in diesem schönen Album von Rosemood gelandet.- Selbstporträt Projekt: auf der Website zeigt Nina Bilder- Lockdown Diaries: wie kann man im Winter-Lockdown die heimische Situation fotografisch erzählen, ohne immer wieder dieselben Bilder zu machen? Auf der Website findest du Bilder. Nina zeigt dieses Projekt in Auszügen auch auf Instagram.Am Ende der Episode erwähnt Nina die DFAs, die Documentary Family Awards, einer der wichtigsten Auszeichnungen in der Dokumentarischen Familien Fotografie. Auf der Website kannst du alle bisher ausgezeichneten Fotograf:innen finden, es macht wahnsinnig viel Spaß, durch die Galerien zu stöbern. Der Call for entries hat gestartet für die erste von zwei Auszeichnungsrunden 2021. Nina hat im Jahr 2019 zwei Auszeichnungen erhalten.

MicroConf On Air
Mentorship for SaaS Founder with John Knox

MicroConf On Air

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 18, 2021 27:22


Mentorship for SaaS Founders can mean the difference between the slow SaaS ramp of death and making the critical changes to your process that helps get you to consistent growth. https://microconfonair.com John Knox is a repeat Angel Investor in some of the most successful mobile and SaaS brands, including Summit, Branch, and 1 Second Everyday. He is a current Mentor for TinySeed, and his insights and network are huge assets to the companies he provides mentorship for. - Do you follow up on the people you help with a specific problem to see how it went and find further opportunities to help? How do organize this? - Any recommendations on how to become more coachable? - Can you talk about what’s in it for the mentor if they're not an investor? ​- How formal are the mentorships you're talking about? Is there an equity split, consistent scheduled meetings, or is it more informal? - I am at the MVP stage and in the process of promoting my SaaS. It’s going slowly due to lack of budget. Any thoughts on how to speed up growth on a budget? MicroConf Remote (https://microconfremote.com) is on sale! The event is scheduled for March 23 - 25 from 11:00 AM - 12:30 PM EST Daily. MicroConf Connect ➡️ http://microconfconnect.comTwitter ➡️ https://twitter.com/MicroConfE-mail ➡️ support@microconf.com MicroConf 2021 Headline Partners Stripehttps://stripe.comTwitter ➡️ https://twitter.com/Stripe Heyhttps://hey.comTwitter ➡️ https://twitter.com/heyhey

MicroConf On Air
Mentorship for SaaS Founder with John Knox

MicroConf On Air

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 18, 2021 27:22


Mentorship for SaaS Founders can mean the difference between the slow SaaS ramp of death and making the critical changes to your process that helps get you to consistent growth. https://microconfonair.com John Knox is a repeat Angel Investor in some of the most successful mobile and SaaS brands, including Summit, Branch, and 1 Second Everyday. He is a current Mentor for TinySeed, and his insights and network are huge assets to the companies he provides mentorship for. - Do you follow up on the people you help with a specific problem to see how it went and find further opportunities to help? How do organize this? - Any recommendations on how to become more coachable? - Can you talk about what’s in it for the mentor if they're not an investor? ​- How formal are the mentorships you're talking about? Is there an equity split, consistent scheduled meetings, or is it more informal? - I am at the MVP stage and in the process of promoting my SaaS. It’s going slowly due to lack of budget. Any thoughts on how to speed up growth on a budget? MicroConf Remote (https://microconfremote.com) is on sale! The event is scheduled for March 23 - 25 from 11:00 AM - 12:30 PM EST Daily. MicroConf Connect ➡️ http://microconfconnect.comTwitter ➡️ https://twitter.com/MicroConfE-mail ➡️ support@microconf.com MicroConf 2021 Headline Partners Stripehttps://stripe.comTwitter ➡️ https://twitter.com/Stripe Heyhttps://hey.comTwitter ➡️ https://twitter.com/heyhey

Raised Wrong
Unimaginable. Disgraceful. Shocking.

Raised Wrong

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 18, 2021 78:01


Topics include giant hoodies (Part II), bone broth, the 1 Second Everyday app, seasonal depression, being rejected by Matt LeBlanc, saying adieu to Parler, the insurrection, and fighting over NFL football. Plus, we give you 3 out of the 50 Ways To Be A Better Girlfriend from a 2005 issue of Cosmopolitan magazine. And finally, we F**k/Marry/Kill three of the trendiest millennial foods.

Remote Takes
Episode 10: Wonder Woman 84 (2020) / A Scanner Darkly (2006)

Remote Takes

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 2, 2021 72:17 Transcription Available


Tony & Jeremy review Wonder Woman 84 (2020) starring Gal Gadot, Chris Pine & Kristen Wiig. In the second half Jeremy gives his opinion of one of Tony's favorite movies A Scanner Darkly (2006). Chapters: Current Talk: 1 Second Everyday (00:34) Wonder Woman 84 (2020) Review (12:50) A Scanner Darkly (2006) Discussion (49:32) The clips featured in this podcast were for critical review and parody, which are protected under the Fair Use laws of the United States Copyright Act of 1976. All rights are reserved and acknowledged. Show Notes: 1 Second Everyday App Wonder Woman 84 (2020) Rottentomatoes.com A Scanner Darkly (2006) Rottentomatoes.com

Growth Podcast
Your Past and Future Self

Growth Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 24, 2020 11:41


Journaling / Archiving Decision Journals FutureMe.org 1 Second Everyday (app) Narrative (wearable tech) 8th grade (film) Mindful Review by Tasshin Fogleman (article) and Mental Calendar by Lebran Sar (article) Concepts The riddle of experience vs. memory by Daniel Kahneman (video) What's This All About Journaling? by Hayley Phelan (article) Do more good in less time: productivity hacks by A.J. Jacobs (video) Why Life Seems to Speed Up as We Age by Derek Alexander Muller (Veritasium) (video) Feeling Good: The New Mood Therapy by David D. Burns (amazon goodreads): "...you're the only person in the world who can effectively persecute yourself. ... Would you be so cruel to someone else?" Music Intro music: Vlog Music Cafe Type Hip-Hop Instrumental Chill Lo-Fi Beat by Oliwia Orłowska Outro music: Game Over [Super Mario World Lofi/hiphop remix] by Neighborhood Vandal Transcript available at https://benpence.com/podcast/your-past-and-future-self

Culturally Relevant with David Chen
Helping People Remember (Pandemic) Life for 1 Second Everyday (with Cesar Kuriyama)

Culturally Relevant with David Chen

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 30, 2020 74:39


David chats with Cesar Kuriyama, the founder and CEO of 1 Second Everyday, about how he created a company that helps people make a movie out of their lives and how his company has fared during the pandemic.Support me on Patreon!Links:Learn more about 1 Second EverydayWatch Cesar's TED TalkWatch Cesar's cool music videoWatch/Read about David's reflections on 1 Second Everyday Weekly Recommendations:The Renner FilesThe Three Body ProblemLet me know your feedback for the podcast by emailing culturallyrelevantshow(AT)gmail(DOT)com.Follow the show on Twitter.Find every episode of the show at CulturallyRelevantShow.com.This episode was produced and edited by David Chen and powered by Simplecast.

The Ones Who Succeed
1 Second Everyday Founder Cesar Kuriyama | Episode 23

The Ones Who Succeed

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 22, 2020 38:46


This week on the program, a conversation with Cesar Kuriyama, the founder of 1 Second Everyday. What started as a TED Talk back in 2013 featuring Cesar's experience capturing 1 second of his life every day for an entire year, eventually turned into a mobile app enabling 1 Second Everyday users all over the world to do the same. Today, 1 Second Everyday has over 20 employees and is beloved as a modern-day diary, enabling users like myself to preserve and remember every captured day of their lives, one second at a time. This conversation was recorded on June 16th, 2020, thank you for listening :)

founders ted talks second everyday cesar kuriyama
The Lazy Genius Podcast
#148 - Making Memories Like a Lazy Genius

The Lazy Genius Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 9, 2020 18:28


We put a lot of pressure on ourselves to mark moments, make memories, and give our kids something to remember. Even if you don’t have kids, there’s still a high cultural premium on memories. Scrapbooking, photo albums, daily journals, the Gram. But if we try to manufacture memories, mechanize them, we’ll get overwhelmed by something that our brains already do. Let’s make memories like a Lazy Genius. Helpful Companion Links You can listen to Ten Steps to Creating Your Own Traditions (even if it’s geared a little bit towards holidays) here. Laura Tremaine’s family doing Sunday pancakes is a great example of a simple, but powerful memory-making practice. She also hosts a great podcast called 10 Things To Tell You. My favorite app for documenting with video is 1 Second Everyday. I also use a five-year journal (affiliate link) with a couple of lines for every day with space for five years. More info on Chatbooks, which we use to print photos of our kids from Instagram. Speaking of Instagram, I’ll be there on Thursday around noon EST to talk live about making memories. I’d love for you to join me. Download a transcript of this episode! See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

Bright & Early
Schöneck Shoaf: Remote Work at 1 Second Everyday

Bright & Early

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 8, 2020 49:21


This episode is part of a series on Remote Work. I'm talking to leaders of remote companies about the pros and cons of working remotely, the most common challenges that remote-first teams face and how to overcome them. Issues like communication, hiring, loneliness and isolation, figuring out timezones, et cetera. Today I talk to Schöneck Shoaf, the COO and co-founder of 1 Second Everyday, a mobile app that lets you record one second every day and then edits those seconds together to create a single spell-binding movie of your life.

Indie Hackers
#141 – Bootstrapping an App to Millions Through Sheer Persistence with Cesar Kuriyama of 1 Second Everyday

Indie Hackers

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 2, 2020 93:36


When Cesar Kuriyama (@cesarkuriyama) first got started, he had nothing but a dream of freedom, an app idea, and a rapidly declining bank account. When every dev shop in New York City turned him down, things looked dire. But through sheer persistence and a penchant to seize every opportunity in front of him, Cesar managed to create an experience that people loved, give a talk on the TED main stage, launch a successful Kickstarter campaign, bootstrap his app to millions of dollars in revenue, and even get it featured in a Jon Favreau movie. In this episode we break down Cesar's improbable path to success, and in the process discover why you should never give up as a founder.Transcript, speaker information, and more: https://www.indiehackers.com/podcast/141-cesar-kuriyama-of-1-second-everyday

Tech Plus Books
Special Holiday Episode: Tech + Books Holiday Gift Guide

Tech Plus Books

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 29, 2019 19:54


Need gift ideas for your bookish or tech-y friends? We have ideas. Book/Audiobook Subscription Services Libro.fm https://libro.fm/holiday Click here for a referral code.  Little Heirloom Books https://littleheirloombooks.com/ https://www.mysubscriptionaddiction.com/best-subscription-boxes/best-book-boxes Book and Tech Themed Clothes & Stuff Svaha USA (https://svahausa.com/)  Click here for a referral code. Litographs (https://www.litographs.com/) Out of Print (https://outofprint.com/) Isotoner SmarTouch Gloves (https://www.isotoner.com/c/smartouch-gloves?viewAll=true) More Ideas Book Riot: Best Books for Book Lovers (https://bookriot.com/2018/09/21/best-gifts-for-book-lovers/) Gift Ideas that are Experiences (https://www.huffpost.com/entry/holiday-gifts-experiences_n_5c004c79e4b0864f4f6b988c) LinkedIn Learning (https://www.linkedin.com/learning/) Unemployed Philosopher's Guild (https://philosophersguild.com/) Zero Waste Nerd (https://zerowastenerd.com/01-zero-waste-gift-ideas) https://www.stasherbag.com/collections/bundle Ring Doorbell (https://ring.com/) Mini Bluetooth Speaker Book Lamp (https://shop.hellolumio.com/) Make a Video/Digitize Old Videos 1 Second Everyday (https://1se.co/) Shampoo Bars https://unwrappedlife.com/collections/wildcrafted-hair-bars https://www.lushusa.com/hair/shampoo-bars/?gclid=Cj0KCQiAoIPvBRDgARIsAHsCw0-YEmV75E12VcOoaOObMNMj6Vkgm8XF7JgkGILS35jmfSGyJpYqFwQaAjYiEALw_wcB --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/techplusbooks/message

Ruby Rogues
RR 434: Surviving Webpack with Ross Kaffenberger

Ruby Rogues

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 15, 2019 83:43


Ross Kaffenberger is a software engineer at Stitch Fix and has been developing web applications for the past 12 years, mostly in Ruby and JavaScript. Today he and the panel are discussing how to survive Webpack. When many folks first encounter Webpack, they feel confused, overwhelmed, and don’t know how to get it to do what you want it to. In the latest version they tried to introduce some more sane default settings, but it is still a major change in technology.  Ross talks about how his company transitioned Rails 5 to Rails 6 with the new Webpacker. His company chose to take an iterative approach and slowly migrated to Webpacker. His app was very JS heavy with a large number of libraries, many of which were not very Webpack friendly. They chose to separate out the vendor libraries into a separate bundle, that way they could contain each deploy. They still had to add some configuration, especially to make things available on global scope.As they started moving jQuery plugins over, sometimes the functionality would disappear, and Ross talks about how they figured out their mistakes. It was difficult for them to get out of their Sprockets mindset and into the new mindset of Webpack, which requires different techniques. There are also things that Webpack can do to keep you out of that situation Ross gives some strategy advice for someone who is in a position to update from Sprockets to Webpack. It’s important to consider your app size, your comfort level with Webpack, your team dynamic, and your timeframe. Ross recommends the iterative approach that they took, which took longer, but allowed them to learn as they went.  Ross talks about the changes that happened in the switch from Webpack 3 to Webpack 4, and some of the contributions they made. He talks about some of his preferred Webpack configs and plugins. They discuss some of the drawbacks of Webpack, particularly the plethora of plugins that can make it seem daunting.  One of the big gotchas with Webpack is the location of your source code. When you install Webpack for the first time, create a JS folder under App, it will place a ‘application.js’ file in another file called ‘Packs”. The idea of that pack file (application.js file under Packs) is that it’s the entry point for all of the JS that you’re going to add to your Webpack build. But if you add additional files to that Pack folder, Webpacker will instruct Webpack to treat each of those files as a separate entry point in a dependency graph. Make sure that only files that are intended to be the entry points for your Webpack builds are in that packs folder.  It is also important to understand how you’re using global scope inside your JavaScript modules in your build. There’s a way to allow Webpack to inspect each of the files for a certain variable, such as a dollar sign. If he could go back and do it again, Ross would not split his code manually, but instead Embrace the notion that Webpack understands how to do code splitting for you, as long as instruct it to do it the right way. Ultimately, it took Ross’ company 3 rather tedious months to transition to Webpack. It could’ve gone faster if they’d known more about Webpack to begin with. The panel discusses whether it was worth it to switch to Webpack. Transitioning to Webpack has changed their team dynamic and their day to day coding and debugging. One nice feature of Webpack is the source maps that aid in debugging. There are still areas for improvement, but now that it’s set up most folks on the team don’t think about it. Overall, the development experience has improved, and he thinks it was worth it, but it’s not for everybody. Panelists Dave Kimura Andrew Mason Nate Hopkins Charles Max Wood With special guest: Ross Kaffenberger Sponsors Sentry use the code “devchat” for 2 months free on Sentry’s small plan Cloud 66 - Pain Free Rails Deployments Try Cloud 66 Rails for FREE & get $66 free credits with promo code RubyRogues Views on Vue Links Webpack Webpacker Sprockets  Knockout.js CKEditor Chosen Webpack Bundle Analyzer Manifest.json Module shimming SplitChunksPlugin Vue Follow DevChatTV on Facebook and Twitter Picks Dave Kimura: Avengers Quinjet Lego set Portable air conditioner Nate Hopkins: MDN JavaScript Reference Brandon Sanderson’s Mistborn series  Charles Max Wood: Restream Twitch OBS Ross Kaffenberger:  Exploring ES6 1 Second Everyday One Sentence Journal Follow Ross on Twitter and Github, and on his blog

All Ruby Podcasts by Devchat.tv
RR 434: Surviving Webpack with Ross Kaffenberger

All Ruby Podcasts by Devchat.tv

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 15, 2019 83:43


Ross Kaffenberger is a software engineer at Stitch Fix and has been developing web applications for the past 12 years, mostly in Ruby and JavaScript. Today he and the panel are discussing how to survive Webpack. When many folks first encounter Webpack, they feel confused, overwhelmed, and don’t know how to get it to do what you want it to. In the latest version they tried to introduce some more sane default settings, but it is still a major change in technology.  Ross talks about how his company transitioned Rails 5 to Rails 6 with the new Webpacker. His company chose to take an iterative approach and slowly migrated to Webpacker. His app was very JS heavy with a large number of libraries, many of which were not very Webpack friendly. They chose to separate out the vendor libraries into a separate bundle, that way they could contain each deploy. They still had to add some configuration, especially to make things available on global scope.As they started moving jQuery plugins over, sometimes the functionality would disappear, and Ross talks about how they figured out their mistakes. It was difficult for them to get out of their Sprockets mindset and into the new mindset of Webpack, which requires different techniques. There are also things that Webpack can do to keep you out of that situation Ross gives some strategy advice for someone who is in a position to update from Sprockets to Webpack. It’s important to consider your app size, your comfort level with Webpack, your team dynamic, and your timeframe. Ross recommends the iterative approach that they took, which took longer, but allowed them to learn as they went.  Ross talks about the changes that happened in the switch from Webpack 3 to Webpack 4, and some of the contributions they made. He talks about some of his preferred Webpack configs and plugins. They discuss some of the drawbacks of Webpack, particularly the plethora of plugins that can make it seem daunting.  One of the big gotchas with Webpack is the location of your source code. When you install Webpack for the first time, create a JS folder under App, it will place a ‘application.js’ file in another file called ‘Packs”. The idea of that pack file (application.js file under Packs) is that it’s the entry point for all of the JS that you’re going to add to your Webpack build. But if you add additional files to that Pack folder, Webpacker will instruct Webpack to treat each of those files as a separate entry point in a dependency graph. Make sure that only files that are intended to be the entry points for your Webpack builds are in that packs folder.  It is also important to understand how you’re using global scope inside your JavaScript modules in your build. There’s a way to allow Webpack to inspect each of the files for a certain variable, such as a dollar sign. If he could go back and do it again, Ross would not split his code manually, but instead Embrace the notion that Webpack understands how to do code splitting for you, as long as instruct it to do it the right way. Ultimately, it took Ross’ company 3 rather tedious months to transition to Webpack. It could’ve gone faster if they’d known more about Webpack to begin with. The panel discusses whether it was worth it to switch to Webpack. Transitioning to Webpack has changed their team dynamic and their day to day coding and debugging. One nice feature of Webpack is the source maps that aid in debugging. There are still areas for improvement, but now that it’s set up most folks on the team don’t think about it. Overall, the development experience has improved, and he thinks it was worth it, but it’s not for everybody. Panelists Dave Kimura Andrew Mason Nate Hopkins Charles Max Wood With special guest: Ross Kaffenberger Sponsors Sentry use the code “devchat” for 2 months free on Sentry’s small plan Cloud 66 - Pain Free Rails Deployments Try Cloud 66 Rails for FREE & get $66 free credits with promo code RubyRogues Views on Vue Links Webpack Webpacker Sprockets  Knockout.js CKEditor Chosen Webpack Bundle Analyzer Manifest.json Module shimming SplitChunksPlugin Vue Follow DevChatTV on Facebook and Twitter Picks Dave Kimura: Avengers Quinjet Lego set Portable air conditioner Nate Hopkins: MDN JavaScript Reference Brandon Sanderson’s Mistborn series  Charles Max Wood: Restream Twitch OBS Ross Kaffenberger:  Exploring ES6 1 Second Everyday One Sentence Journal Follow Ross on Twitter and Github, and on his blog

Devchat.tv Master Feed
RR 434: Surviving Webpack with Ross Kaffenberger

Devchat.tv Master Feed

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 15, 2019 83:43


Ross Kaffenberger is a software engineer at Stitch Fix and has been developing web applications for the past 12 years, mostly in Ruby and JavaScript. Today he and the panel are discussing how to survive Webpack. When many folks first encounter Webpack, they feel confused, overwhelmed, and don’t know how to get it to do what you want it to. In the latest version they tried to introduce some more sane default settings, but it is still a major change in technology.  Ross talks about how his company transitioned Rails 5 to Rails 6 with the new Webpacker. His company chose to take an iterative approach and slowly migrated to Webpacker. His app was very JS heavy with a large number of libraries, many of which were not very Webpack friendly. They chose to separate out the vendor libraries into a separate bundle, that way they could contain each deploy. They still had to add some configuration, especially to make things available on global scope.As they started moving jQuery plugins over, sometimes the functionality would disappear, and Ross talks about how they figured out their mistakes. It was difficult for them to get out of their Sprockets mindset and into the new mindset of Webpack, which requires different techniques. There are also things that Webpack can do to keep you out of that situation Ross gives some strategy advice for someone who is in a position to update from Sprockets to Webpack. It’s important to consider your app size, your comfort level with Webpack, your team dynamic, and your timeframe. Ross recommends the iterative approach that they took, which took longer, but allowed them to learn as they went.  Ross talks about the changes that happened in the switch from Webpack 3 to Webpack 4, and some of the contributions they made. He talks about some of his preferred Webpack configs and plugins. They discuss some of the drawbacks of Webpack, particularly the plethora of plugins that can make it seem daunting.  One of the big gotchas with Webpack is the location of your source code. When you install Webpack for the first time, create a JS folder under App, it will place a ‘application.js’ file in another file called ‘Packs”. The idea of that pack file (application.js file under Packs) is that it’s the entry point for all of the JS that you’re going to add to your Webpack build. But if you add additional files to that Pack folder, Webpacker will instruct Webpack to treat each of those files as a separate entry point in a dependency graph. Make sure that only files that are intended to be the entry points for your Webpack builds are in that packs folder.  It is also important to understand how you’re using global scope inside your JavaScript modules in your build. There’s a way to allow Webpack to inspect each of the files for a certain variable, such as a dollar sign. If he could go back and do it again, Ross would not split his code manually, but instead Embrace the notion that Webpack understands how to do code splitting for you, as long as instruct it to do it the right way. Ultimately, it took Ross’ company 3 rather tedious months to transition to Webpack. It could’ve gone faster if they’d known more about Webpack to begin with. The panel discusses whether it was worth it to switch to Webpack. Transitioning to Webpack has changed their team dynamic and their day to day coding and debugging. One nice feature of Webpack is the source maps that aid in debugging. There are still areas for improvement, but now that it’s set up most folks on the team don’t think about it. Overall, the development experience has improved, and he thinks it was worth it, but it’s not for everybody. Panelists Dave Kimura Andrew Mason Nate Hopkins Charles Max Wood With special guest: Ross Kaffenberger Sponsors Sentry use the code “devchat” for 2 months free on Sentry’s small plan Cloud 66 - Pain Free Rails Deployments Try Cloud 66 Rails for FREE & get $66 free credits with promo code RubyRogues Views on Vue Links Webpack Webpacker Sprockets  Knockout.js CKEditor Chosen Webpack Bundle Analyzer Manifest.json Module shimming SplitChunksPlugin Vue Follow DevChatTV on Facebook and Twitter Picks Dave Kimura: Avengers Quinjet Lego set Portable air conditioner Nate Hopkins: MDN JavaScript Reference Brandon Sanderson’s Mistborn series  Charles Max Wood: Restream Twitch OBS Ross Kaffenberger:  Exploring ES6 1 Second Everyday One Sentence Journal Follow Ross on Twitter and Github, and on his blog

ごりゅごcast
今あえてiTunesでiPhoneのデータ移行をやった 333

ごりゅごcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 2, 2019 7:17


iPhoneのデータ移行にあえて今iTunesを使った 新しいiPhoneを新規で設定 一部のデータだけ引き継ぎたい たすくま 1 Second Everyday 今回の話題についての詳しい内容や補足リンクはこちらから確認できます。 感想や質問、リクエストなどはTwitterのハッシュタグ #ごりゅごcast にお送りください。Anchorからのボイスメッセージも受け付けています。 収録機材や収録方法、各配信の概要などはScrapboxにて詳細を公開しています。 ごりゅごcast on Scrapbox

iphone anchor second everyday
10K Dollar Day
60: Pay No Attention to the Girls Behind the Table with Melanie Simpson!

10K Dollar Day

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 12, 2019 76:47


INTRO: (00:00) It's our latest Youtube Companion Episode. Go check it out! It's our first time to have a guest googler on a live video recording, which means there are THREE of us on camera drinking wine. OBSESSIONS: (06:58) Lulu is obsessed with the 1 Second Everyday app. Melanie is obsessed with the Netflix show Tidying Up with Marie Kondo. She's the one who released that book, The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up.WISHLIST: (13:27) Alison's wishlist comes true...she wished for a wine foil cutter, which guest googler Melanie gave to her today. Melanie is wishing for a handheld mixer. Alison is drunk on Amazon so adds it to her cart to send to Melanie. Don't drink and Amazon, folks.LULU’S 10K DAY - ISTANBUL, TURKEY: (16:43) Lulu visits the only city in the world that spans two continents. It is both in Asia and Europe. Lulu stays at Raffles Istanbul, and gets a suite with access to their concierge club. Lulu wants to find all the sweets at the Grand Bazaar. For lunch Lulu heads to afternoon tea at Lavinia Lounge. A very short rendition of "Istanbul (Not Constantinople)" introduces Lulu's goal of bringing the song back. It involves #notconstantinople banners and a photographer from Shoot My Travel to take pictures. Finally, Lulu heads to Agatha Christie's favorite room at the Pera Palace to read her $4,000 first edition of Murder on the Orient Express.MELANIE’S 10K DAY - FIJI: (47:32) A shopping spree at Everything But Water prepares our guest googler for her trip to the Fijian Mamanuca Islands. She stays at Castaway Island Fiji, the island where the movie Castaway was filmed. Melanie adopts sharks at My Fiji Sharks, which she hopes to see later on her Fiji Shark Dive. The Shell Market Excursion with a traditional kava ceremony is followed by the Modriki Tour with champagne brunch, Lastly, Melanie grabbed dinner at the 1808 Restaurant.Read more about this episode and the cities we visited here.CHARITIES: (1:07:58)Small Projects IstanbulShark Reef Marine ReserveFOLLOW US:FacebookInstagramYoutubeTwitterWebsiteApple PodcastsGoogle PodcastsSpotifyStitcherSupport the show (https://www.patreon.com/10KDollarDay/)

She's All Fat: A Body Positive Podcast
Episode 3.1: @ Our Thin Friends

She's All Fat: A Body Positive Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 6, 2018 65:31


This week we discuss thin allyship, Mitski, and routing for everybody black.   This episode of She’s All Fat is also sponsored by 1 Second Everyday, a video diary app that helps you create, remember, and share your life story, 1 second at a time. The app is free in the Google Play Store and $4.99 in The App Store. Start capturing memories today! Future you will thank you.   We are an independent production. If you’d like to support the work we do,  you can join our Patreon by visiting patreon.com/shesallfatpod.  When you pledge to be a supporter, you’ll get all sorts of goodies like our Patreon-only Facebook Group and extra content.   If you are interested in the perks available to our Patrons but you are not able to afford the monthly contribution, apply for our Patreon Scholarship! If you are a member of the Fatmily interested in becoming a sponsor, contact us here.   Every week, Sophie and April listen to a pump up song to get them ready to record! Listen to this week’s pump up song here.   Need advice? Email/send voice memo to fyi@shesallfatpod.com.   Follow us! Twitter / Instagram / Get updates!   You can find us on: Apple Podcasts / Spotify / Stitcher / Google Play / Pocket Cast / PlayerFM / CastBox   Need something else? Check out our site: shesallfatpod.com   Mentioned in this episode:   I’m Obsessed:  Ariana Grande's Sweetener.. Black Lightning. Mitski. Meaty by Samantha Irby.   The Meat Of It: MD Spicer-Sitzes. MD’s Upcoming Workshop (Oct 20th)! The Body Positive. Building Allies. Quartz. NPR on BMI. No Weigh! You Have the Right to Remain Fat. The Infamous Unpacking the Invisible Knapsack. How to Tell the Difference Between Real Solidarity and ‘Ally Theater’. Kimberle Crenshaw’s TedTalk.   MD’s Instagram Recommendations:

ごりゅごcast
第96回:1 Second Everydayを使って1日1秒で過去を振り返る

ごりゅごcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 6, 2018 10:02


概要やアプリリンクまとめ: http://bit.ly/2wOoTpM 感想や質問、リクエストなどはTwitterのハッシュタグ #goryugocast にお送りください。Anchorからのボイスメッセージも受け付けています。 収録機材や収録方法、各配信の概要などはScrapboxにて詳細を公開しています。 https://scrapbox.io/goryugocast/

anchor second everyday
Better Pastors Podcast
Zac’s Hacks — One Second Everyday

Better Pastors Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 10, 2018 5:30


Zac talks to Loren Zamora about the app One Second Everyday. Loren’s Video

The Limit Does Not Exist
One Second Every Day (Cesar Kuriyama)

The Limit Does Not Exist

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 29, 2018 43:43


Do you remember what you were doing last Tuesday? Cesar Kuriyama does. He's a director, animator, 3D VFX artist and the creator of the 1 Second Everyday app, which records—you guessed it—one second of every single day. You'll hear about Cesar's life-changing journey that began with a decision to quit his job in advertising and take a full year off. Plus, the power of memory triggers, why “creative human person” is Cesar's title of choice, and how it all traces back to Doogie Howser. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

one second doogie howser second everyday cesar kuriyama
SuperMeta
Weekly Podcast Review (Ep. 10)

SuperMeta

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 15, 2018 15:29


There are podcasts we listened to in the last week. We wanted to share with you as a recommendation list for the week ahead.   (1)The Liturgists. -- "Embodiment" (March 8)   (2) The Pitch (Gimlet) -- I listened to an episode on "1 Second Everyday” a social media company (a digital journal).     (3) Safe for Work (Wondery) -- I picked the first episode because they had Rainne Wilson on as a guest.   (4) Launch (Wondery) -- One of my favorites of year so far!   (5) Kaleidescope -- M Barclay: Breaking the Binary   (6) The Ezra Klein Show (Vox Media) -- Mark Zuckerberg interview   (7) Pull Up with CJ McCollum — New this month, one I'm most excited for this year!   (8) Live Alive Podcast — by some friends: Chris DiDonna and David Pezzoli.   (9) Masters of Scale with Reid Hoffman (WaitWhat)-- “Netflix’s Reed Hastings in Culture Shock” all about culture.   (10) NBA Fan Podcast -- Team Profile: Phoenix Suns.   Special thanks to Nick Quah & his "Hot Pod" newsletter. Recorded & Produced by Chris Randazzo.

The Pitch
#28 Is This Entrepreneur Ready to Take On Facebook?

The Pitch

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 28, 2018 34:14


Facebook is the undisputed king of social networks. But Cesar Kuriyama thinks his app, 1 Second Everyday, could topple the giant. If he's going to do that, he'll need some serious cash. Today's investors are Jillian Manus, Daniel Gulati, Phil Nadel, and Michael Hyatt. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

entrepreneur michael hyatt second everyday jillian manus
JMNJR Radio
Nat Chats with Dad, Episode 16 - Natalie Turns 5

JMNJR Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 26, 2018 35:07


Natalie and her dad kick off Year 2 (and 2018) by celebrating her birthday! Nat goes over her birthday weekend (party, gifts, etc) and conducts Show and Tell before singing to an early 2000s classic and then dancing her way to the end. Oh and the duo watches her Year 5 "1 Second Everyday" video! ---------------------------------------------------- JMNJR Radio: www.jmnjrradio.com/ Nat Chats with Dad: www.natchats.net/ Facebook: www.facebook.com/NatChatsWithDad Twitter: @JMNJR_Radio | @NatChatsWithDad Email: joe@natchats.net Phone: (530) 563-6297 More @ www.natchats.net/

dad second everyday
The Good Practice Podcast
78 — Design thinking for L&D

The Good Practice Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 16, 2018 34:08


When we're asked to create a learning solution, how often do we think about the context within which that solution will sit? Design thinking prompts us to take a wider view, collaborating with learners and stakeholders to co-create a course or resource. On this week's podcast, Connie Malamed from The eLearning Coach podcast joins Ross G and Owen to share her insight into design thinking. If you'd like to share your thoughts on the show, you can tweet us @RossGarnerGP, @OwenFerguson and @eLearningCoach. You can also find us @GoodPractice or @GoodpracticeAus. To find out more about GoodPractice, visit goodpractice.com.  Harvard Business Review covered design thinking in some detail here: https://hbr.org/2015/09/design-for-action Connie's NICU and HDX examples from Frog Design can be found at https://www.frogdesign.com/press-release/aspect-imaging-frog-collaborate-mri-technologies and https://www.frogdesign.com/work/un-ocha-humanitarian-data-exchange We covered agile methodology way back in episode 13. You can listen here: http://podcast.goodpractice.com/agile-ld-lessons-from-coding Owen's 'Little UI Details' Twitter moment recommendation can be found at: https://twitter.com/i/moments/880688233641848832?lang=en Ross' '1 Second Everyday' video for 2017 is on YouTube at: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hg9skphCdsE You can find out more about Connie by visiting theelearningcoach.com or by listening to The eLearning Coach podcast.

The Less Doing Podcast
305: Cesar Kuriyama - One Second Every Day

The Less Doing Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 20, 2017 29:40


_“At this point, I personally am about to hit 7 years…It's like a 40-minute video at this point... I've not forgotten a day of my life since I started.” Cesar Kuriyama, creator of 1 Second Everyday_ In our fast-paced world, it can be hard to keep track of the important moments that happen every day. Time goes by in a blur, months blend into the next, and it's easy to suddenly find yourself unable to remember what you've done with your time. This can be discouraging and have a negative impact on mood and productivity. Cesar Kuriyama has developed a solution to this problem with the app 1 Second Everyday. This app provides a simple, user-friendly way to create a video journal made up of - you guessed it! - one second from every day of your life. In this episode, Ari and Cesar discuss the app, the amazing benefits it's providing its users, and how it creates a meaningful way to look back on your life. If you've ever wanted to know how to keep a video journal, you don't want to miss this episode! Do You Struggle With Keeping a Journal? Well, Here's an Easy Way! The benefits of journaling are well known. The process can improve memory, boost your mood, encourage mindfulness, and increase overall happiness. However, many people don't know how to keep a journal or struggle to maintain a journaling habit. Hear how 1 Second Everyday makes it easy, fun, and memorable to keep a video journal. Creating Habits for Success Much research has been done on how habits are created and how people can harness the power of habit to improve their daily lives. This issue created unique challenges for Cesar and his team throughout the development of the app. In this episode, Ari and Cesar discuss the complex science of habit and how Cesar's ultimate goal is to help people live a better life by installing positive habits. An App for Greater Effectiveness Studies are currently being done on the impacts of 1 Second Everyday on its users. Initial results and personal stories reveal a significant effect on the happiness, well-being, and effectiveness of the people using this app. Hear Cesar share these stories as well as his top three tips for being more effective. Outline of the Show: [0:28] - Ari opens the show and introduces his guest, Cesar Kuriyama. [0:57] - Cesar explains the inspiration behind the app. [6:30] - Cesar shares his personal experience with using the app as a journal to remember the meaningful moments from his days. [7:38] - Deciding what moment to use can be stressful for some people. Cesar offers some advice. [10:10] - Cesar explains some of the features and how it works. [12:44] - The science of habit-forming impacts the development of 1 Second Everyday. Research is being done on the effects of the app on its users. [16:18] - Cesar explains how he chooses his second. [17:45] - There are many exciting new updates being released between now and the new year. [20:20] - 1 Second Everyday is helping people to install better habits in their lives. [22:00] - Cesar shares his top three tips to be more effective to include the benefits of trusting your gut, the value of reading and research, and how to make a distributed team function well. [26:03] - Cesar talks about new updates to the iOS version of the app versus the Android app and shares information on some great new features. [28:58] - Ari closes the show. Resources: [1 Second Everyday](https://1se.co/) 1 Second Everyday on [iOS](https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/1-second-everyday-video-diary/id587823548?mt=8) 1 Second Everyday for [Andriod](https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=co.touchlab.android.onesecondeveryday&hl=en) If you enjoyed this episode of the Less Doing podcast and want even more tips for improving your productivity, join our community on [Slack](https://go.lessdoing.com/labsoptin) or [Facebook]( --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/lessdoing/message

Crowd Scene | Crowdfunding Success Stories
Recording Your Life: Cesar Kuriyama On Crowdfunding ‘1 Second Everyday’, TED Talks & ‘Chef’ Movie

Crowd Scene | Crowdfunding Success Stories

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 18, 2015 84:02


Imagine a movie that includes everyday of the rest of your life. What would you choose to remember? TED speaker and creator of the ‘1-Second Everyday’ app, Cesar Kuriyama, is our guest in this episode of Crowd Scene. Cesar remembers exactly what he has been doing every day for the last five years. And that’s thanks to the app he created, called ‘1-Second Everyday’. In this episode, Cesar explains how ‘1-Second Everyday’ works, how he was selected to do a TED Talk that’s been viewed over a million times, and how that led to a massively successful Kickstarter and his work being featured recently in a recent hit film. And all it started with quitting his job. Cesar’s Kickstarter campaign attracted a huge amount of media attention and more than 11,000 backers, who shared his passion for this project and raised close to $60,000. You can find more information about this episode and all our of our guests on crowdsceneshow.com

Der Übercast
#UC024: Lebensprotokolle und Schotengüsse

Der Übercast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 27, 2015 74:54


Neben einer Ladung Follow-up widmen sich die drei Piloten dem Thema Life-Logging. Danach sind sie so ausgepowert, dass sie erst einmal über das Angebot von Podcasts-Apps auf dem Markt reden. Lieber Fluggast, wenn dir das Gehörte gefällt oder dir Sorgenfalten auf die edle Stirn fabriziert, dann haben wir etwas für dich: iTunes Bewertungen. Überbleibsel BusyContacts Andreas hat sich BusyContacts gekauft und damit dank der Twitter-Integration auch erst einmal die Liste mit Leuten gekürzt, welchen er auf Twitter followed. Auch die Email-Schnittstelle findet er ganz praktisch. YouNow und Whisper Nach der letzten Show ist Patrick für 3 Stunden bei YouNow und Whisper hängen geblieben. Seine YouNow Highlights: Eine 17-jährige die sich während ihrer YouNow-Übertragung bei BaseChat einloggt und dort gnadenlos die Jungs beschimpft, welche sie unverhohlen angraben. Ein Skype Duo, wo sie Telefonstreiche macht und er die Daten der Doofen sammelt. Die Männer, welcher Opfer des Telefonstreichs wurden sollten unterwürfig wie ein Hund bellen und natürlich stöhnen. Ein Typ der beim Fernsehen eingeschlafen ist…. Kurz, es ist wie Sven es schon vorletzte Woche vermutet hat wirklich das RTL2 des Internets. Patricks Resümee: 90% viele langweilige und gelangweilte Teens und 10% Kreativität. Er bedauert, dass er nun über YouNow bescheid und würde gerne die Zeit zurückdrehen und verhindern, dass er auf dieses Portal stößt. Whisper hat er sich auch angeschaut. Erinnert hat es in an FML und Beichthaus.com – (nur halt mit Bildern). Beide Dinger sind absolute Zeitfresser, taugen aber eventuell als Klolektüre. Trotzdem werden von nun an beide Sachen blockiert bei ihm. Andreas hat derweil seinen ersten Whisper-Hit hingelegt und bleibt dabei: Ein für gut befundenes Seitenprojekt vom Whisper Team ist “Your Voice”… und da dies das Follow-Up zu letzter Woche ist, gibt es noch eine Anleitung zu Snapchat. Überschallneuigkeiten Affinity Photo Nach Affinity Designer gibt es von Serif nun auch Affinity Photo in einer Beta-Version. Dranbleiben und testen, dass könnte interessant werden. Prezi Macher bringt Nutshell Source: Introducing Nutshell - YouTube Ob als Präsentations- oder Mobile Video Follow-Up. Whatever. Nutshell it heißt es demnächst und befähigt euch dazu auf die Schnelle Videos mit Fotos und kleinen Illustrationen zu kombinieren. Seht selbst: Apple Watch Spekulationen Im März oder April könnte es schon soweit sein… und Sven ist schwach geworden und holt sich wahrscheinlich entgegen seiner Behauptungen doch die eine Apfeluhr aus der ersten Auflage. Erstes Produktionsvolumen und Verteilung über die verschiedenen Modelle Das Wall Street Journal (WSJ), traditionell recht gut informiert, möchte in Erfahrung gebracht haben, dass Apple für die erste Charge Apple Watches 5 Mio. Stück vorsieht. Die Hälfte davon für das “Sport”-Einsteigermodell. John Gruber rechnet gleich mal hoch, wie bei der gerüchteweise Verteilung zwischen Modellen, eine etwaige Umsatzverteilung und -entwicklung aussehen würde. Dabei wird schon klar, dass entweder aktuelle Preisspekulationen, vor allem was die höhenwertigen Modelle anbelangt, oder die Produktionsvolumen, die das WSJ veröffentlicht hat, kaum stimmen können. Denn Apple würden dann mit der kleinsten Stückzahl aller Modelle bei der “Gold Edition” 5 Milliarden US$ pro Quartal machen, was dem weit größten Umsatzanteil über alle Modelle hinweg entsprechen würde. Aber: Wer weiss schon genaues. Preise, vor allem für die “Gold”-Modelle Stephen Foskett, ein durchaus ernstzunehmender Uhren- und Schmuckexperte rechnet vor, warum die “Gold Edition” bis zu 9,999 US$ kosten muss und soll. IFTTT Do Neben IFTTT Do Button hat das IFTTT Team die Hauptapp auf iOS in “IF” umgetauft und noch Do Camera und Do Note rausgehauen. Apple Auddo Stille Post. Wer den von Apple abgeworben wurde und was Sache ist erfahrt ihr von Sven. Der hat mal seine Lauscher aufgespannt und fast die bisherigen Gerüchte zusammen. Patrick fällt bei dem Stichwort The Oatmeal mit seinem Testbericht zu Googles automatisch fahrendem Auto ein. Die Redaktion sieht Apple übrigens nicht in der Automobilbranche. Neuigkeiten zum Thema werden wir trotzdem verübercasten. Lifelogging Nachdem Slogger nicht so regelmäßig upgedatet wurde wie unser Andreas sich das gewünscht hätte, ist Andreas auf eine IFTTT-Lösung umgestiegen. Er erhofft sich daraus eine stärker visualisierte Auswertung, statt einer groben Zusammenfassung. Ein gutes Beispiel für persönliches Logging ist der Herr Feltron, welcher hier immer seinen Jahresreport mit ordentlich Grafikschmackes abgibt. Wer es jetzt sprichwörtlich noch bildlicher haben möchte, kann sich den $149 teuren Narrative Clip anschauen, welcher in kurzen Zeitabständen ein Bild aufnimmt. Beispiele gibt’s hier oder hier. Auf dem iPhone kann man das auch manuell machen mit einer App, z.B. mit 1 Second Everyday. Andreas stört, dass die App momentan noch die Camera Roll nimmt, um die kleinen Videos abzuspeichern. Die iOS App Dayli nutzt Patrick, um den täglichen Mugshot zu machen. Seit Mai 2012 ist er dabei, schafft es nicht jeden Tag, kommt aber immerhin auf 632 Fotos. Rund die Hälfte der Fotos stammt aus Everyday, welches nicht mehr upgedatet wurde seit ein paar Jahren. Wie dem auch sei, wen es interessiert der kann hier 3 Jahre Patrick in 40 Sekunden anschauen. Apropos Patrick…. Wenn einer von euch eine Empfehlung für’s loggen hat, welche die folgenden Anforderung erfüllt, so schickt ihm doch eine Nachricht auf Twitter oder an den Übercast. Das sollte sie können: Kategorien selbst wählen: z.B. Taillenumfang wird eigentlich nirgends unterstützt bei den “Großen” grafische Aufbereitung, evtl. auch ein Backend oder eine API mehr als nur GoogleSpreadsheet Podcasts hören Einleitend wird geklärt, wer wie schnell seine Podcasts hört. Anlass zu dieser kleinen Diskussion ist das Statement John Lagomarsinos von The Verge: “Stop listening to podcasts at 1.5×” worauf Mr. Overcast aka Marco Arment geantwortet hat “jedem das seine”. Andreas wird dann noch genötigt eine Empfehlung für einen Putz-Podcast abzugeben und hat erstaunlicherweise auch prompt eine parat: Aufgeräumt. Fest steht, dass Podcasts von den Piloten eher als Unterhaltungsprogramm gesehen wird, im Vergleich zu Hörbüchern, welche dann eher mit voller Aufmerksamkeit genossen werden – Sprachpause und Intonation kommen so halt mehr zu Geltung als wenn man nebenher etwas auf fünffacher Geschwindigkeit hört. Es folgt nun eine Zusammenfassung über einige Podcast Apps zum hören. Downcast Downcast ist unser Purist unter den Apps. Optisch nicht ganz on-point, aber es kann alles was man zum hören braucht und wirkt nicht super überladen. Simple und gut. Overcast Universal für iOS plus Web Interface Smart Speed verkürzt Pausen und erhöht Abspielgeschwindigkeit unmerklich Voice Boost hebt die Stimmen (in schlecht produzierten Podcasts) hervor Gutes, kuriertes Podcast-Verzeichnis mit “Starter Packs” und guter Suche Web Interface durchaus gut Sharen von Podcastepisoden mit Timecode möglich (!!) Frei im App Store mit Einschränkungen. Für 4.99€ IAP gibts dann alles. Zurzeit ist Overcast der go-to Podcast Client von Sven und Patrick. Pocket Casts von Shifty Jelly Pocket Casts ist Patricks Ex-Favorit und hat ein sehr hübsches Interface, welches mal nicht als Liste daherkommt, sondern im Blockgrid-Stil. Die App synct ebenfalls überall hin, hat ein Webinterface, eine Android Version und ist auf iOS zu hause. Instacast Deutsches Produkt von Vemedio aus Ludwigsburg im Schwabenlande! Instacast Sync iPhone, iPad, Mac Unterstützt Flattr Gute Unterstützung von Show Notes Bonjour Sync (Schneller iOS Download über das lokale Netzwerk, wenn die Episode bereits von Instacast für Mac runter geladen worden ist) Download Einstellungen pro Podcast Erlaubt das Setzen von Bookmarks in einzelnen Episoden Spielt auch Videocasts ab und lässt die Tonspur weiterlaufen während der Screen gelockt ist → Perfekt für “Der Übercast” auf YouTube Ordentlich: Unterstützt OPML zum Austausch von Abonnements Auch eignes, kuriertes Podcast-Verzeichnis iOS: Night Mode (einmaliger IAP für 0.99€) iOS: Abonnement-weite Suche in Titeln und Show Notes (einmaliger IAP für 0.99€) 19.99$ für die Mac Version und Universal iOS umsonst mit IAPs für Service-Abo (6 Monate 9.99€, 12 Monate 14.99€) Huffduffer Huffduffer könnte man als Instapaper für Podcasts beschreiben. Per Bookmarklet kann es MP3 Dateien auf einer Webseite erkennen. Diese könnt ihr dann “bookmarken” in eurem Huffduffer Account. Weitere Features von diesem Service sind, dass ihr per Tags Ordnung reinbringen könnt. Ebenfalls könnt ihr auf die große Entdeckungstour gehen könnt und die Hörempfehlungen oder Accounts anderer durchstöbern. Wem das Konzept gefällt, es aber lieber ein wenig privater mag: rbugajewski/fuck-huff-duff jeredb/ping- Castro iPhone only Das vielleicht schönste UI Design von allen Auch sehr gutes und durchdachtes UX Design, vor allem die Swipe-Gesten machen eine Menge Sinn Eigner Audio-Algorhytmus, der die Stimmwiedergabe bei anderen Geschwindigkeiten (0.5 - 2x) deutlich verbessert Castro kostet 3.99 € im App Store und gibt es nur auf dem iPhone. Synology Download Station Wer einen Synology NAS sein eigen nennt, der kann mit der Download Station auch Podcast-Feeds automatisch runterladen. Patrick haut sich so den Stones Throw Podcast direkt in sein Musikverzeichnis und bekommt den ARD Radio-Tatort in seine Hörspielsammelung gelegt. gPodder gPodder können die Hardcore-Nerds ausprobieren. Wie bei Synology kann man hier sagen, wohin man seinen Podcast verschoben haben möchte. Super wenn man z.B. viel mit Plex macht. Unsere Picks Sven: AlterNote Andreas: Colin McRae Rally Patrick: Easy Photo Merge bzw. Easy Photo Merge Pro on the App Store on iTunes In Spenderlaune? Wir haben Flattr und PayPal am Start und würden uns freuen.

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Today in iOS  - The Unofficial iPhone, iPad, and Apple Watch Podcast
Tii - iTem 0326 - MCX and CurrentC are evil

Today in iOS - The Unofficial iPhone, iPad, and Apple Watch Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 31, 2014 72:26


Tii - iTem 0326 - MCX and CurrentC are evil Give us a call - 1-206-666-6364 Send us email - todayinios@gmail.com   Links Mentioned in this Episode: Today's Sponsor - Harry's.com - Promo Code = tii CVS and Rite Aid block Apple Pay  A closer look at CurrentC Apple Pay being shut out by retailers Apple Pay Is Disabled by Rite Aid and CVS  Blocking Apple Pay Is a Stupid Move for Retailers The Apple Pay refuseniks at CVS won’t win this battle CurrentC Hacked - Business Insider Tim Cook on Apple Pay: 'We're already No. 1' in mobile payments More proof AT&T is clueless/evil Feds: AT&T misled millions on 'unlimited' data plans iPhone 6 Plus users report persistent unexplained crashing Google+ Community SPI 2014: Sapphire yield issues brought GTAT down GT Advanced blames Apple for one-sided sapphire contract Did GTAT Just Have Bad Management Or Did Apple Do Them In? xPrintServer - an iOS Print Server for iPhone and iPad Printing (use promo code 2014ShipFree) Cesar Kuriyama's Ted talk about 1 Second Everyday     Apps Mentioned in this Episode: Tii FREE App Garageband Fotor Slender Man Origins 2 Note-ify Text Expander Swiftkey Swype Path Input vBrowse PainterEsque Picr 1 Second Every Day        

33voices | Startups & Venture Capital | Women Entrepreneurs | Management & Leadership | Mindset | Hiring & Culture | Branding

33voices interviews Cesar Kuriyama, founder of 1 Second Everyday.

second everyday cesar kuriyama