Bizbox Twitter:

    iEntrepreneurship

    By Marc Tracy

    This weekend, the New York Times tackled a subject that, as you can see, is near and dear to our heart: the modern-day Gold Rush that is the making of applications for the iPhone and other smartphones. Have a good idea? Have some basic programming know-how (or the time and willpower to learn)? Then the iPhone could literally make you a millionaire.

    The article is chock-full of interesting nuggets (gold nuggets?), and, if read the right way, solid advice. For example, one app was selling modestly at a price of $4.99. But when a simpler version of it was made downloadable for free, in order to get users hooked, and the full version's price dropped to $2.99, it really took off. Also, who knew that already there were more than 25,000 applications in the Apple app store alone?

    One ironic aspect to this trend, incidentally, is that the recession is if anything accelerating it by giving talented people who ordinarily would have jobs with larger companies the time, if involuntarily, to strike out on their own as entrepreneurs. One profiled app creator was recently laid off from Sun Microsystems, for example.

    In fact, in a subsequent blogpost, the author of the article sounded a note of caution about the increasing glut of apps, positing, "As more developers seek their fortune in the glossy curves of the device, the App Store is becoming crowded. Competition is spiking, driving down application prices--and the chances of becoming the next iMillionaire." The saving grace might be the iPhone's 3.0 application system, forthcoming this summer, which should grant app-makers new methods for monetizing their products--although even this could turn out to be a boon largely to those big corporations that offer apps rather than mom-and-pop app-creators, the author argues.

    Of course, there's also always Blackberry App World! TechCrunch has an interesting review of Research In Motion's counterstrike to the iPhone juggernaut here. So there's another available platform for developers; expect something similar at some point from Google for its Android smartphone operating system.

    And one more thing. We really couldn't make up so perfect an example of the way in which these smartphones, like so much information technology before them, are serving as a great leveler that gives even the smallest of start-ups and even the most novice of entrepreneurs a bona fide way to compete with the big guys. It's not enough that Stanford, whose symbiotic relationship to nearby Silicon Valley has been well documented (Stanford was of course once the academic home to Sergey Brin and Larry Page, among many others), offers a popular course on--what else?--how to develop an iPhone app. Now, though, you don't have to go to Stanford to view the course. Rather, reports TechCrunch, you can go right ahead and download it, for free, to your iPhone as a video podcast. How appropriate.

    Comments (0)

    April 6, 2009 1:01 PM

    Post a comment

    (Comments that include profanity, personal attacks or other inappropriate comments or material will be removed from the site. Additionally, entries that are unsigned or contain "signatures" by someone other than the actual author will be removed.)

    (If you haven't left a comment here before, you may need to be approved by the site owner before your comment will appear. Until then, it won't appear on the entry. Thanks for waiting.)

    The Purpose Linked Organization

    by Alaina Love

    On Tuesday, July 14 earn how to harness your employees' passions so that they further your own.

    401(k) 401(k)s academics Advertising alternative energy American Express Americas Competitiveness Forum Android angel investing Anonymous Banker! Apple ARC Are You An Entrepreneur? athletes audits auto bailout Baby Boomers bailout Balance Banana Republic Banking Bankruptcy Banks Barack Obama bartering Bear Stearns Ben's Chili Bowl benefits Bill Cosby Bill Gates Biz Box Panel BizBooks BizBox BizEquity BJs black entrepreneurs Branding Brett Favre broadband business blogging Business Growth business incubators Business Planning Business Week Buzz Capital card-check Carl's Jr. cash flow CDFI Census China Chrome Chuck Schumer CIT Clients Cloud Computing cNet Collection Columbia University community banks Community Express Competition consumer spending convertible notes Costs coupons creative capitalism credit Credit credit cards credit score credit union currency Customer Service Day in the Life Debt Debt Repayment Digg Disaster Loans discounting Dodgeball Dun and Bradstreet Dunder-Mifflin e-commerce eBay eco-preneurship Elvis Email Employee Free Choice Act Employees Energy costs Entrepreneur.com Entrepreneurship estate tax Evan Bayh Facebook family business Fannie Mae FDIC Federal Reserve Financing Firefox Flex-time Flexibility Forbes fraud Fred's Freddie Mac Gap gelato George W. Bush Gizmodo Global Gmail Google Google Analytics Google Sites Government great rearranging green Green Bay Packers Greg Verdino Grom Happy New Year hats Health Care Highland Capital Hiring homestead exemption Housing bill HR ICBA identity theft iFund immigration incorporating Innovation innovation policy Internet Internet Explorer Introduction inventory optimization investment strategy iPhone iPod IRS iTunes Ivan Misner Jaiku Jerry Seinfeld Jill Lublin jobs John McCain Johnny Money joseph michelli JotSpot Karen G. Mills Kiva Late Payments leadership Legislation Lloyd Chapman Loan Repayment Loopt luxury M&M's M&M's Premium Magic Johnson Mamma Mia Management Market Value Marketing Mars Mastercard Meetings Mentoring Mentorship meta Microsoft military Mission Statement Mojave Mojave Experiment Money Mortgage Motivation Mozilla MySpace NASE National Women's Business Administration Networking new lending program NFIB NFL office OfficeMax Old Navy Olympia Snowe Olympics open source optimism index Organization P2P lending Packetel paperless partnership Payment payroll payroll tax Persuasion Planning Podcaster Politics PR Pricing procurement Productivity Raising Capital Rate of Return Real Estate recession marketing referrals Republic Windows retail retirement retirement plan blog retirement plans retiring Risk ritz carlton Roadmap to 2020 Roth IRA Sales Sales advice Sandy K. Baruah SBIR SEAS security self-employment self-employment assistance self-employment tax self-promotion Selling Seth Godin Slate Small Biz Advice Small Business Administration Small Business Legislation Small Business Salon social networking solar panels Southwest Staples Starbucks Start-up Start-ups stimulus Structure Success Super Bowl swine flu T-Mobile T-MobileDream TALF Tax Reform Taxes TechCrunch Technology TechRepublic telecommuting the bailout The Big Money the economy The Economy The Entrepreneur's Lament The Great Rearranging the states TIN Twitter unemployment United Parcel Service UPS vacationing venture capital Visa Vista Vista Small Business Assurance Wal-Mart Web 2.0 Windows women entrepreneurs Work/Life Balance Yahoo Yahoo! young entrepreneurs Zune