kariatx | 14 years ago | on: The $150k Solution
kariatx's comments
kariatx | 14 years ago | on: The $150k Solution
kariatx | 14 years ago | on: Gowalla Founders v. Gowalla Investors
kariatx | 14 years ago | on: Poll: Facebook usage (monday morning crowd)
Otherwise, I don't really add any content to Facebook much considering how often I log in. Most of my friends (professionals in their mid to late 30s) have more or less stopped using it, except for women with small children.
kariatx | 14 years ago | on: Ask HN: Small product, single founder success stories?
kariatx | 14 years ago | on: Who Has Defriended You? Facebook's New Timeline Will Tell
kariatx | 14 years ago | on: Who Has Defriended You? Facebook's New Timeline Will Tell
In this case, "he" is a "she", btw :-)
kariatx | 14 years ago | on: Who Has Defriended You? Facebook's New Timeline Will Tell
kariatx | 14 years ago | on: Ask HN: Small product, single founder success stories?
kariatx | 14 years ago | on: Reed Hastings responds to criticisms and announces Qwikster
kariatx | 14 years ago | on: Building a Fashion Company on the Internet? Stop. Just stop.
I tend to agree with you about curation versus AI, but I am not 100% sure. Years ago I was skeptical that collaborative filtering would ever work at all. As the poster below notes, it does pretty well for Netflix and sometimes for Amazon too. I could at least imagine some sort of AI recommendation system working for the masses, but I doubt it would ever appeal to the highest end customers.
kariatx | 14 years ago | on: Building a Fashion Company on the Internet? Stop. Just stop.
I don't see why internet fashion companies couldn't take a crack at solving / mitigating at least some of these. For example, there are some sites (like zafu.com - no affiliation) that help women find jeans that fit. They can't change the sizes on the jeans, but I'm not holding my breath for the fashion industry to make sizing any easier any time soon.
I also disagree with her claim that discoverability is not a problem. A lot of people are trying to solve it, but I don't consider it solved for myself (or other women I know). I find the choices in women's fashion to be overwhelming (to say the least), and I'm still looking for the more efficient ways to find clothes I like.
I agree with her overall point that the number of trendy affiliate fashion sites is getting tiresome, but that doesn't mean that they couldn't be developed in interesting ways. It may be true that affiliate sites need to sell a ton more in order to compete with "click-and-mortar" fashion companies, but I'd argue that affiliate sites can also be more innovative, flexible, and forward thinking. If you're not shipping or manufacturing, you can iterate more quickly.
kariatx | 14 years ago | on: Bump (YC S09) Shares What Its 10 Million Users Share
kariatx | 14 years ago | on: David Kadavy's "Design for Hackers" now on Amazon
kariatx | 14 years ago | on: 14 Days Later: What I’ve learned in the first 2 weeks of my startup
kariatx | 14 years ago | on: 14 Days Later: What I’ve learned in the first 2 weeks of my startup
kariatx | 14 years ago | on: 14 Days Later: What I’ve learned in the first 2 weeks of my startup
I clicked over to your site, and your design blew me away. You really build authority with it, but also keep things fun, lighthearted, and modern.
A couple suggestions:
- You might want to test telling people they don't pay you fees after the first X they receive in monthly donations (around $1333, right? maybe make that an even $1000) as opposed to the maximum they pay you in fees. My marketing copywriting intuition tells me that may be clearer / more compelling than people having to do the math themselves. It also gives them a more tangible goal to shoot for and story to tell themselves. ("I'm sure we can get over $X a month, and the service is basically free after that!")
- Possibly test a more prominent mention of Facebook / Twitter integration on the front page (to the point that you don't have to click or mouseover to see it). I have a feeling that these features are pretty important to non-profits, especially ones who aren't savvy enough to have a good web presence yet. I'm not sure - again, probably I would just test it out.
kariatx | 14 years ago | on: YC Office Hours with PG and Harj
This whole video served as a reminder to me to slow down, listen to what people are asking you, and give a thoughtful response. I'm not claiming I'd do any better in this sort of situation, but the amount of marketing speak coming from most of these guys' mouths was practically dehumanizing to PG and Harj.
kariatx | 14 years ago | on: Gowalla Is Reborn As A Beautiful App For Travel And Storytelling
I met a lot of diehard Gowalla fans during SXSW at their party, and they seemed much more keyed into the gaming / object collection aspects of the service. Bottom line - I think a lot of these superfans (many of whom traveled on their own dime to the party) will probably feel alienated by this new app. Gowalla will probably have to find a whole new market, which may not be the worst thing but won't be the easiest either.
No matter what, I think Gowalla has a huge uphill battle to climb. They haven't even really been able to build much excitement here in Austin (even among people I know who are addicted to social media). I think their design and UI is top notch, but they seem to be missing whatever makes consumers super excited.
kariatx | 14 years ago | on: My failed bootstrapped startup: a retrospective.
Take the lessons you learned and start again. Sooner rather than later. You'll probably fail again too, but eventually you'll stumble upon something that clicks. The key is refusing to give up.
Perseverance is much more important than any idea, programming language, or system of doing things. People who get it all right on the first or second try aren't skilled entrepreneurs. They're just lucky.