Friday, July 26, 2024

Adyar police initiative to alert mobile

When the posters of politicians vie for humans’ everywhere, the Adyar police use the equal to create attention most of the public, specifically the younger techies, approximately cell cellphone snatching to lessen such incidents. Mobile apps for small business owners are becoming more common as smaller businesses have found apps to be one of the main cornerstones of marketing and branding their businesses.

In the past, apps were only available to “large” companies due to the high costs of developing a custom app. App developers spend many hours designing and coding the apps to the exact specifications of the company, which leads to an extremely high price tag. But, as it has pretty much played out in the past with other automation, technology has caught up with the trend, and we now have made more affordable apps for medium to small-business owners.

alert

But more focus is wanted by a few of the public about the incidents on the way to be vigilant. Initially, we created awareness via an audio system fitted on patrolling jeeps; however, none struck to listen. Some of them were irritated over this. Then we brought a value-powerful approach — sticking notices seen by the general public. Statements explaining specific modus operandi of the culprits have been displayed on each road and street from SRP equipment and Chemmanchery.”

Look at your smartphone right now. Every one of those apps that you see on your screen was developed for a specific reason. Check your email, local weather reports, social media, work calendar… etc. Then, mobile apps for business marketing came into existence, and the whole marketing world exploded. Now, businesses can buy, sell, trade… or just about any transaction you can think of that you could do in person on your smartphone. Business marketers had developers create mobile apps for their businesses to take advantage of this new marketing strata.

What do you see when you watch people walking through a mall or shopping area? Most will look down at their phones, interacting with someone or some business. It can be argued that this practice can be somewhat risky, especially if you’re not watching where you are going. But that’s another discussion at some other time.

However, here’s what’s refreshing about a mobile business app. It can be referred to as an “electronic business card.” It is always in front of a business’s customers. As the smartphone user scrolls through the apps and has your app for your business, they will see it multiple times daily. A company can only grow with that kind of exposure.

What do you see when you watch people walking through a mall or shopping area? Most will look down at their phones, interacting with someone or some business. It can be argued that this practice can be somewhat risky, especially if you’re not watching where you are going. But that’s another discussion at some other time.

However, here’s what’s refreshing about a mobile business app. It can be referred to as an “electronic business card.” It is always in front of a business’s customers. As the smartphone user scrolls through the apps and has your app for your business, they will see it multiple times daily. A company can only grow with that kind of exposure.

What do you see when you watch people walking through a mall or shopping area? Most will look down at their phones, interacting with someone or some business. It can be argued that this practice can be somewhat risky, especially if you’re not watching where you are going. But that’s another discussion at some other time.

police

However, here’s what’s refreshing about a mobile business app. It can be referred to as an “electronic business card.” It is always in front of a business’s customers. As the smartphone user scrolls through the apps and has your app for your business, they will see it multiple times daily. A company can only grow with that kind of exposure.

Here is a great example of a mobile business app operating. A customer, we’ll call him John, who had downloaded the app from a local pizza place, places a pizza order from the app for a little gathering of friends at his house. John knows they make great pizza, and sure enough, one of his friends wants to see the name of the place where he got the pizza because it is NOT a major chain. John says, “Here’s the name of the pizza place, and you can download their app from the app store.

Word of mouth is the best advertising money cannot buy.

That pizza business picks up another customer they would normally not get. And, when John’s friend downloads the app, the pizza place is on his phone, and he will see it multiple times during the day or night.

That is only one-way mobile business apps work for businesses.

Notices of the methods utilized by cellular smartphone snatchers have been stuck at bus stands and the partitions of streets and roads to alert those who talk on their telephones, even as strolling or sitting in a single location.

M. Rohit Nathan, Deputy Commissioner of Police, told The Hindu, “Here we have greater humans working in IT agencies on Old Mahabalipuram Road. The children use the mobile smartphone for messaging and get in touch with them while walking on the road, thinking that they are saving time. Utilizing such events, the culprits strike the walkers on the street and rob them with their mobile telephones. After the attention marketing campaign, the instances of mobile snatching reduced drastically.

alert

V.Srinivasan, Assistant Commissioner of Police, stated, “We mobile alert detected police nearly 90% cases of snatching cell phones. But more focus is wanted by a few of the public about the incidents on the way to be vigilant. Initially, we created awareness via an audio system fitted on patrolling jeeps; however, none struck to listen. Some of them were irritated over this. Then we brought a value-powerful approach — sticking notices seen by the general public. Statements explaining the specific modus operandi of the culprits have been displayed on each road and street from SRP equipment and Chemmanchery.

Jenna D. Norton
Jenna D. Norton
Creator. Amateur thinker. Hipster-friendly reader. Award-winning internet fanatic. Zombie practitioner. Web ninja. Coffee aficionado. Spent childhood investing in frisbees for the government. Gifted in exporting race cars in Orlando, FL. Had a brief career short selling psoriasis in Ohio. Earned praise for getting my feet wet with human growth hormone in Minneapolis, MN. Spent several years creating marketing channels for banjos for farmers. Spent 2002-2010 merchandising karma for no pay.

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