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Going Global on Rails: Lessons Learned Taking Japan's Biggest Recipe Site International by Miles Woodroffe Cookpad is Japan’s biggest recipe site - and one of the biggest Rails sites in the world - with 50M unique browsers per month. 80% of women in Japan between 20 and 40 use Cookpad! This talk will cover lessons learned launching our service outside of Japan for the first time, to 30 new regions with 8 languages in 12 months, with a globally distributed team spread across 7 countries. Help us caption & translate this video! http://amara.org/v/LidY/
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The video titled "Going Global on Rails: Lessons Learned" presented by Miles Woodroffe at Rails Pacific 2016 delves into the experience of Cookpad, Japan's largest recipe site, as it expands internationally. Cookpad, which boasts around 50 million unique browsers per month, has a core mission to enhance people’s cooking experiences globally, having achieved significant user engagement primarily in Japan. This talk articulates the lessons learned while launching services in 30 new regions across 8 languages within just 12 months, supported by a diverse, globally distributed team across seven countries. Key Points Discussed: - **Cookpad's Background**: - Established for nearly 18 years and primarily Japanese-centric, with 80% of usage from women aged 20 to 40 in Japan. - Objective to internationalize and adapt the platform to cater to a global audience. - **Global Expansion Strategy**: - Acquisition of other recipe companies in countries like Spain, Indonesia, and Lebanon to create a more unified international service. - Gathering insights from local teams ensures a better understanding of regional cooking habits and challenges. - **Communication & Development Tools**: - Implementation of hypothesis-driven development to validate new ideas and improve the development process. - Use of automation tools like "PT Flow" to streamline development tasks such as branch creation in Git, saving vital time for developers. - Feature toggling to test new functionalities regionally before wider deployment, leveraging localized insights from teams. - **Collaborative Process**: - Features of a new project called "WIP link" facilitating early-stage feedback on ongoing projects to invite collaborative input before full-scale development. - A deployment communication tool helps keep all team members informed of updates and changes in real-time, fostering transparency and collaboration across global teams. - **Challenges Faced**: - Addressing language and cultural differences across regions, ensuring content relevance in varying Spanish-speaking countries, and adapting for right-to-left languages in Arabic-speaking regions. - Emphasizes the importance of having engineers embedded in different locales for better understanding and quicker iteration on user feedback. **Conclusion and Takeaways**: Woodroffe closed by sharing the successes and ongoing challenges faced during the international rollout of Cookpad. His experiences underline that while technology facilitates communication and development, the cultural nuances of different regions can significantly influence product strategy. Continuous engagement and adaptation are key takeaways that can help tech companies navigate the complexities of going global without losing sight of local consumer needs.
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