The Social Media App For Kids
Social media is part of American culture, it is not something that you can keep your kids from, the cubby app intends to teach children good habits and behavior on social media from an early age. By de-emphasizing the importance of likes, and focusing more on actual social interaction in a kind manner.
THE HOW? Operating system plug-ins will allow third-party content like YouTube videos to be shared in Users feeds as well. Parental approval is required for any posting of comments or content. Application access shuts off universally at 9 PM Eastern every night.
The app is ideally for children ages 5 to 10. It is understood that children will age out of the app, but the hope is that they have developed healthy social media habits as a result.
The selling point is is that it is an app that is an entry point to social media for children. ADT will primarily appear as items in a child’s cubby. The ads should look as natural and it’s close to the look and feel of a typical cubby entry as possible. Sponsored and targeted advertisements will be the primary means of revenue generation.
The long-term possibility of the app is to make it available to educational systems Azure tool for connecting classrooms. That is the potential endgame for the app to have it sold to an educational system.
Children make entries to their cubby, via a very intuitive and age-appropriate in her face. The interface should consist largely of colored icons with very clear instructions about how to add information to a copy. While the interface is not expected to have a system of lakes, parents will be able to see and measure the amount of engagement in individual items in the parents interface. Parents will have the option of making automatic approvals for a short window of time. The typical content approval process would involve a child pressing a button on cubby to send to parents for approval, and the parent is receiving a notification in the parent copy app in which they grant approval.
Parental control also extends to the amount of time that a child is available to use the app for a given day, and parents will have the ability to turn off the ads for a monthly fee.
So to reiterate, the primary sources of revenue or sponsored ads that appear in a child’s cubby, as well as fees from parents who do not want the ad sponsored version. The monthly fee should be low enough that parents do not see it as a hindrance, by making it as little as $.99 a month that is a recurring charge in there App Store account App Store account
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