Google Really, Really Wants To Bring India's Small Businesses Online (buzzfeed.com) 36
An anonymous reader shares a report: Millions more Indians are now coming online, but India's small businesses -- including everything from decades-old mom and pop stores to neighborhood bakeries -- are lagging behind. Google wants to change that. At an event in New Delhi today, Google CEO Sundar Pichai announced a brand new program called Digital Unlocked aimed at helping India's 51 million small and medium businesses establish an online presence. Over the next three years, Google will hold 5,000 daylong classes in 40 Indian cities to teach business owners everything from the basics -- getting their business listed on Google Maps, for instance -- to advanced courses like running an online advertising campaign and measuring analytics.
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Fixed Headline (Score:1)
Google Really, Really Wants To Profit From India's Small Businesses Online
FTFY - Do not confuse philanthropy with business strategy, they are not the same.
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Google - GeoCities? (Score:3)
It sounds like Google is just putting out an enhanced version of their Google Sites [google.com] based on location. You pick a template and fill in a form with your information. Google then consumes it and automatically indexes your site.
Also instead of putting on these classes couldn't they just do YouTube videos and their version of the Dummies Guide to Google?
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For-profit businesses want to reach customers. If a business's prospective customers predominantly use one mapping platform and a vocal minority of freedom fanatics use another, the business is likely to concentrate on the mapping platform that brings in the most customers. In order to make OpenStreetMap viable, freedom fanatics may have to find businesses themselves and ask staff why the business's listing is inaccurate or missing.
And if you really wanna be a madarchod (Score:2)
4a. Run technical "support" hotlines where technicians pretend the tree command is a "wirus" scan, misinterpret Windows event logs as evidence of malware on the user's "dextop", misinterpret services that don't need to run right now as services disabled by malware, charge $500 for a 3-year PC maintenance plan, and threaten to lock the victim out of his own computer with SAM Lock Tool (syskey.exe) if he doesn't buy.
Source: YouTube channels Each & Everything [youtube.com], Thunder Tech [youtube.com], and Lewis's Tech [youtube.com]
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I hope nobody mods up the usual unfunny racist bullshit about curry.
Re: Small business ideas for India (Score:1)
I lived in an apartment building with a bunch of Indians once. It fucking sucked. It stunk so bad all the god damn time. Between smelling like curry, spices and human body odor, it was unbearable. I moved after my lease was up, when asked why, I told them the truth. Because living around a bunch of Indians(6 of them in a 2 bedroom apartment, all adults) sucked.
Should not be surprising (Score:4, Insightful)
Tax evasion hampers such innovation (Score:2)
Right market for Google (Score:3)
Given that Android is even more dominant in India than it is in the US, Google is targeting the right market. Small businesses are less likely to own computers, but more likely to own phones - be it Galaxies, Micromaxes, Karbonns et al. So if they come up w/ suites of mobile business packages that they can use, they'd be off to the races. Specially given that they seem to support at least a minimal amount of support for Indian languages like Hindi, Marathi, Kannada, et al
Apple is hardly present in India and unlikely to grow, and Microsoft has pulled the plug on Lumias and PCs ain't selling much there. Looks like the perfect storm for Pillai's company
Google Really, Really Wants To Bring cheap labor (Score:1)
Google Really, Really Wants To Bring cheap labor Online
If this was about small businesses, Google would be doing the same for USA small businesses. But Google is out of touch, and thinks ONLY overseas is the only place, especially third world countries, that are worthy.