- From www.udacity.com
App Monetization
- Self-paced
- Free Access
- 4 Sequences
- Introductive Level
Course details
Syllabus
Lesson 1: Introducing Monetization
Developing an appropriate monetization strategy is comparable to finding the product/market fit for a new idea. This lesson will get you started on the path to finding that strategy by helping you think about profitability from the very beginning. You will also learn about different monetization models, profit margins, KPIs, and customer acquisition and retention.Lesson 2: Monetization Strategies
They say nothing happens before you make your first dollar. This lesson takes a deep dive into monetization strategies for different platforms, covering freemium, subscription, eCommerce, and Ads across web, games, and native apps. You’ll learn about the tools startups use to implement these strategies and design a plan to execute a model for your own product.Lesson 3: Implement a Monetization Plan
Monetization strategies change over time as the user base grows and the product evolves. In this lesson, you will choose and tailor a monetization strategy for your product and learn how to set up tracking to monitor its effectiveness. Using Google Analytics and other tracking tools, you will begin closely following and iterating based on behavior reports, crashes, exceptions, and app speed.Lesson 4: Optimize Your Model
In the final lesson, you will learn how to react and re-engage users if your monetization strategies don’t originally work. Through a case study with Nir Eyal, you will see how product and monetization are closely tied and how the Hooked Model can be used to optimize your strategy.Case Study: Wufoo
Learn how Kevin Hale got started with Wufoo (sold to SurveyMonkey).Prerequisite
Instructors
- Ido Green - Ido is a Developer Advocate for Google Chrome. In the past 20 years, he started six companies and had a lot of fun developing and scaling large systems. He has a wide array of skills and experience, including HTML5, JavaScript, Java, PHP -- and all aspects of agile development and scaling systems. His last book [Web Workers: Multithreaded Programs in JavaScript](http://www.amazon.com/Web-Workers-Multithreaded-Programs-JavaScript/dp/1449322131) will help you sleep better on long flights. You can follow his adventures [here.](http://ido-green.appspot.com/)
Editor
Google est une entreprise fondée le 4 septembre 1998 dans le garage Google dans la Silicon Valley, en Californie, par Larry Page et Sergueï Brin, créateurs du moteur de recherche Google.
L'entreprise s'est principalement fait connaître à travers la situation monopolistique de son moteur de recherche, concurrencé historiquement par AltaVista puis par Yahoo! et Bing. Elle a ensuite procédé à de nombreuses acquisitions et développements et détient aujourd'hui de nombreux logiciels et sites web notables parmi lesquels YouTube, le système d'exploitation pour téléphones mobiles Android, ainsi que d'autres services tels que Google Earth, Google Maps ou Google Play.
Platform
Udacity est une entreprise fondé par Sebastian Thrun, David Stavens, et Mike Sokolsky offrant cours en ligne ouvert et massif.
Selon Thrun, l'origine du nom Udacity vient de la volonté de l'entreprise d'être "audacieux pour vous, l'étudiant ". Bien que Udacity se concentrait à l'origine sur une offre de cours universitaires, la plateforme se concentre désormais plus sur de formations destinés aux professionnels.