Mobile
social network 2go is extending its feature phone app to smartphones, while
growing its team of software developers and support staff.
2go currently has over 10 million active users who send more than
6 billion messages a month, mostly on lower-end feature phones in Nigeria and
South Africa. “Feature phones have been an incredibly successful platform for
us and will continue to be so for the next few years at least,” says Alan
Wolff, who founded 2go with fellow student Ashley Peter while still at
university.
“Research firms such as Informa indicate that by 2015 there will
still be 5.6 feature phones in the African market for every one smartphone. But
now is the right time to start extending to iOS, Blackberry and Android
platforms as well.”
The secret to 2go’s success, say Wolff and Peter, is careful
attention to user needs and a rock-solid technical foundation. They say this is
especially important in African contexts where users face high data costs and
scarce bandwidth.
“We’ve custom-built both the user app and our backend systems to
work fast, reliably and efficiently,” says Peter. “We’ve been self-funded from
the start and so we’ve learned how to make the most of very scarce resources –
we still have a very low ratio of engineers to users.”
“With our recent rapid user growth and the emergence of newer
platforms such as Android and iOS, there’s now a need to aggressively grow the
team,” he adds. “We are actively recruiting new developers who have an appetite
for the technical challenges we’re taking on.”
“Having abundant resources can make people lazy,” adds Wolff. “We
didn’t have money at the beginning, so we had to squeeze every last bit of
performance out of our hardware. That’s why we still own, control and manage
all of our servers, which now total more than 50. We’re working very close to
the hardware layer.”
These backend challenges are mirrored at the level of the feature
phones the 2go app was originally developed for. Wolff notes that designing a
successful app for feature phones brings complexity not faced in the smartphone
world.
“Most of these phones have a very low memory footprint, so we’ve
had to be creative to develop an app that’s fast, fun and easy to use,” says
Wolff. “We’ve developed some proprietary compression and other ways to make the
app as lightweight as possible. There is such diversity in the number of
feature phones one has to support – we have several hundred phones in a
cupboard that we’ve collected over the years, and we test every version on
every phone.”
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