Posts Tagged ‘indonesia web developer’

The BlackBerry RIM Indonesia Project

Wednesday, June 1st, 2011

Ever since BlackBerry entered the Indonesian market, the whole country got smitten by its wonders. Gradually, Indonesia is invaded by an extreme viral BlackBerry addiction, spreading from its biggest cities to even the smallest and most remote areas.

BlackBerry is the gadget that any decent person MUST HAVE in hand. It is teenagers’ wildest dreams to have one, a symbol of prestige for the working population, and an essential in networking and socializing activities.

Today, after merely 5 years of its launching in the Nusantara archipelago, BlackBerry is something more than common: you can see it everywhere, literally, in the hands of its devout users. Indonesia now possesses over 3 million active BlackBerry users, representing a large market of around 6% of total 50 million BlackBerry users in the world – and this number only increases rapidly each day.

It’s very interesting to see how BlackBerry quickly conquers the market – their products fit perfectly with the Indonesian market’s psychology – the need to connect with their peers at any moment, instantly. And if everywhere else around the world, BlackBerry device is identical with business and corporate people, in Indonesia it’s rather a social tool: everyone has it, regardless whether they are businessmen or not: teens, students, housewives, even the elderly – everyone is infected with the BlackBerry phenomenon.

So when BlackBerry creator the giant RIM (Research In Motion) from Canada finally set up an office in Jakarta around two months ago, we were excited and wishing that we would someday be able to work together with them.

And just last week, our wish came true!

Better-B, one of the best and the first Indonesian BlackBerry Developer companies contacted us. We have met them previously for Sunsilk FAB10 Project, and we really had some sort of matching chemistry – we really liked and appreciated them for their open-mindedness, wit and expertise in handling projects.

Alone in 2010 Better-B launched over 32 BlackBerry Application – hats off to that – and they are one of RIM Indonesia’s most trusted partner due to their prime quality and great personnel.

And that’s what we like – they are so professional and they understand their domain so well!

So their purpose in contacting us is to ask us to work with them in creating an online-based, Facebook-Apps CRM for licensed BlackBerry resellers under RIM’s 3 main distributors in Indonesia (TAM, ComTech and Selular Shop) to boost sales and help sellers understand BlackBerry better.

The project was only started last week and this week we’ve already gotten the confirmation we’re getting it – together with Better-B we’re working to fit the launching date in early July.

More news to come!

Ford & Allianz

Friday, May 20th, 2011

Did you know the story about Lara Jonggrang?

She was an ancient princess from the kingdom of Baka. Upon the marriage proposal by her enemy, she gave him a great task to erect 1,000 temples overnight – something nearly impossible.

Why am I talking about this folklore?

Well because in a joke with our client yesterday, we were talking about two different projects that we just got from him, and the deadline is next week on the first of June, which left us mere ten days to do them both – and both are quite complicated.

He said, “Yeah, this is a Lara Jonggrang project – we haven’t even gotten the layout ready and set yet but at least we know about the functionality we’re going to do. It’s the big picture that matters and even though it’s quite complicated I believe we can tackle it.”

Indeed the projects are quite big, involving some of things we have never explored into, previously, but ever since we’ve built up the winning formula almost two months ago, we always know what to do now.

What are the projects?

Ford & Allianz. Can’t tell you yet what’s up with those two but well, by the 8th of June you’ll find out anyway.

So, until next week it’s hard work at the office to deliver both Ford & Allianz projects…

Successful Viral Marketing Campaign: JB Indo Fever

Tuesday, March 22nd, 2011

Trying out a new formula in social media campaign & audience engagement program, we decided to launch the Justin Bieber My World Indonesia Tour Quiz, which consists of a platform of audience attraction and engagement to get as many users as possible to register in the Facebook Application.

Here’s how it looks like:


Actually all this app goes around Justin Bieber’s Indonesia Tour on 23 April 2011 – you can win 10 FREE Tickets to watch Justin Bieber live in Sentul.

We decided to launch it on Monday 21 March 2011, 4:30 PM, and after an hour or so, active participants already reached the number of 1,000 while the inactive ones not yet participating about the double.

And a bit more than 24 hours later it’s 4,379 active participants and about three times total inactive ones not yet participating on the quiz.

Target audience was originally young female teens between 13 to 18 years old, but after we’ve launched it we realized that it’s much larger and both males and females. The youngest participant is 13, complying with Facebook policy, but the oldest ones range between 35 and 45 years old.

It was crazy to see how engaged people are with this kind of program.

A little statistics for you:

Pageviews

Yesterday: 65,000++ page views between 4:30 PM and midnight.

Today: 100,000++ page views between two midnights.

Unique Visitors

Yesterday: 12,000++ between 4:30 PM and midnight.

Today: 18,000++ between two midnights.

Number of Shared Tweets on Quiz Home: 4,703 Shared Tweets in 26 hours.

Number of Facebook Likes on Quiz Home: 1,339 Likes in 26 hours.

Amazing! People don’t stop playing and we’re VERY HAPPY to say this is one campaign that can be categorized as an immediate success!

So, if you need a help in planning your online activity, you know that you can come to Idebaik to discuss about your expectations and whatever it is you want to do / engage your audience in.

We’ll be back with more statistics next week!

Labeling Your Own Brand: A Reflection of How You Define Yourself

Wednesday, March 16th, 2011

Putting  a label on your brand is a challenging thing to do: you have to know exactly where you position your brand – and consequently your company – in the market.

Questions that you must think about before you decide to label your brand should be:

- Who is my main target audience?

- What do I want to achieve?

- Do I want to improve my position or stay in the same place?

These are the questions that you should try to find the best answers to, when you want to start labeling your brand for some purposes.

The purposes are: getting more popular / visible, getting new clients, achieving a target, creating an image, building your brand. Or even more – you tell us yourself.

There is one thing though: you should really be careful because once you start labeling your brand, it would be hard to change afterward, so think carefully before you put any label on it.

Appreciating your own brand to reach a better position in the market

Often, people are so desperate to attract clients that they market themselves lower than they should. They try to grab clients by the means of “Hey I’m cheap, use me, you won’t waste your money”.

But they often forget, too, that the right quality demands the right compensation.

We are in the right position to say that, because the websites we do are relatively high-end thus demanding better compensation, and despite abundant offers left and right from other cheaper vendors, our clients are still willing to hire us and pay the fee we ask, because what we offer is what they are looking for.

We appreciate our own brand and we try to give a good label on it: a digital agency that does advanced web development, not for less, nevertheless reliable and very much sought for.

And when you start giving an image of yourself as “cheap” in hope that due to your quality of work, people will start pay you more, then you are wrong – if you label your brand this way, people will never pay you big – because in the first place, you’re the one who says that your services can be bought with a low cost budget.

Recently, I stumbled upon an advertisement on Google that says: “Low cost design agency for all your needs. You shouldn’t pay so much for such jobs.”

This kind of thing makes me wonder if the advertiser really does appreciate his own brand. Never, never will we, even in our wildest dreams, want to put a “low-cost” labeling on our brand – for one simple reason: we are NOT cheap – we are worth something good!  And we want to do projects we can be proud of, as well!

And the thing about “You shouldn’t pay so much for such jobs” – I really disagree with this. Digital development is not something you can “bargain for”. Even though it’s something non-physical, something you can only see on screen and only exists in a virtual world, it has a price. It has a combination of research, effort, skills and work hours behind it.

By saying “You shouldn’t pay so much for such jobs”, you are condemning your OWN job, your own skill, research, effort and work hours unworthy. You are actually telling clients “What I do is crap so don’t pay so much, it’s not worth your money”. That is the message that comes across to them, while, we’re sure, most of the time, the message you originally intend to send out is “I do great job for less”.

Of course, being low-cost, positioning yourself at the bottom of the ladder, means that you could have bigger opportunities to get projects because more people are able to afford your services.

Being selective like we do means that we don’t get to get as wide a range as the low-cost vendors get, but at least we are sure that everything that comes will be worth the wait and the effort.

Labeling your own brand is a reflection of how you define yourself.

Good? Bad? Cheap? Worth the price?

It’s for you to define.

At IdeBaik, we definitely put ourselves in the positive polar, so that the label we get are the correct one, the message we send will come across properly – and our position can only get better in the future.

So, start thinking about your goals now, think about what you want to build, what you want to do with your brand, and don’t settle for less!

Welcoming 2011

Wednesday, January 5th, 2011

Welcome back to the office!

After two weeks of half-week off for Christmas and Year End Holiday, we’re back in the office.

And it’s 2011 already! What does 2011 have in store for us?

First Big FMCG Project and more to come

The Year of the Rabbit has promised a very good start for us: we won the Unilever Sunsilk Indonesia 2011 Digital Activation Pitching together with M Interaction / Mindshare Indonesia, and thus our journey into the depth of the FMCG (fast-moving consumer goods) Digital Market began. (Actually, back in the days, when Idebaik was not yet named Idebaik, we had already several FMCG clients – but Sunsilk is the first in our Idebaik era)

In 2010, we were focusing more on retail businesses – in 2011, our next target is the FMCG world. We have already several potential clients lined up: milk, sweets, haircare and skincare.  And we’re pitching for Indonesia’s biggest retailer giant, the world’s second-largest retail group – cross our fingers!

First Big Office Outing

We’re also planning to do the first office-outing around April – somewhere nice with beach, to relax and to strengthen the bond between Idebaik people.

At first, we wanted to  aim somewhere far, far away, like Paris (think about idebaik group photo in front of the Eiffel Tower), but since going to Paris would take at least 6 months of preparation and a lot of time to take care of the paperworks, we simply decided that it’d be a future project.

So we opted for Phuket instead. Phuket isn’t so far, it’s only about three and a half hours away, still in the SEA Region and it’s beautiful (think Leonardo di Caprio, think The Beach).

We’re planning to do it at the end of March / early to mid April 2011.

Second Batch of International Interns

After the successful experience last year with Bree, our French intern, we’d like to recommence.

So we opened the vacancy a few months ago and got several feedback (some bad, some good, including a Polish guy living in Surabaya wanting to scam us into paying money for his so-called “help” to find interns).

But we’ve found a couple of good ones, and they’re arriving soon in the first quarter of 2011, one from Holland, and one from Germany.

We’re also interviewing several more local interns for developer and account positions.

Enter the BlackBerry market

Yes, this is an interesting part.

We believe in BlackBerry.

In spite of the turmoil caused by the Minister of Information and Technology regarding RIM, we still believe that BlackBerry would remain one of the most potential domains in the Indonesian Digital Market.

Why? Because Indonesia has over 2 million active BlackBerry users – world’s third-biggest after Canada (Research In Motion’s Native Country) and the US.

And people love BlackBerry. The way they’ve been rallying to stop the Minister from forcing RIM to stop operating in Indonesia, leads us to believe, really, that BlackBerry is essential in Indonesia’s future of telecommunication and technology.

And that is why, we’re planning to enter this market.

More Important Goals

- Increase Turnover by 100% (At least! Crossing fingers)

- Double our workforce (we need MORE developers and designers)

- Increase our capitals

- Develop more in-house projects

- Increase Efficiency

- Better Documentation & Archiving for all projects (pitching, running, finished)

2011 is promising – but as quoted from Margaret Thatcher:

~ I do not know anyone who has gotten to the top without hard work. That is the recipe. It will not always get you to the top, but it will get you pretty near. ~

So, even though this year has started well enough, it’s up to us to make the best out of it.
Check back often to find out what’s up with us, and Happy New Year once again!

IdeBaik celebrates its First Anniversary

Friday, November 12th, 2010

People say that the first year is always the hardest for startups, regardless what business they are in.

Well, we just passed the first cap – our first anniversary. We had so many deadlines we didn’t get to celebrate, but what means most for us is the fact that we have passed the first test.

We hope to get more interesting projects, grow and expand as our clients become bigger!

Local StartUp Group

Thursday, November 4th, 2010

As one of the startups, we just joined the local startup group and so far the group has been very helpful, inspiring and interesting!

Are you also one of the startups in Indonesia?

Join them – just click the link below:

Startup Lokal

[NEW STARTUP VENTURE] Online Shopping by Idebaik

Sunday, October 24th, 2010

November will be a great month for idebaik. Happy clients, new projects coming, there is no better way for us to be proud of what we have accomplished so far since we bought the company almost 8 months ago.

We are currently working on several projects, such as :

- Cheese Cake Factory (Online Shopping with intuitive admin panel to manage orders in one click)

- Riva Restaurant (part of Hotel Park Lane Jakarta – voted as South-East Asia best restaurant by Asia Tatler!)

- MOIE (Designer Furniture show-room located in Jakarta and Singapore)

- PAMA 2011 Calendar

- Coldwell Banker Intranet (fully working with Ajax)

All these projects will be 100% finished before the end of the month.

We are also finally working on our 5th in-house project since one week (After indonesiaclubbing.com, icmini.com, indoclubbing.tv and vv.vg), which will be a new concept of Clothing Online Store. This project is quite exciting since more than just being an online shopping with everything you could find in a common site of this type – and even more ! – it allows us to think about every aspect of an online project. Managing stocks, marketing, promotion, and more.

As a startup business, we still have to go through that long and windy road to climb up to reach for success, but we are happy, excited and motivated with this new business venture.

We have created and managed several online shopping so far already, but never as the owner – just as developer.  This sure will be a helluva experience and we know it’s not gonna be easy; a new friend within the Indonesia startup circle gave us a really nice quote, something to think of and something to plan far in advance to be prepared and to prevent this from happening:

“80% of startups will fail within their first year, and 80% from the rest surviving 20% will fail within the first 5 years.”
–> A statistic taken from Michael Gerber’s book “The E Myth – Why Small Business Fails and What To Do About It”.

But one that never tries will never know the sweet taste of success. But goes without saying, we don’t do it just like that – we jump with both feet in and do all the math behind first to make sure that this new thing won’t go bust. It’s a robust business plan that we need – and we’re gathering the backbones right now to make the whole process easier.

PS: We’ve also found a name, but it remains to be officially announced!

We live for deadlines

Friday, October 8th, 2010

Just some nice photos from the office – day-to-day life within the small world of idebaik.  Between projects, codes, designs, proposals and all-that-stacks there live smiles, laughter, silly jokes, funny pastimes – we are idebaik. :)