Where HotPotato Fits (and why an acquisition should be about more than talent)

The rumor mill is swirling that Facebook is about to buy HotPotato, and that the acquisition will be all about talent. That’d be a shame, because although it has yet to pick up steam, HotPotato fills a killer space in the marketplace of social interaction. Here’s how I see a few small parts of “social” evolving and why HotPotato’s concept will be an important part of that.

In person interaction is going to be augmented, but never replaced by, “social networking” services. This is why Meetup, Foursquare, Facebook Events, and other services that encourage in-person interaction have taken off and now contribute value to our daily lives. (it’s also why Evite survives) These services don’t replace interactions with friends, but instead leverage our knowledge that, as a species, we like to congregate.

But we can’t always interact in person, because modern travel (1950s onward) has encouraged us to move farther and farther away from the place we were born. My high school classmates are a good examples. We have a past in common, and probably have some current interests in common as well, but we’ve scattered all over the world. Other times, we can be geographically close to our network, but prefer to interact from a distance. For example, I can’t possibly fit all of my friends into a tiny NYC apartment when I watch Mad Men, and having a party each week is impractical.

With that in mind, how can we interact beyond “status updates” and random comments on each others’ photos? After all, we still have interests in common and a history together. That’s where HotPotato fits in. Take the commonalities we’ve entered into Facebook, figure out the connections, and let us interact around those connections and “events” that can exist in spaces other that our physical vicinity. It’s what Facebook promises to do, but hasn’t delivered on.

Facebook would probably tell you they do that today via Fan pages, but those pages don’t even come close to their potential as tools for social action and interaction. I tend to think that’s because the brands that control those pages wouldn’t want one-to-one or collective interaction among their fans (Rushkoff shout out!), but you can draw your own conclusions.

The power of HotPotato is to connect you into a group with people doing/watching/listening to/experiencing the same thing you are, even when you’re physically not in the same place, and giving you the freedom to interact with them. Think the Heatpocalypse NYC venue and subsequent Foursquare swarm, which was inappropriate for Foursquare, but perfectly appropriate for HotPotato.

A great, but maybe silly, example are viewers of So You Think You Can Dance. I’d never watched the show until this season, and somehow I’m hooked. Other than my roommates, I don’t know many people who watch, although the show is wildly popular. It’s broadcast live every Wednesday and Thursday evening, which is a perfect reason to use HotPotato as a backchannel to reconnect with friends over our favorite performances and dancers of the night, even we’re not all in the same room. There are thousands more examples of all different sorts, but I think that illustrates the sort of deeper social interaction that HotPotato enables and is absent from every other non-physical social network.

If only it got a bit more traction, and/or were integrated into a high-traffic social network, it’d be a killer product. Let’s hope Facebook sees that too, and isn’t just looking to acquire HotPotato’s (admittedly excellent) product development skills.

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Online Dating Sucks Because People Are Like Wine

Very interesting perspective from Dan Ariely. Online dating sucks because it’s too tough to identify what really turns you on.

(via Patrick Appel)

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We launched The Ingredient Finder

Hey all! I’m happy to announce the beta of The Ingredient Finder, which is focused on connecting home chefs with great hard-to-find ingredients from around the world.

The team has been working for about a year now to gather some great ingredients, develop relationships with chefs, and more. We’ve got a few hundred really special spice blends, oils, condiments, etc, and we’re adding more every day.

Anyway, if you love cooking check it out. The site needs a lot of polish, but we’re hard at work!

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How Budget Can Fix Their Customer Experience

So, Budget Truck and I have put our bad experience to rest. I’m not totally satisfied, but hey, that’s life.

But being a user experience consultant, I’d be remiss if I didn’t offer some advice to Budget for the future. Because I’m not the only one having issues with them. And as nice as social media outreach is, it’s a band-aid if you’re not fixing the underlying problems, of which I think there are three. Continue reading

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The iPhone and Starbucks’ AT&T Hotspots

If you live in New York City, you know there’s a Starbucks on every corner, and sometimes on the blocks in between as well. They’re as ubiquitous as street vendors, and with AT&T’s new smartphone data plans, you have free and automatic access to the “ATTWifi” networks at each of them.

Which should be a boon for iPhone users stuck on AT&T’s overloaded 3G network. But instead, the auto-connected wifi hangs on for just long enough to be annoying. The signal is too weak to do anything with, and yet you’ve got to go through a few screens on the iPhone to switch off the wireless so you can get 3G service.

It may seem trivial, but it’s one of my biggest user experience complaints about my phone. And I don’t think there’s necessarily an easy solution from AT&T and Apple’s perspective. AT&T wants to offer good service, which means keeping people off of 3G when there’s a faster (and free) option in-range. Apple wants a strong wireless antenna that does a good job holding on to a hotspot connection.

From my perspective, I set the phone not to auto-join ATTWifi networks… but I see that as a band-aid.

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BP on Youtube

Sometimes, social media just isn’t going to help.

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The New Yorker Has Several Kinds of Registration

Wow. User experience fail. How many times are you registered with the New Yorker?

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LOVE this Ad on the Daily Beast

I love the effect of this ad on the Daily Beast. The dynamic wrap-around is really innovative. Creates a lot of spaghetti source code, but wow does it make an impact.

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Never Rent From Budget Truck

I don’t often use my blog or other social media outlets like Twitter to complain about companies, but Budget Truck is just too shady to keep quiet.

As friends know, I recently moved downtown and rented a Budget Truck. My plan was to move to Chelsea and put some stuff into storage in New Jersey. I compared two rates – a one-way rental for $257 or returning it back to Queens for $185. Easy decision.

When moving day came, Budget Truck in Queens told me my bill would be $399 plus a $300 deposit, which I immediately disputed. The Budget Truck representative in Queens told me to call the 1-800 number and we could resolve it. Things happen, computers get quirky, and I’m an easy guy to get along with, so I was happy to.

As I’m standing inside Budget Truck, the phone rep. tells me that indeed I have a reservation for $184.99. So I put him on the phone with the guy at the counter. They can’t seem to agree or figure it out, and no one is empowered to honor the rate that the phone rep. is seeing on his screen at that very moment.

(PS, the phone reps, of whom I spoke to no less than three, tried to transfer me to “customer service,” which was closed. Says a lot right there.)

Eventually, after waiting well over an hour (with the movers and my friends at my apartment waiting to load the truck!), the counter rep told me the only way I could get a truck was to pay him $330. I agreed, because honestly what else can one do in that situation?

On the next business day, I contacted Budget Truck customer service, confident that they’d figure it out. I’ve got a lot of faith in people; it’s just how I am. They got back to me and told me they have no record of either the $257 reservation or the $185 reservation.

Ridiculous. Here’s what I’ve done.

  1. Instructed Citibank to deny the $337 charge from Budget Truck.
  2. Sent Budget Truck’s counsel a certified letter describing the situation and requesting them to honor the rate of $185, minus all costs, including my time, associated with resolving this situation. I’ve also requested that Budget Truck find and turn over audio recordings of all phone calls I’ve made to Budget, as well as all electronic records of my original reservation and all modifications made to it.
  3. Filed a formal complaint with the Better Business Bureau against the Queens location of Budget Truck, as well as a BBB complaint with national Budget Truck/Avis Rentals.
  4. Filed a complaint with the NYC Bureau of Consumer Affairs.
  5. Filed a formal complaint with the Federal Trade Commission for both misrepresentation of price and consumer coercion.

Budget Truck – let’s rumble. Here is a copy of the letter they are receiving from me.
Avis Budget Group Rd

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