Friday, February 24, 2023

Google Docs Goes Smarter: New Stopwatch, Calendar Template, and Smart Chips for Productivity

The Google Docs platform will soon get several new additions, such as a timer, a calendar template, and other Smart Chips. The modifications are intended to increase productivity and teamwork for users of the well-known document editing program.

Users will be able to track their time on a specific job within Google Documents using the new stopwatch functionality. For people who need to track their work hours for a project or bill clients for their time, this function is especially helpful.

On the other hand, the Calendar template will offer customers a pre-formatted calendar that can be altered and included immediately in their papers. Users will benefit from time savings while establishing calendars for appointments, events, and meetings thanks to this feature.


Google Documents will also include the Smart Chips feature, which was previously exclusive to Gmail. Users may quickly and easily reference data from other Google apps, such as Google Drive, Google Meet, and Google Calendar, within their documents by using smart chips.

For instance, the Smart Chip will automatically create a link to a file if a user types "@drive" and the file's name while referencing a file in Google Drive. Similarly, when a user wants to set up a meeting, they may type "@meet" and the name of the person they want to meet, and the Smart Chip will establish a link to set up the appointment immediately within Google Calendar.

Also, the company is enhancing its Explore tool, which suggests related articles to users based on the context of their documents. A wider range of information sources, including the internet and users' own Google Drive files, will now be suggested by the revised Explore function.

Google claims that these upgrades would increase productivity and teamwork among platform users. All users of Google Documents will progressively receive the new capabilities over the coming weeks. Users won't need to do anything to get the upgrades because they will be added to the platform automatically.

Google Docs is one of the most popular document editing software platforms, with millions of users worldwide. The platform is widely used by individuals, businesses, and organizations of all sizes for its ease of use, collaborative features, and integration with other Google apps.

With these new updates, Google Docs is poised to become an even more powerful tool for productivity and collaboration. Users can expect to see even more updates and improvements to the platform in the coming months, as Google continues to invest in its suite of productivity tools.

Read next: How Can Companies Leverage Data to Modernize and Personalize Email Marketing?
by Unknown via Digital Information World

How Can Companies Leverage Data to Modernize and Personalize Email Marketing?

Engaging with customers and subscribers is key to building long-lasting relationships and driving conversions. Personalization helps your company connect with customers, but the need for data and changes to consumer privacy policies present challenges to personalizing the customer experience. Let’s look at how you can use the data you already have to improve your company’s email marketing operation and nurture relationships with your subscribers.

Each day, you’re barraged by dozens of emails competing for your attention. Some of it is pure spam. Others are irrelevant. And some succeed in snagging your attention, even if you’re not entirely interested in the company or offer.

Which emails are enticing enough for you to spend more than half a second glancing over them before tapping delete, delete, delete?

They likely leverage some type of personalization intended to grab your attention and call out to you. The subject line probably greets you like an old friend — “Hey, Melissa!” — before referencing one of your interests, likes, or needs the same way a colleague would: “Enjoy your next lunch for 40% off, on us!”

This approach is warm and welcoming. It’s almost easy to forget the sender is some corporation or company. And even then, 40% off your next lunch is tough to pass up, especially when your favorite lunch spot is making the offer.

And so, belly rumbling, you open the email and get greeted with even more personalization. There, under a mouth-watering image of your favorite sandwich — the same one you ordered last week — is your name, front-and-center in bold, with an offer the email claims is just for you.

It’s an experience we’ve all had. The companies we frequently interact with leverage the personal information and data we’ve provided and that they’ve collected to target us with unique, personalized emails designed to retain us as customers and drum up more business.

The same is likely true of your company. Think of all the data you’ve collected in your CRM or data warehouse.
  • Are you using it all?
  • How can you use it better to personalize your emails beyond simple greetings and niceties?
  • What are the benefits and impacts of maturing the way your company personalizes its communications with customers?

How to personalize beyond the [FName] in email marketing

71% of consumers expect personalized experiences from the companies they interact with. Using merge tags — dynamic tags like [FName] that include your subscribers’ basic information, such as their First Name — isn’t enough to deliver a personalized experience. It’s only a start.

Like the lunch example, you must demonstrate that your company understands your customers. Not only might you address them by name or reference a previous order or visit (“we miss you!”), but show them that your company cares about their likes, needs, and preferences.

For example, a restaurant personalizing a lunch offer may look at your past order history to suggest a meal you haven’t tried yet that matches your assumed tastes.

Past orders may also be compared to that of similar customers to create a personalized suggestion for a meal that fits your customer profile.

How data changes the way we communicate with subscribers

Data enables companies to connect and continually engage with customers. It’s why an email on a Wednesday morning treating you to a discounted and mouth-watering lunch is so effective.

Sure, you’ve ordered from that restaurant before and will likely do so again in the future, but at that moment, that check-in engages with you (and your appetite).

But without collecting and using your personal data, that restaurant wouldn’t be able to offer you such a personalized suggestion.

Maybe you’d have been offered a new menu item or one of the restaurant’s most popular orders, but there’d be little guarantee such an offer would convert and have you picking up the phone to order.

Let’s break down how this data influences the way businesses like yours communicate with subscribers.

Image Credit: Ongage

Behavioral data

Behavioral data is rich with insights into what your customers want and how they think.

Leveraging this information — which comes from behaviors that include how customers engage with emails, interact with your website, and use your mobile app — enables your business to drive personalization [on] an individual level and continually improve your algorithm.

There are no limits to the types of behavioral data you may find useful. In addition to more generalized (but equally important) data like location and device type, consider looking at behavioral data that includes:
  • Search keywords.
  • Referral source.
  • How often the customer visits your website or uses your app.
  • Time of visit, including its proximity to payday, holidays, or sales events.
  • Purchase or order history.
  • Session behavior.
Tapping into this behavioral data can have significant impacts on your ROI. Using this information to craft personalized, behavioral-based emails may lead to 60% more conversions than generalized mass marketing emails.

1:1 personalization

1:1, or one-to-one, personalization is an intensely focused type of "hyper-personalization" that uses micro-segmentation to understand each individual customer you’re targeting.

This personalization approach leverages real-time data, past activity, and machine learning to identify new connections between data sets, creating specific and personalized approaches.

But 1:1 personalization needs substantial data to be effective. A restaurant recommending a highly-personalized lunch order can leverage an extensive order history to understand your interests, preferences, and tastes.

If you’ve only ever ordered once — or only ever ordered a roast beef sandwich without mayo — a restaurant must depend on other data and analytics — such as the customer segment you belong — to offer you a personalized recommendation.

However, if you’ve ordered:
  • Once a week.
  • On Wednesdays at 11 am.
  • And it’s always sandwiches made with French bread, no mayo, and extra tomatoes.
Then the restaurant has enough data to start custom-tailoring suggestions for you — and knows the best time to offer those suggestions.

Segmentation

Segmentation lays the groundwork for personalization of any sort, including something as in-depth as 1:1 personalization. It’s what gives you a broad view of who your customers are.

From there, you can personalize on a general level or break personalization down into micro-segments.

For example, your favorite restaurant may segment its customers into common subsets based on age, gender, and location. But it may also segment further into micro-segments based on factors such as:
  • The usual time of day to order.
  • Favorite dishes.
  • Preferred proteins, vegetables, and sides.
Analyzing this data and creating customer segments helps businesses identify opportunities that may be leveraged to improve KPIs.

Think of customers who frequently order lunch as a single segment. That segment may then be narrowed down further into customers who frequently order sandwiches for lunch. Or it may be narrowed down even further into customers who frequently order tuna sandwiches for lunch.

The more specific your segmentation, the easier it is to provide hyper-personalization.

Automation

With so much available data, one of your major concerns may be how to collect, analyze, and use it all in meaningful, actionable ways. Email automation helps streamline this process, segmenting customers based on certain parameters and the data contained within their profiles.

You can then leverage these heaps of data to create and generate dynamic content blocks.

Dynamic content enables your company to deliver targeted and hyper-personalized content to segments or micro-segments of your choice. Then, automation can send this tailored content to each subscriber segment without requiring you to create multiple and distinct email campaigns.

Consider a restaurant offering new menu items for breakfast, lunch, and dinner. Through its behavioral data analysis, the restaurant knows vegans make up a sizable part of its customer base.

Upon announcing its new menu items, the restaurant creates dynamic content blocks spotlighting vegan-friendly options for vegan customers. In contrast, the restaurant sends different content to meat-eating customers.

But the possibilities don’t stop there. For example, the restaurant can create dynamic content targeting specific customers, highlighting new vegan breakfast options to those who typically stop in for a morning snack.

By combining dynamic content with automation, your company can tap into its wealth of data to create and launch specific, hyper-personalized email campaigns without requiring much more effort or investment, even as your business grows.

It also helps ensure seamless experiences from one channel to another. The information collected on your website or learned through a chatbot can impact how you personalize messages to that same customer via email or SMS marketing.

However, automation is no excuse for doing away with the personal touch. Companies must find a balance between automation and human interaction. Let automation enhance and empower your approach to personalization, but remember the person (or people) you’re engaging with, too.

We’ve covered many ways you can use personalization to improve KPIs. They’re all important and relevant.

But it’s vital to acknowledge they all rely on quality data, and obtaining it is crucial for effective personalization.

You may think it’s an impossible task for you, but keep on reading and you’ll discover quality data is within reach.

How do you acquire subscriber data?

Despite legal, regulatory, and ethical obligations, acquiring subscriber data may be easier than you think. In fact, 90% of customers are happy to provide you with their data if it means they’ll have a cheaper or more convenient experience.

The best approach is adding data into your company’s CRM or data warehouse. Because these tools contain data from every channel, they provide you with a high-level overview of how each of your customers or customer segments behave.

But there’s no guarantee that the data you’ve collected is accurate or complete, potentially degrading the impact of your personalization efforts. To avoid any shortfalls, we recommend using data enrichment tools to complement, improve, and verify the data you’ve collected by adding and connecting data points from multiple channels.

Using data enrichment to enhance your subscriber data lets your company better personalize the customer experience. As a result, your campaigns are more likely to engage with your customers and drive conversions.

But, alas, there are still some obstacles to overcome.

The impact of Apple MPP and the cookie apocalypse on email data and personalization

Apple MPP, or Apple Mail Privacy Protection, is an iOS 15 privacy feature that blocks marketers from acquiring data through an invisible pixel included in emails and newsletters. Since well before its launch in September 2021, Apple MPP was seen — perhaps hyperbolically — as the “emailpocalypse.”

If that’s not enough -pocalypses for the marketer in you, there’s another in the pipe, too. The “cookie apocalypse” — Google’s plan to deprecate support for third-party cookies — is expected to roll out in mid-2023.

Google doesn’t plan to stop there, either. Driven by Apple’s new privacy policy, Google intends to limit data sharing on Android devices within two years.

Though it promises to be less disruptive than Apple MPP, Google’s expansion of its Privacy Sandbox initiative means marketers will lose access to tracking identifiers and other data.

What do these privacy initiatives mean for you?

MPP makes certain metrics — like open rates — difficult or impossible to measure with any degree of accuracy. It also becomes difficult to follow subscribers' mail activity because their IP addresses are hidden.

Google’s cookie apocalypse functions similarly. By deprecating third-party cookies, companies will lose access to user data generated from off-site, diminishing the ability for advertisers to display highly-personalized ads to consumers.

This makes segmentation more difficult, but it doesn’t impact your ability to collect information via first-party cookies on your site or app. You just need to get smart about collecting and using data to personalize the customer experience.

How to rely more on clicks than opens as an engagement meter

Across all industries, the average email open rate is 25.39%. But that number is relatively meaningless because:
  1. Open rates are unreliable and don’t necessarily correlate to conversions or sales.
  2. They’re also skewed by subscribers who use Apple Mail, who are immediately counted as having opened your email.
To mitigate the changes introduced by Apple MPP and Google’s renewed focus on consumer privacy, reassess your metrics and KPIs. Focus less on vanity metrics (open rate) and more on engagement KPIs, such as click-through rates (CTR), conversions, and growth — metrics that measure how well your emails perform.

This means you need to create actual value.

Speak to the reasons a subscriber would even consider opening your email. And then, think about what will encourage them to follow through with your CTA.

One way to go about it is to send your emails at the best time possible.

How to optimize sending time

Email marketing platforms often offer Send Time Optimization (STO) functionality, employing algorithms that use behavioral data to determine the best time to send emails.

If your platform doesn’t offer this, don’t despair.

Much of the data you collect and analyze can be used to actively and manually calculate the best times to send an email. Consider factors such as recipients’:
  • Time zones: the geographic region they live in.
  • Signup time: when they signed up to receive emails from you.
  • Real-time engagements: when the subscriber is actively browsing through their inbox, clicking links.
  • Cross-channel activity: during periods when the subscriber is interacting or has interacted with your company.
Additionally, practice deduction and experimentation. Try out different time blocks as a form of A/B testing. Put yourself in the mindset of your audience according to segments to try and understand what’s most convenient for them. Further, offer subscribers the option to decide when they’ll receive emails — morning, noon, or night.

Illustration Credit: Ongage

Collating, analyzing, and acting on this information is why your favorite restaurant knows its best shot at bringing you in for a special lunch is that early Wednesday morning email. You’re going to see it, you’re going to be hungry, and you’re going to convert.

How is automation affected?

Both MPP and Google’s cookie apocalypse impact automation, but don’t lead to — as their monikers may imply — the end of the (marketing) world.

Automation may suffer some defeats, at least at the start. For example, open rates are no longer a dependable trigger for sending a follow-up or subsequent email. Similarly, you may have difficulty gathering data from the customer’s entire journey once third-party cookies lose their functionality.

However, this changing landscape also helps automation shine. Automation can function as an alternative to third-party data, especially when coupled with machine learning and AI.

You can leverage automation to create and learn from a first-party ecosystem and all of the first-party data stored in your CRM or data warehouse. This gives you access to whatever metrics you deem necessary and important, like click rates, and provides insight into customer behaviors and interests across every channel you operate in.

To succeed with email marketing, prioritize personalization

Eighty percent of customers are more likely to purchase from companies that offer personalized experiences, which only highlights the importance of developing an effective email personalization strategy.

The good news is: you likely have all the data you need to implement or improve personalization in your email marketing.

Like a restaurant tapping into its customers' order histories to make highly-personalized and mouth-watering recommendations, your company's CRM and data warehouse represent a treasure trove of information that can improve your customers’ experience and drive conversions.

By leveraging personalization to create value for your customers, you’ll create tangible value for your bottom line, too.

Authors bio:

Melissa Pekel and Haim Pekel (H&M) are VP Marketing & VP Growth @ongage , a nextgen email marketing platform. Prior to Ongage, H&M spearheaded marketing and growth operations at Press on It, their agency. They worked with SaaS, Martech, and software companies, building them from the ground up or leading continued growth in large-scale operations.

by Unknown via Digital Information World

Fake ChatGPT Clones Spread Malware to an Ample Windows and Android Devices

According to cybersecurity investigators, hackers have been employing bogus ChatGPT programs to install malware onto Windows and Android devices. The malicious software was disseminated via third-party app stores in the pretense of ChatGPT, a well-known artificial intelligence chatbot.

Due to the chatbot's high demand and rapid growth, a $20/30 days membership tier (Chat GPT Plus) was made available for those who want to utilize it without any availability restrictions.

As a result of the move, threat actors were able to profit from the tool's popularity by providing constant, free access to premium Chat GPT. The opportunities to deceive users into installing malware or divulging their login details are numerous.

According to reports, the malware has a variety of dangerous payloads, including Trojans, backdoors, and ransomware. Once the victim downloads the false Chat GPT clone, the malware is secretly placed onto their device, giving the hackers access to private information, the ability to steal login information, and remote control of the device.


Third-party app shops, which are known to be less secure than official app stores like Google Play or the Microsoft Store, are where the phony Chat GPT programs were disseminated. Tens of thousands of consumers worldwide have downloaded bogus AI apps, claim researchers.

Users are advised by experts to only download programs from official app stores and to exercise caution when doing so. Also, they advise setting up reliable antivirus software and maintaining devices.

Also, the business has released a statement advising customers to exercise caution when downloading apps that seem to be related to the service. The business has acknowledged that it only makes its app available through authorized channels and does not distribute it through unofficial app stores.

Also, the company has advised customers to alert the proper authorities about any dubious apps posing as Chat GPT.

The discovery of this malware operation brings attention to the growing danger posed by cybercriminals who use well-known products and services to spread malware. The threats related to cybersecurity keep rising as more people rely on digital services for communication, business, and pleasure.

Users should exercise vigilance and take preventative measures to safeguard their devices and data, according to professionals. This entails creating secure passwords that are different from others, enabling two-factor authentication, and frequently backing up sensitive files.

Read next: New Survey Shows the Challenges Businesses Face When Confronting Political Polarization
by Arooj Ahmed via Digital Information World

Google Paid $12 Million To Protect Its Platform Against Security Vulnerabilities In 2022

The tech world continues to evolve with time and that means there are more threats to platforms now than ever.

Security vulnerabilities continue to increase as we speak and if big tech names don’t have adequate protocols in place, they’re bound to suffer. Developers continue to rant about how their software is always at risk of new threats. This is why identifying each issue and fixing these vulnerabilities is necessary.

A lot of firms are making use of bounty programs and reward schemes so researchers can be at the top of their game and feel rewarded for taking out time and effort to assist and prevent the great risks attached.

No one is perfect and the more helping hands available, the better the chance that you’ll be protected. Hence, this is exactly where today’s report comes into play. So many actors are lingering and Google is making sure it’s staying protected.

And if that means jetting out more money to ward off the threats, then so be it. A new report says 2022 was the year when we witnessed Google pay $12 million in the bounty that tried to eliminate nearly 2900 different security threats.

One of the highest was actually a payment worth a staggering $605,000. Another sent out $468,000 for 700 reports. Meanwhile, Android’s vulnerability program saw $4.8 million be paid to those putting in a lot of effort.

Google Chrome saw nearly $4 million be paid to researchers covering some huge bugs and others covered threats seen in ChromeOS. Now, we’re hearing the news that Google is adding a new category where it wants researchers to work hard and provide incentives to target certain areas including memory corruption.

Google is a mega contributor to the likes of a community involving open-source software. It believes it can greatly benefit from such incentive-based programs. And so far, 100 are already taking part, making rewards worth $110,00 up for grabs. So as you can see, it’s a double-benefit affair at both the receiver's and giver’s end.

If you happen to be interested in how the tech giant can reward you for your efforts when and if you do make a breakthrough finding, you can visit Bug Hunters University. This was set out last year and provided some great instructional videos on how to make reports and how to actually help the tech giant stay protected in return for money of great value.


Read next: AI Chatbots Are Costing Google And Microsoft Ten Times More Than The Usual Search
by Dr. Hura Anwar via Digital Information World

What Country Has the Highest Adoption Rate for VPNs in the World?

Using VPNs has turned into a popular option for most people because of the fact that this is the sort of thing that could potentially end up allowing them to maintain their privacy online. What’s more, VPNs can also allow individuals to circumvent any restrictions that their government might have placed on their internet access.

A report that was just published by Atlas VPN highlights which countries tend to have the highest adoption rates for VPNs with all things having been considered and taken into account. It turns out that the country where the most people use VPNs is the UAE, where 43.18% of the population stated that it uses VPNs in order to be able to access every single part of the internet.

With all of that having been said and now out of the way, it is important to note that Qatar came in second with 39.2%. Qatar was followed by Singapore, where the overall VPN adoption rate currently hovers at around the 37.11% mark.

In spite of the fact that this is the case, VPN adoption has actually fallen in most of these countries. Back in 2020, the adoption rate was as high as 61.61% for the UAE and 53.06% for Qatar. Singapore, however, has seen VPN usage skyrocket in the same time period. While only 16.16% of Singaporeans used VPNs in 2020, that number has increased to 37.11% after two years although this is still a decrease from the over 49% that was seen last year.

There are also quite a few countries where VPN usage remains incredibly rare. Only 1.48% of Japanese people use VPNs, and this proportion has remained rather consistent over the years. Thailand is another country with an exceptionally low adoption rate for VPNs, with it currently hovering around the 1.91% mark.

This reveals that VPNs don’t exactly have a universal appeal. What’s more, they often don’t have a very long usage curve. Users that start to utilize them often abandon them after the span of a year, although the reasons behind this are not quite clear as of right now.



Read next: 48% of People Say That Recording People Without Consent Should Be Illegal
by Zia Muhammad via Digital Information World

Shutterstock’s Generative AI Could Be a Game Changer, Here’s Why

Generative AI is the next big thing in the world of tech, and Shutterstock just tossed its hat into the ring. Collaborating with OpenAI, Shutterstock has just launched a generative AI that will be a part of its Creative Flow suite.

However, oversaturated users might be weary of yet another entry into the game. Platforms offering generative AI are about to seem like a dime a dozen, so what exactly makes Shutterstock different from all the rest?

Before we proceed, it might be useful to provide an overview of how creatives are thinking about Generative AI. For one thing, the data that such forms of AI scrape doesn’t come out of the blue. Rather it is the by-product of hard work that was done by very real people, and they often don’t receive any of the fruits of their labor.

Therein lies one of Shutterstock’s main appeals. You see, Shutterstock doesn’t just use art that was made by real individuals and repackage and repurpose it based on user prompts. Instead, it treats this like a collaborative partnership by paying artists for their efforts. Creators will receive ongoing royalties which will be paid out by the Shutterstock Contributor Fund!

One thing to mention here is that Shutterstock will only be using images that have been officially licensed by its platform. That can do a lot to prevent artists getting taken advantage of, and it can also help to declutter the database thereby making it easier to trace the origins of various art and generated depictions back to the people that they took inspiration from.

66% of Shutterstock users are already interested in learning more about generative AI according to a survey conducted by the company. What’s more, 45% of Shutterstock users have already begun using AI to generate various forms of content, and 35% of art contributors also said the same. It’s quite clear that AI usage in such contexts isn’t going away anytime soon.

This has created a huge level of demand, and Shutterstock is looking to fulfill this demand with a product that does not leave artists in the lurch. It is an important step forward, but users won’t be convinced to adopt this generative AI based on ethics alone. While it is essential that artists get paid, around 29% of AI users on Shutterstock are doing so for professional reasons, so they will need more than just fair revenue sharing policies to entice them.






That is where Shutterstock’s ease of use comes in. If you have ever tried to use a generative AI such as DALL-E, you might’ve noticed how difficult it is to come up with the right prompt. Oftentimes users have to think long and hard about prompts otherwise the art that gets generated doesn’t come out right

This couldn’t be further from the experience that users can obtain through Shutterstock. The AI offered by this platform is advanced enough that it can generate appropriate images through one word prompts. The platform also has a variety of aesthetics that can be selected through a proprietary style picker.

Also, the fact that this AI is part of Shutterstock’s Creative Flow suite is useful in and of itself. The AI pairs excellently with the editing tools, providing the results of a professional designer at a fraction of the cost. Again, this won’t end up taking food off the tables of designing experts. Rather, artistic individuals will still earn through the revenue share program, so the superior ease of use does not come at any significant social cost.

Speaking of costs, consumers won’t have to deal with any extra ones while using this generative AI. It’s meant to be a part of the same Creative Flow suite as before, which means that any customers that are already subscribed to the suite will be able to take advantage of it moving forward.

In fact, users can even sign up for a free trial. They will get ten free AI generated images, which can help them to try before they buy. Furthermore, Shutterstock is offering one of the few generative Ais that don’t have a waitlist! Users need only subscribe and start using the AI to generate images at their leisure.

Multi-language functionality is also an important part of Shutterstock’s appeal here. With over 20 languages being supported, Shutterstock is providing one of the first truly global generative AI platforms that we have seen so far. That alone makes it a worthy contender for the top spot, but it also happens to be just one of many features that make this an excellent newcomer to the world of generative AI.

Shutterstock is clearly trying to hit the ground running, and their no holds barred approach will provide some stiff competition to generative AI platforms that are already being used. It was only a matter of time before other companies started to hop on the bandwagon, but in the case of Shutterstock we can at least take solace in the fact that the company is trying to go about it the right way.

With countless ethically sourced visuals at their disposal, users can take advantage of Shutterstock’s new platform in a big way. The platform has also offered a series of tips that can be used to improve the quality of the generated visuals.

Adding more ideas, visual cues and descriptors into your prompt can help you to generate just the kind of image that you had in mind. However, single word prompts are still a viable option.

All in all, it seems like the AI wars have only just begun, and many companies like Shutterstock will be attempting to create their own versions of the tech. It remains to be seen who ends up coming out on top, but with the way things are going with Shutterstock, many will be betting that this is the platform that manages to set the stage for the future direction of the industry.
by Zia Muhammad via Digital Information World

Are Cheaper EV Batteries Really the Solution Carmakers Need?

The rise of electric vehicles (EVs) has put the automotive industry in a sticky spot, since car manufacturers need to come up with ways to make EVs more affordable than might have been the case otherwise. They need to find a balance between affordability and profitability because of the fact that this is the sort of thing that could potentially end up making the industry more sustainable in the long run.

With all of that having been said and now out of the way, it is important to note that a lot of car manufacturers have started to go for slightly more affordable batteries. With the cost of NCM (Lithium Nickel Manganese Cobalt Oxide) materials rising with each passing day, cheaper LFP (lithium iron phosphate) batteries could provide a solution that will help car manufacturers bring EVs to a much broader audience.

In spite of the fact that this is the case, switching over to these cheaper batteries could exacerbate the range issues that EVs experience during bouts of cold weather. Companies like Tesla are already being taken to court for overstating the maximum range of distance that their cars can cover on a full battery in cold weather.

Some studies have shown that the maximum possible distance that a fully charged EV can cover can be cut in half if the weather is frigid. This can even go so far as to cause a 60% reduction in overall efficiency, which is a serious problem that would have to be resolved if these vehicles are to replace standard combustion engines that can have a seriously negative impact on the environment of the world.

However, with companies like Rivian sustaining record breaking losses in the past few quarters, they might not have any other option apart from going for LFP batteries. Range issues notwithstanding, the use of such batteries can help to make cars affordable enough that regular people would actually be able to consider buying them.

If only the old school batteries end up getting used, chances are that EVs will remain the sole purview of people in the upper crust. That will inhibit the growth of the industry and cause a wide range of problems that companies like Rivian simply won’t be able to handle for much longer.

Rivian is not the only company that is considering moving away from the NCM model, either. Well established car manufacturers such as Ford are also considering going down a similar route with all things having been considered and taken into account. Ford already has a new plant in Michigan that will focus mostly on LFP batteries, so it seems like companies are trying to make LFP the standard and fix any issues that arise later on.

LFP batteries are enticing because instead of cobalt and manganese they can use the much more widely available iron. That makes the cathodes in these batteries considerably easier to manufacture, not to mention how they will become a lot more affordable. These savings can be passed down to the consumer, although some are saying that the tradeoff might be far too severe.

It will be interesting to see how the switch from NCM to LFP goes. If it works out well, it could create a new normal for the entire industry.


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by Zia Muhammad via Digital Information World