gravatar

Inside Facebook

Inside Facebook


BandRx: A Free Page Management App for Musicians That Matches Facebook’s Design

Posted: 26 May 2011 11:59 AM PDT

BandRx is the latest tool to emerge in the musician Facebook Page management space. Utilizing a modular design, BandRx gives bands flexibility in terms of functionality while retaining Facebook’s design principles.

The small company saw leading musician Page management tools from RootMusic and Reverbnation pushing Pages to look more like MySpace and wanted to build a product with a white and blue style that better matched Facebook.

In response to the decline of MySpace, the former home of band profiles on the internet, several developers have begun competing to host musicians as they migrate to Facebook. RootMusic’s BandPage is currently the biggest, with 1.5 million daily active users, followed by ReverbNation’s Band Profile with 504,000 DAU. Meanwhile, some companies such as DamnTheRadio, recently acquired by FanBridge, are doing more custom app development work for the world’s most popular bands.

As users have an organic interest in Liking musicians, now over 40 of the top 100 Pages belong to musicians, while hundreds of thousands of less popular bands have also started Pages. This indicates there may be room for younger developers  such as BandRx, as it’s already grown to 59,000 DAU and 1.1 million MAU according to AppData.

Launched in February, the lean three-employee startup has taken a small seed round of funding from friends and family. BandRx is hoping to offer as much Facebook functionality as possible for free, as right now the company’s costs are low. It may eventually launch paid band services such as email marketing, with a model more similar to ReverbNation than RootMusic, which offers additional Facebook features from $2 a month.

BandRx worked with feedback from bands and their managers to design the application and improve on some shortcomings of BandPage and Band Profile. Configuration of the app occurs within the app itself instead of on an external website. Admins can toggle on or off and reorder a large set of features.

Some features admins can choose from include the ability to add a banner image, Page wall, and bio. They can offer MP3 streaming powered by SoundCloud, and have the option to require a Like to listen, or a Like or subscription to a mailing list to download. Video is powered by YouTube and other services and can be Like-gated, and live streaming is powered by uStream, Livestream, and Justin.tv. Tour dates are powered by Facebook Events. Admins can also add a custom HTML module, display their Twitter updates, or track traffic with Google Analytics.

If bands have a merchandise store operated by Go Merch or Big Cartel they can import it, and BandRx is working on deals with other musician ecommerce services. The company is also looking to offer checkout within Facebook and to sell digital downloads, but for now it can only link out to digital music stores. Musicians can collect email addresses from fans though Facebook’s extended permissions system, and run Facebook-compliant contests.

Absent are any type of color, theme, or style customization options. Instead, the app’s permanent blue and white style makes it blend seamlessly into Facebook. Some bands may want to more branding options and the ability to make a more forceful impact, though.

BandRx tells us that “bands often have too many tabs in the sidebar. You only have one chance to show a tab, so we’re trying to create as much of an integrated experience as possible.”

We’ve heard from some digital music experts say that the focus on Facebook Page tab applications may be misplaced because the bulk of interaction with Pages occurs through the news feed. However, BandRx tells us it purposefully doesn’t offer a rich, music streaming news feed player because it received feedback from managers and record labels that they want to drive people back to Pages to grow their Like counts.

BandRx’s free, internally configured, highly functional app is a solid option for bands on a tight budget that don’t want to be confused with too many extraneous services as with ReverbNation, or have to pay for full functionality as with RootMusic. However, as bands grow in popularity they may want these additional customization options and offsite services, and feel too constrained by BandRx.

Facebook Announces PayPal Payouts to Developers for Credits Revenue

Posted: 26 May 2011 09:44 AM PDT

Facebook announced this morning that developers signing up for Facebook Credits now have PayPal as a payout option, increasing the flexibility developers have for monetzing apps through Facebook Credits.

This is of particular importance to developers in countries where PayPal is really the only trusted payout option for developers. Payout is the means by which a developer converts in-app currency exchanges to real money that the developer can then deposit into its bank accounts. Facebook says that the PayPal option now doubles the number of countries where developers can begin integrating Facebook Credits to 22 countries total, including Turkey, India and Japan.

Facebook Credits has been a slow road for certain social game developers in the last nine months between apparent reluctance and technical issues. The mandatory integration deadline for Facebook Credits within social games is July 1. It is not clear if Facebook will extend the deadline for remaining countries that are experiencing difficulties with integration tied to payout complications. PayPal currently serves over 190 countries.

Facebook Careers Postings: Singapore, Recruiting, Engineering and More

Posted: 26 May 2011 09:00 AM PDT

Facebook is still hiring for its Singapore office, as suggested by two recruiting positions the company posted for its offices there according to the company’s Careers Page. What’s more, several engineering jobs popped up in its Seattle, Washington and Palo Alto, California offices. Some researching jobs were also posted on the company’s LinkedIn feed.

Posts added this week on Facebook's Careers Page:

  • Recruiter, APAC (Singapore)
  • Recruiting Coordinator, APAC – Contract (Singapore)
  • Product Manager, Technical Operations
  • Search Analyst
  • Strategic Partner Development, Local Monetization (Palo Alto)
  • Asset Disposal Manager
  • Director, Global Supplier Management
  • Director, Global Accounts (New York or Palo Alto)
  • Director, Global Accounts (New York or Palo Alto)
  • Strategic Partner Development, Local Monetization (Palo Alto)
  • Manager of Online Sales & Operations (Austin)
  • Analyst, Deal Optimization (Austin)
  • Analyst, User Operations – Dutch (Dublin)
  • Software Engineer, Desktop Software (Seattle)
  • BIOS/Firmware Engineer
  • System Software Engineer
  • Technical Program Manager – Platform Security

Jobs posted by Facebook on LinkedIn:

Who else is hiring? The Inside Network Job Board presents a survey of current openings at leading companies in the industry.

Facebook Hires and Departures: Engineering, Account Management, Creative and More

Posted: 26 May 2011 08:28 AM PDT

Facebook has hired a new group of interns, as you can see in its LinkedIn feed, and also made some interesting hires, if the company’s Careers Page is any indication. The Head of Creative Agencies position in New York disappeared from the company’s Careers Page, as did a North Carolina data center manager position. See the rest of the list below for more.

New hires per LinkedIn and Other Sources:

  • Justin Allen, Account Executive – formerly worked as a National Sales Account at Apple.
  • Natthu Bharambe, Software Engineering Intern – previously an intern at VMware.
  • Dana Bouscaren, Account Management – formerly worked on as a Business Development Manager on the Grants Team at Cisco.
  • Daniel Habashi, Account Executive – formerly worked in Entertainment, Music and Mobile at MSN Canada.
  • Tsung-Hsien Lee, Software Engineer Intern – previously a Graduate Research Assistant at University of Texas at Austin.
  • Tony Huang, Software Engineering Intern – previously did the same job at Google.
  • Alex Langenfeld, Software Engineering Intern – was also an intern at NVIDIA.
  • Jack O’Connor, Software Engineer – formerly worked as a Software Development Engineer at Microsoft.
  • Kathleen Pedersen, Business Operations Associate – previously worked as a Direct Response Analyst Intern at Yahoo France.
  • Abhinai Srivastava, Software Engineer – formerly a researcher at Microsoft.
  • Wenyu Zhang, Software Engineering Intern – formerly an undergraduate reseaarcher at Pursue University's Computer Science Department.

Recent departures, per LinkedIn:

  • Eric Roul – formerly a Senior Infrastructure Manager.

Prior listings now removed from the Facebook Careers Page:

  • Business Analyst, Finance Procure to Pay
  • Group Technical Program Manager
  • Manager, Global Supplier Management
  • Manager, Datacenter Facilities Operations (NC)
  • Administrative Assistant
  • Executive Assistant
  • Account Executive (Chicago)
  • Head of Creative Agencies (New York)
  • Associate, Ad Operations – Swedish (Dublin)
  • Account Manager – Czech (Dublin)
  • Account Manager – Dutch (Dublin)
  • Analyst, Online Sales Operations – Dutch (Dublin)
  • Associate Manager, Online Sales Operations – German (Dublin)
  • Head of Online Sales & Operations (Austin)
  • Policy Enforcement Specialist, Online Sales Operations (Austin)
  • Team Lead, Online Sales Operations – German (Dublin)
  • Sales Marketing Manager (New York)
  • Software Engineer 1105001

Who else is hiring? The Inside Network Job Board presents a survey of current openings at leading companies in the industry.