Friday, February 26, 2010

Credit Cards, Pricing Changes

author photoWe have decided to change our prices and pricing infrastructure in 1 month's time. Starting on March 26th, Skritter will cost $9.95/mo, you will no longer be able to purchase multiple months of Skritter service at a discount price, and billing will be done primarily via credit cards on a month-to-month basis.

If you are currently a paid user, this change in prices will only affect you when your subscription expires (e.g. if your account expires in June 2010, you will only be migrated to the new system in June). Between now and the 26th of March, existing users will still be able to buy Skritter through the old 1, 3, 6, 12, and 24 month Paypal/Google Checkout payment system, but we are migrating away from the old system and so new registering users won't have access to those payment options. If you want to continue paying with Paypal or Google Checking after March 26th, you will be able to pay for a 6 month subscription at the monthly rate.

The free trial will still be 2 weeks long, but we will require billing information during registration like Netflix, 37 Signals' Basecamp, and World of Warcraft. Because we realize that auto billing can sometimes catch people unaware, we are continuing our 100% refund policy and we will email new users 5 days and then again 1 day prior to being billed.

We are discontinuing the use of discount coupons, so if you have such a coupon, the code on it will cease to function in 30 days. We will continue to use coupons for institutional sales, but end user coupon discounts will cease functioning.

Institutional rates will be unaffected by these changes. To date we have done our institutional pricing separately from individual pricing, and it will continue to be done that way.

There are three big reasons we are changing the billing and pricing system:

1) To increase ease of use and simplify the signup process We've done a lot of one-on-one usability testing, and many of the testers had difficulty understanding how much Skritter cost at a glance which led a significant number of them to believe Skritter was significantly more expensive than it really is.

2) To satisfy prospective customers People keep telling us they don't like Paypal and Google Checkout. Since we launched we have heard from quite a few people who wanted to pay but didn't want to use or didn't understand Paypal and Google Checkout.

3) To satisfy existing customers Among current users, most would prefer to just use a credit card. We have been gathering data using the homepage poll about how many people want to continue paying with Google Checkout and Paypal (with and without existing balances). The results are clear: you would rather use your credit card without a third party service.

Since this is the first time we have made a big change in service, we wanted to give everyone one month's time before making the changes. If you have more questions or would like any clarifications, drop us a line and we'll do our best to help out.

Thursday, February 25, 2010

Welcome Christopher and Gabriel!

author photoA while back we indicated that we were in the market some folks to help us do some back end vocabulary linguistics work. We received quite a few applications from a number of really qualified Skritterers. Regrettably we only had two positions to fill, but we are pleased to announce two new additions to the Skritter team: say hello to Christopher Clark and Gabriel Castillo! Christopher (username cclark) will be handling our character, definition, and stroke order corrections, so be sure to say hi when you send your next correction. Gabriel will be hard at work processing all the words you have added and making sure they are available for practicing as soon as possible.

In the last month or so we've fallen behind on adding vocabulary, responding to corrections, and processing vocabulary requests so we are thankful to have these two brave linguistic soldiers helping us dig out of the backlog!

Tuesday, February 23, 2010

Skritter.cn, MDBG Promotion, and More

author photoHere are Skritter HQ things have been particularly busy the last week or so, and we come to you bearing the fruits of our labors! We now have a Chinese mirror for those of you located behind the Great Firewall (www.skritter.cn), our promotion with MDBG has been announced, our February newsletter went out, and we've made a number of tweaks around the site.

Many of you have been having trouble with blocked content, general slowness, and 500 server errors from China. We've been trying to tweak things for a long time, but a few weeks ago we gave up and decided to just start a mirror of the site to speed up performance and eliminate access problems for those of you access Skritter from 中国. Our preliminary tests seem to indicate that it's a big improvement, but you be the judge, check out Skritter at www.skritter.cn and let us know how that works!

As some of you may have heard, we have been working with the Chinese dictionary MDBG for a little while testing some cross-functionality. On Sunday, we officially announced the launch (you can read the MDBG press release here). The promotion lets anyone add vocabulary from MDBG to their Skritter Queue directly without any copying and pasting. So, the next time you're browsing MDBG and find a character you'd like to learn, just click on the little "S" icon and you can get your Skritter learn on when it's convenient. We'd like to thank MDBG for being willing to make this happen. We've been fans of the dictionary for a long time (I've used it extensively for my Chinese homework) and we're happy to be working together.


Our February newsletter went out a little late in the early morning (EST) of February 16th. For those of you who didn't get it, you can check it out online here. It includes an interview with a new Skritterer, site updates, coming features, and the site stats from the last month. The January contest is going to be concluding shortly, and we'll be including news of the winners in next month's newsletter as well as a new feature: a pro tour of some of Skritter's less well understood features.


If you were effected, the list creation debacle has ended, and editing is now back to normal. We lost several of our own lists in the bug, and we appreciate how understanding everyone has been. Everything is back to normal and will remain thus.

Nick has created a bookmark that enables you to add words on any page to your Skritter Queue. The "Bookmarklet" as Nick christened it, can be accessed from the the bottom of the vocabulary page. It currently doesn't have an icon (okay, that's my bad), but it seems to be working well. Let us know what you think of that.

We posted on the forum a little while ago looking for some linguistic help, and we are going to be posting our hiring decision shortly. There are other big changes that need announcing soon, but that's for another blog post.

Friday, February 12, 2010

Skritter Referrals

author photoThe Skritter referral system is up and running. You can go directly to the referral page by clicking here or by clicking on the "Tell your friends about us!" link on your homepage.

Here's how it works: refer your friends to Skritter and for every person you refer that becomes a paying member of the site, you get 2 free weeks of Skritter access. People you refer and who pay also get 2 extra weeks of time on their account. It's supposed to be a win-win for both people recommending Skritter and people just discovering the site. Let us know what you think of it!



In other news, we are preparing for this month's newsletter (which goes out on Monday), Nick and Scott have crushed still more bugs, and the alpha version of active reading practice has proven to be a little buggy.

Sunday, February 7, 2010

Skritter Twitter

author photoSkritter is now on Twitter: you should follow us at SkritterHQ! The feed will keep you up to date on our goings on, and in the next few weeks we will be starting Twitter-only contests. More on that later, but for now, feel free to listen to our Twitterings and see what we're doing between blog posts.



In other news, the tee shirts for last month's contest winners arrived this last Tuesday and I was busy for a day or so packing and shipping them all over the world. Congrats to everyone who qualified for that! We hope that you get ample opportunity to amaze and astound your friends with your hard-won Skritter apparel. This month's newsletter contest continues on till the end of the month so that we can better feature winners in next month's installment.

Nick and Scott have been destroying bugs like rampaging, angry rhinoceroses in a field full of flightless flamingos. Scott fixed a problem with the manual move to next section feature. When you are manually moving through words you will no longer get the next section's material before you actually study it. Nick squashed a sly little bug that caused prompts to be skipped if users pressed the arrow button while the next prompt was loading. Contrary to previous behavior, the section progress bar that drops down in the flash now only appears when a new word is being studied, and it's a lot less of a performance drag (nice). Nick fixed the show button so that it now unpresses when the phantom fades out, as opposed to just staying depressed until its next usage. Nick also fixed a bug with manually adding words so that those words actually show up right away when you press the button. Scott fixed a problem that was forcing people to learn Chinese if they logged in via Clickpass.

Between all of this flamingo/bug stompin, Scott has been hacking away at a new Japanese textbook that will be up soon, Nick has been working on reading practice, and I've been doing a lot of customer support. Into the next week, and beyond!

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