Future of Bunpro’s (missing) Grammar - Update!

I think that’s a decent idea and I wouldn’t be opposed to it.

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Please no tip options. Just buy a gift membership for someone. If you don’t have a friend learning Japanese then give it away on this forum or somewere else online.

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I am genuinely curious your reasoning against it. Personally I don’t know anyone in my friend/family group that is interested in Japanese, so gifting wouldn’t be helpful for me should I wish to monetarily support Bunpro beyond what is warranted for a lifetime sub.

Maybe an alternative idea could be suggested that is better? A store where the cost of the materials plus X dollar or x% added so you can clearly see what Bunpro would get out of the transaction work better?

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Khan Academy has something like this, but they are a non-profit, which we are not. Basically it is a ‘this product is free but if you wanna support others in the future, feel free to donate’ type setup.

https://donate.khanacademy.org/give/419869/#!/donation/checkout

This is purely hypothetical though. We have no intention of doing it and it has not been discussed amongst the team. More than anything obviously we just want to have a product that provides enough value that customers will always exist.

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If you do NFTs tho I am backflipping out a window.

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I have a bias here since I am from a country that doesn’t tip much and I live in a country that doesn’t tip at all.

Setting that aside, tipping often leads me to wonder “well what is the actual value of the thing?”. In an environment with no pressure I can’t imagine more than a handful of people will ever want to use a tip system when you can just buy a gift membersip and give it to no one if you want to give Bunpro more money. I am sure if you DM a dev they will also accept a direct paypal donation.

[Originally I wrote a long comment about how I think Bunpro makes money but it was all a bit crass and negative so I am removing it but leaving everything else. Summary though is Bunpro is a company which is trying to make money.]

[Now contextless positive comment about Bunpro:] Having said that (and sorry for bringing it up), I personally think if you use Bunpro from the start to the end it is extremely cheap (for someone making an average wage in the first-world). It has multiple textbooks worth of content and the custom hints and nudges etc make all the difference. I don’t use vocab but that is also a game changer in terms of value. I would actually prefer the price of Bunpro just goes up or grammar and vocab are offered as two different sub types or vocab is offered as an upgrade or something.

Bunpro actually bothers to work on N2+N1 level stuff properly. Many apps or similar projects (Marumori comes to mind) promise the world but only if that world ends when you learn how to ask for directions and sit the N4. They do this, again, because most of the market is made of bright-eyed beginners who will quit or stagnate at the same level forever. So, again, +1 to Bunpro in my opinion as they could just focus on the beginner stuff and run. There defintely are elements of Bunpro being a passion project and not just a money making project.

I just find the idea of a dedicated tip system unpalatable given all this.

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If you were to remove the crass part, I think your post would have merit and I would really like to read it if you ever choose to make a thread on it. Being able to share ideas freely is what prevents an echo chamber, so I am all for it.

Personally, I think your thoughts on tips are valid, and I understand where you are coming from. I’m from the US so tips are traditionally used to show a manner of thanks. (I know tip culture in the US has gone to exploitative levels, but that’s a conversation for another forum lol)

It sounds like you want the product to represent a fair value, and I have to agree that if you go from start to finish, value is definitely high.

In my opinion, Bunpro could justifiably set the price of their lifetime sub to $200+ and the value would be still high. So I guess the matter is, how can we show appreciation for Bunpro in a financial sense without stepping on too many toes and without severely changing the core pricing scheme?

To me, a single subscription model is fine, as I always preferred simplicity. A store would be cool, they can finally sell that darn “this is a pen” shirt, or maybe make a graded reader ebook, or a textbook of their own works.

I still hold that tipping would be fine, but I am curious what ramifications that would have for a for-profit company, or even if Bunpro would be open to it at all.

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Seems like gifting subscriptions currently involves sending an email, unless I’m missing something. Perhaps, we just need a more streamlined process for gifting subscriptions.

On another note, your mention of different countries brings to mind the localization of prices in games and DLCs. A price hike could potentially alienate a considerable portion of the active members and potential subscribers.

Anyway, it’s amusing that the community is interested on discovering ways to spend more in the platform, and I like @rdennison7 idea of having a shop.

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It can be a bit dangerous, admittedly, as it could bring the wrong ideas that could result in long-term harm. But it is indeed quite amusing lol

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And that’s precisely why I’m grateful, because I have other apps like iKnow where I paid for a lifetime subscription, but have not updated their content in years. And Clip Studio Paint where I bought the license for it with the promise of forever updates, but the company switching to a sub service and opting not to update the people who bought the full version. Many companies are following this trend, and backtracking by saying that only a certain version of their software actually applies to lifetime so believe me, I have been furious with these unethical practices before. But they’ve happened so much I just started to become numb to them.

Bunpro has been one of the best values among the spectrum of Japanese learning apps, classes, and books I have bought. I’m honestly not sure what’s strange about being surprised and grateful that a company is providing constant support and new content when they already have a relatively complete product compared to other grammar apps and books.

I guess continued support is supposed to be “the deal”, but as mentioned with the examples in the first paragraph, this is not the case with other services I use. The amount of grammar that is being added is extensive enough to merit a separate add on payment, but I’m glad that it’s not.

If you don’t agree that’s fine, I’m not gonna argue it. This isn’t X or Reddit, but I hope that explains the “oddity” of my thankful post.

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You make complete sense and I think it’s deeply shameful that companies do such a tactic.

Bunpro should be praised for its decision to not do that, and your explanation definitely removes some of the “oddness” I had with your initial statement.

Would be low key really funny to use posts from this thread as part of their testimonials. It would be probably the most honest interpretation of what Bunpro currently is lol

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I appreciate the work and efforts the entire team put into the site. It’s a tremendous resource and it has helped my learning to no end.

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This is also a good idea, IMO. Part of the word of mouth concept, I suppose.

One thing I’ve noticed, though – and I think there’s even science to back this up (but I can’t recall where I heard this, so I could be wrong on that) – is that when someone receives something for free, they tend to value it less than if they had to pay for it themselves. The ‘concern’ would be that people who receive a sub (lifetime or regular) may end up not even using it or, alternatively, having a lower opinion of it (less likely to give positive review/recommendation).

I don’t know how ‘serious’ or realistic this concern actually is, though! Just mentioning that I heard something like this before. Maybe it wouldn’t apply to Bunpro? :man_shrugging: One way that might work to ‘mitigate’ this potential concern could be to do as you say, and try to confer such gifted-subs to people who are already interested in using Bunpro, such as forum members, or randomly chosen from those who already have monthly/yearly memberships.

Might be cool on the user-experience side of things if someone with an existing monthly/yearly subscription logged on one day and got a celebratory splash-screen / banner saying,

(With a little simple animation of party stuffs, like the new WaniKani Level-Up banner.)

" :open_mouth: :smiley: Hey! Wow! That’s awesome!" they might say. In which case, might also be a nice user-experience thing to have a way for the recipient to send a thank-you note back to the donor.

A tip option might also be fine, in addition. Not sure if it detracts from the gift option or not. :thinking: On many streaming platforms, both options are available usually. Although maybe not a straight ‘tip’; usually you ‘get’ something for the tip, even if it’s just a ‘superchat’ or just a notification to others that you’ve tipped.

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(This may not directly answer your question, but it’s just what came to my mind.) Well, personally, the way I tend to support projects (such as Bunpro and WaniKani, but really any project/team/artist/whatever that I think is under-rated / under-appreciated) is to actively make an effort to engage in word-of-mouth.

Now, this doesn’t mean just blindly praising something – in my opinion, the only good word of mouth is honest, genuine word of mouth; one’s true opinion, even including the negatives if they are relevant to the conversation.

Oh, and speaking of conversation, I only do such word of mouth stuff if the topic comes up naturally in the course of a conversation. E.g. someone specifically asks, “How do you guys actually study grammar?” (paraphrasing an actual title of a post on another forum), or “Any recommendations for other SRS tools out there?” That kind of thing. I don’t just inject a recommendation out of the blue. To me that would basically be equivalent to spam; and many forums would actually treat it as such.

So, even though I personally have very limited funds (hence why I invested in lifetime to begin with), I can still support quasi-financially by providing one of the most valuable forms of marketing a business/project/artist/whatever could ask for, word of mouth. And I do it consciously, but also conscientiously. And I only do it for projects/products I really want to support. So, in my book, it’s all good. Win-win-win: I win (feeling good; doing my part; increased survivability of stuff I like), project wins (increased probability of new customer(s)), potential customer wins (honest/truthful/useful recommendation & info).

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Thank you Asher for the mention, congrats on all the development BP has gone through, pretty amazing both on content and platform. I still use the dictionary quite often so expanding the content is a much appreciated , I look forward to the additions :slightly_smiling_face:

BunPro is over 5 years old, MaruMori.io is not even a year and just got out of beta, I don’t think you are making a fair comparison here or saying they are making a money grab on unfulfilled promises as it’s been actually quite active hitting milestones. And in fact, I remember the N1 content on BP being like only 20 grammar points for years here as a grammar only resource and seems only recently the core N1 got filled. N1 can be determinant for jobs and residency so glad they completed it. And I can remember there was some fear the site might even shutdown so happy to see they now have a solid fanbase and promising future.

And as far doing the content N2/1 ‘properly’, that is actually one of reasons I didn’t continue with the platform and unless the core translation exercise that BP utilizes were to get a major overhaul on approach, I didn’t see myself returning either. But that is ok…the value is still outstanding, happy to have supported and I’ve gotten my return long ago on BunPro and remains a solid resource in other aspects, congrats to the team on their continued success, super impressive.

While there is some competition obviously, I honestly think there is room for all these resources in a student repertoire as they all do something different and if you compare the cost of classes or private lessons for example, the value is quite high. And in the end, the so-called best platform is the one you can stick with the most and the learning styles vary greatly (or evolves at any given time) so amazing the amount of resources available compared to before. But I believe developers should get paid for their time and work for the value they provide, something I didn’t really like seeing on the WK side who basically made the platform livable with a community of developers making apps and scripts for free but didn’t get a dime off any of the subscriptions…there is too much expectation for free content IMO. And while I sympathize with broke students of unfavorable currencies, there has to be some fairness for the work that gets put in on a platform, so more power to BP if they can grow financially.

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Marumori was just a random comparison as it was the first thing that came to mind. The same thing applies to many other apps and services and (as you pointed out) Bunpro itself in the past (possibly even now). The part of my post that I deleted was talking about how lifetime memberships for language learning services are, I assume, financial viable for businesses as all the wide-eyed beginners who never actually learn the language make up for the people who actually use the product for the 3-5 years it takes for them to hit N1. As such, the quality of higher level material is either neglected or it simply doesn’t exist. Writing high quality N1 material is difficult to begin with anyway. My criticisms here still apply to Bunpro as it currently is, by the way, as the N1 material is probably the least polished. For me this line of thinking actually started with Wanikani which I think is bordering on Duolingo levels of predatory and Wanikani is definitely a “complete service” so my criticism isn’t dependent on how complete or incomplete the service is.

At the end of the day basically all of these services are re-inventing the wheel to some degree so there is always a question of “how is this financially viable”. Many language learning services seem obviously non-viable from the perspective of long term growth and the ones that are viable are still trying to make money and the easiest way to do that is to fleece beginners. Something like Marumori is clearly doing this in my opinion by offering fairly expensive lifetime memberships for a service that is nowhere close to being finished and is of no value to someone who isn’t N5. Although I think Bunpro’s model probably works the same way they actually have that higher level content now which is a big big difference. I hope Marumori achieves their goals in 5 years time as well but I am just talking about the reality of what exists now. I didn’t really want to start an argument about business models as it is not really relevant (although I accidentally did, sorry) hence why I cut part of my original post out.

100% agree with this.

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Fair enough, thank you for your thoughtful reply. And I would agree MM still has a lot to prove and IOUs, particularly for the experienced learners so it remains to be seen what it will turn into. And again, I don’t think it conflicts with what is done here, I can see how users would use both their grammar SRS methods. It’s a tricky balance, I didn’t want to see BP fall if got abandoned or unsupported so glad it didn’t and they seem financially healthier. I actually think their price is way under though, they could easily get away raising it IMO (but what do I know :sweat_smile:).

Another interesting comparison is https://nihongonomori.com/ they are pretty much the opposite of most services; no beginner content whatsoever (N3-N1) and entirely taught in Japanese by natives. One would think this would alienate a smaller community but actually they have a very strong non-english student presence (especially since I believe they are home based in Vietnam now). To me it makes more sense to be using Japanese to teach Japanese at this level as most content already has more fundamental definitions that can be described quite easily (and any English I find more of bother at this juncture). I think this is why flexible platforms like Anki will always have a place, because I don’t think teaching beginner material and advance material with the same methods make much sense; to me it looks like more of a platform development convenience just to fill content using the same architecture. WK does this as well and why its usefulness bottlenecks IMO learning more abstract vocab/kanji with zero context other than a silly example sentence. Maybe BP still has a chance to consider this given the additional flexibilities of the platform they have worked on already.

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Try N2 grammar I am assuming? We have access to all of the Try Grammar and Vocab books, so I don’t see why we couldn’t add it. Rather than a path though, it would probably be in the form of a deck, as that will be the system we use going forward.

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Hi! I’m far from being an advanced learner on here so rather than a request i am simply wondering whether or not there would be a need to add かというと〜ない as a grammar point? Or it’s simply the main かというと point being negated and there’s no real incentive to add it? Sorry if my question seems dumb, cheers.

I’ve tried my best to search lessons and post so forgive me if this is already Present or covered. I think that ようで(ようでいて) “it looks as though” and ようであれば(ようならば/ようだったら) “if so” may be missing, although there are lots of similar grammar points so they could maybe fit into an already existing one.

Note on the textbook side of things, is there a precedent on what textbook people use for particular lessons? For instance if people only use 完全 for level 2 and 1 then it makes sense to prioritise that over level 5.

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