sudoscience | 9 years ago | on: Wirify turns any page into a Wireframe
sudoscience's comments
sudoscience | 10 years ago | on: Ask HN: How to avoid being arrogant?
2. Detecting arrogance in others is pretty easy: they do not listen to an alternative point of view with any patience.
I think the question really being asked is: "How do you detect arrogance in yourself?" That's more interesting, and more difficult. Unfortunately arrogant people are the least receptive to the feedback they are arrogant because the root cause is that they are bad at listening. There are some good indicators you can use to help recognize arrogance in yourself if you are an arrogant person by nature, however. I think the most effective is to monitor your use of questions and not statements when having discussions with your peers. If >90% of your contribution to the conversation are statements and not questions, you're almost certainly being arrogant. "We can't do it that way" is very different than "Why did we decide to do it that way?" One is a statement that begs equally fierce opposition, the second starts a conversation that reveals reasoning and the creative process.
So ask lots of questions, and really listen.
3. I'll avoid answering this--it is different for every person. For many it is simply not having had historical peers on their level to effectively add to a conversation, for others it is just a learned behavior. It isn't as important how people go that way, it is important they recognize it and stop.
4. Human behaviors are rarely binary good/bad: each usually has a place. Arrogance can be a tool in rare cases where a massive display of confidence can substitute as a shortcut for authority--you might sometimes see a CEO, for example, say "I am right on this and you are wrong, we are doing it my way" (the subtext that this is in the interest of saving time or resources is often lost in translation). Steve Jobs built an empire on this. However, it is generally bad in the long term to display this level of arrogance--all large-scale work is teamwork, and in a organization of 100 peers you will only be the most right statistically a small percentage of the time.
This is why avoiding arrogance is important; it means that you are open to hearing other solutions and implementing them when they make the most sense.
To avoid arrogance is simple, yet hard. You have to actually listen and converse with your peers. If you have disagreements you should state them politely and from a non-combative alternative point of view--not a combative self-driven point of view, and you should not jump to conlusions. For example: "Won't it be harder for a user to access feature X in this redesign?" is better than "How am I supposed to access feature X now? We can't ship this, it is not good enough". The first leads to conversation, allowing the opposition to present their approach, the second does not. Perhaps feature X was buried because it was found to be used with reduced frequency by actual customers? If you start with the second you are less likely to have the conversation with your peers where that critical information is revealed.
sudoscience | 12 years ago | on: Vybe: the smartest bracelet you will ever wear
sudoscience | 12 years ago | on: Amazon's minimum order size for free shipping is now $35
sudoscience | 12 years ago | on: SteamMachines
sudoscience | 13 years ago | on: Google Glass - Innovating A Social Failure
The "this will fail social norms" card has been played many times, and it
has come to pass, but it hasn't been the core of a product failure.
Yes it has. The first cell phones, the first PDAs certainly fell into this category and only later when they became less obtrusive did the gain any real traction. Outright failures are less memorable because they tend to not get very far: people realize they are a mistake before they get to market. But a couple examples I can think of off-hand:WebTv: Not socially ok at all to treat your TV like a computer. Still not, really.
Delorean: Weird car with its gull wing doors, too different, can't be seen in that.
sudoscience | 13 years ago | on: Show HN: Personalized Product Discovery
What's so special about photab that I would want to sign up? In the current state I am not feeling enough of a compulsion to sign up.
sudoscience | 13 years ago | on: Ask HN: Why will my startup fail?
To the original poster: I don't think you have to market to fashion bloggers at all. It helps if they see value in what you do and they promote it, but they are not your final customer: pay attention to your end customer's needs instead.
sudoscience | 13 years ago | on: Ask HN: Why will my startup fail?
a) They don't provide benefit to the customer b) Their product isn't directed towards the right customer
In context of your product, here's how I think each of those may apply.
a) They don't provide benefit to the customer
Here you have an interface to help create whole outfits. This is ostensibly valuable because most agree that a complete outfit is generally a better fashion choice that unrelated pieces of clothing. However, does this provide benefit to the customer? Well, I am not sure. For example, myself, personally, I pick out six outfits at a physical store and buy maybe one or two of them. Some of the clothes just don't fit well, others must don't quite go together (this shirt is too long for these pants). It is sort of hard to say if you have a market that would love this; if you do, I am not it. I feel there are two types of shoppers, those who want to pick out the whole outfit, and those who would rather have their entire outfit chosen for them by people with trusted fashion taste. I am actually the first one, but I still don't want this. My suspicion is that you may have built a feature and not a benefit.Conclusion: if you haven't done market research DO IT. Run a Google Consumer Survey if you want to get something done quickly. Troll fashion forums. Question customers on their process of picking an outfit. How do they do it? What is important to them? You might find most people do not want to buy total outfits online for the reasons I mentioned above (or others). Or you may find I am an outlier.
b) Their product isn't directed towards the right customer
So, it could be that your product has value but it isn't directed at the right customer. To riff off of above (and to use examples others in this thread have noted), what if you turned the idea on its head and only had precompiled outfits (cater to men/busy professionals). Alternatively, someone mentioned price...do people really buy $700 shoes online? (Cater to market that is possibly more likely to buy outfits online).Conclusion: Again market research can solve this for you (Q: How much do you normally spend on a pair of shoes when you buy them online? $0-50, $50-100, $100-200, $200-400, $400+).
The validation stage of your startup should happen before you've built anything. If you've done this, great! If not, get on that before you type one more line of code.
Now, smaller reasons it might not work:
a) The name
Yes, you can overcome screwy names with a great product, but it is best to try not to. I know you may have actually paid a lot for the domain, but if you did consider it lost money and move on. The real problem with it is that everyone who actually wants to use your service will go to outfits.com instead, get frustrated it isn't what they wanted (it just times out, looks like someone has been sitting on the domain for 15 years), then give up on your service. The only way cute names work is if they are both easy to say and cannot possibly be confused with another domain (i.e, not a real word, like Quora) or spelled quite different but easily distinguishable from the word they are replacing (Boxee). b) The demo doesn't work
For me, it doesn't behave like the video--I don't see prices as I shuffle outfits. This may be intentional at an early stage but that video sets my expectations it works already. Aslo, right and left clicking don't work for me either as the instruction below the outfits suggest and get in an inconsistent state where I can't reselect. Sure, this would never make it front of customers as-is, but unless you are bootstrapping this you'll want somthing far better than this to show to investors. c) Revealing lack of traction
Only 15 people like this on facebook? Reddit famously padded their service with fake comments and articles when they started. I am not suggesting you do that, but fashion is a trendy business and unless 1k people like this no one else is going to hit that button. My friend is a SHITTY photographer and she still has 80 pity likes from her friends for her photography business page on FB, you can get at least a couple hundred (or not show the number). Play the fashion trend game: know your audience and appear in fashion yourself.Now some things you've done right!:
a) design
It looks good. The logo is great, the animation makes sense. It is clean, functional. Great job! b) Gathering feedback from others
This is good you're asking us. Asking customers questions is better, but this is good. So many startups just go, hey, let's launch this thing with no questions asked and a bunch of assumptions.sudoscience | 14 years ago | on: Frustration, Disappointment And Apathy: My Years At Microsoft
sudoscience | 14 years ago | on: Why I'm working for the man and not doing a startup
sudoscience | 14 years ago | on: The iPad Is Unbeatable
All that said, I do agree their tablet share will go down as competition increases, Android is too mature for someone not to close the gap in the next year.
sudoscience | 14 years ago | on: Show HN: Seddit.com, a chat site based around Reddit
sudoscience | 14 years ago | on: Why Online Dating (Still) Sucks, and a Simple Attempt at Fixing It
Other than that I think this is really nicely done and a great idea. However, apparently there are no 20-40 year old girls in Seattle yet. :)
sudoscience | 14 years ago | on: Why I don't use recent travel startups
FWIW I agree with the trying-too-hard aspect of forcing the square peg of social into a round hole sometimes, but the visualization of Hipmunk is better than Kayak. (I don't use Hipmunk to purchase because I find flights to be significantly cheaper direct from the airlines, however.) If you were used to Hipmunk you would also be loathe to change to new technologies that were marginally, but noticeably better. It is the nature of human "comfort cost" and the reason why poorer, older products still retain customers, at least for some period of time.
sudoscience | 14 years ago | on: Facebook Timeline is too awful to be an accident
Do I want others to do that? Well, not so much. Timeline would have been a perfect product in my view if it only applied to your own profile.
sudoscience | 14 years ago | on: Why 13th Chords
sudoscience | 14 years ago | on: Thoughts on the Amazon Kindle Fire
About 40% of the people I know who have e-readers didn't give a damn about eInk and chose the Nook.
The rest of this comes off as "Waaaah, I don't want Angry Birds on my Kindle" to which I say: buy one of the two new eInk models...
sudoscience | 15 years ago | on: The Toughest Companies for Job Interviews
sudoscience | 15 years ago | on: Amazon Cloud Drive and Amazon Cloud Player