The things that worked years ago- importing addressbooks and blasting out invites, no longer work today.
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Scooped by
Guillaume Decugis
onto Ideas for entrepreneurs June 6, 2013 10:13 PM
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Very interesting analysis by Sangeet Paul Choudary on Andrew Chen's blog on how social products don't get traction by claiming to be a community anymore.
Being quoted in the article as a example of this new type of products made me happy and proud: we've been careful to craft an experience on Scoop.it that didn't overwhelm people. While we are fundamentally a social product and have high ambitions for helping our users build their communities of interests, we know that very few people feels like they need yet another community. So we wanted to deliver an experience where new users would clearly see initial value (saving time, good looking content hub, cross posting to social networks) without the need to have a community, then reinforce the value over time (be discovered, grow their audience) independently of the social dimension of the platform while still helping them all along the process but in a seamless way to discover their community of interests.
Beyond that post, our data have validated this in a couple of ways:
- the more people use Scoop.it, the more they use it: the number of scoops per week increases over time since sign-up.
- social and content discovery features make users seamlessly get a bigger and bigger community of follower/followees over time.