Is it possible to start a company (with a product) in just one weekend? 70 people have joined forces in Boulder Colorado to try to do just that. They’ve already named the company, incorporated, and organized themselves into departments. You can follow the action at startupweekend.com.
eNeighbors Suggestion Box
Below are a few of the suggestions that we’ve received from our users in the last couple of weeks. If you want to add your 2 cents, feel free to make a note in the comments at the end of the blog. I also created a new email address specifically for suggestions. So, if you have a suggestion you can email us at suggestions [at] eneighbors [dot] com. (Note: These are unedited, but excerpted.)
Suggestion: Add number of comments to top of news articles
“Add this to my wish list for eNeighbors design enhancements. The ‘News’ feature, as noted, has a lot of potential as an interactive discussion forum. As such, this is a valuable community building feature. Unfortunately when you look at the list of news topics, there is no immediate way to see if there have been NEW comments without clicking to open the news item.”
Suggestion: Increase character limitation on comments
“Don’t like the fact that I have only 500 characters to respond to postings. Not near enough to promote discussion.”
Suggestion: Increase the photo size for classifieds
“Is there some way I can get a larger, proportional image? If not, is there any way people can post useful images in a space like that or do you find that size works for most needs? I see bigger ones in the News demo on your site?
Suggestion: Include property manager in bulletin distribution
“We would like to include our property manager on bulletin distributions through the Northbrook eneighbors website. This will keep him aware of what communication is being sent to homeowners so that he can be prepared to answer phones calls that come in regarding the bulletins. ”
Suggestion: View entire neighborhood directory online (or PDF download)
“Had a neighbor asking how to view the entire resident directory online. i don’t see a way to do so. perhaps another enhancement for a future version. this way folks could print it if they’d like to.”
MyBlogLog Success Story
Todd Sampson and Eric Marcoullier (MyBlogLog) visited TechStars last month and shared their story. I’m absolutely fascinated by startup stories and they have a fun one. They also have a lot of great advice to share with entrepreneurs.
The video is available on the TechStars Blog.
HOA Property Managers
We work with a dozen or so property management companies like Curry Association Management, The Neighborhood Group, and Centennial Management to help the HOAs that they manage communicate better by using our online tool.
One property manager explained to me that they have a hard time defining the benefits of eNeighbors to their new boards. If they’re running into trouble, you may be too. My recommendation is to (1) download our PDF brochure to hand out, (2) complete this form to send an email to your board, and/or (3) give me a call.
If you’re a property manager, and would like our help, just give me a call at 303-551-0652 or email me at chris [dot] stock [at] eneighbors [dot] com. I’ll be more than happy to walk you through any questions that you may have. If I’m in your area, I can also come out to do a presentation to your board.
Oh, by the way, the benefits of our service aren’t just for the HOA. Property managers benefit as well. It was explained to me that newsletters (especially classifieds) are one of the biggest consumptions of time for some property managers. With eNeighbors, you can tell residents to simply “go to the website” to post your classified or submit your news article.
Am I too fast?
I responded to an email today from one of the property manager’s that we work with. His response:
“Chris you are freakishly fast with your responses. Thank you.”
I laughed out loud (LOL) when I read it. Maybe I should slow down.
What to look for in a neighborhood website
Evaluating the best solution for your neighborhood website can be difficult. There are a lot of things to consider like site features, hosting options, domain name registration, and of course, price. For the most part you don’t want to get caught up in the technical stuff. Instead, focus on how the site will provide real value to your neighborhood.
First, let’s cover the basics. What is your goal? Why do you want a neighborhood website? This is the very first question that you should ask yourself. The answer to this question can lead you down very different paths. More often than not, though, neighborhoods primarily want a website to improve communication amongst their residents. And when you think about it, improving neighborhood communication solves a myriad of other neighborhood challenges, such as social event participation, architectural compliance, and safety. (Download a full list of common neighborhood challenges and solutions.)
Assuming that your goal is also to improve communication, here’s what you should look for when considering a website for your neighborhood.
Registration – Does the solution you’re considering have a registration engine? If it doesn’t, remove it from your list of considerations. A registration engine allows residents to fill out an electronic form online with information such as their first name, last name and email address. Through this process you can capture resident’s email address and establish an electronic communication channel. Registration also allows you to track your success because you’ll know who’s online and who’s not by looking at who has registered. eNeighbors takes this a step further and helps you to send out website welcome letters in the mail that encourage residents to register on your site. See how it works.
Privacy – Does the solution you’re considering protect resident’s privacy? You must be able to protect people’s information online and guarantee their privacy if you expect them to turnover their email address and join your neighborhood website. You want to make sure that your website provider never displays email addresses on the website, gives residents complete control over their personal information, and implements extensive moderation controls that ensure no inappropriate content is published. See eNeighbors Privacy Policy for an example of what to look for.
Security – Is the solution you’re considering secure? Before you can ensure privacy, you have to be able to secure private information through encryption technology. Make sure that what you’re looking at offers 256-bit SSL encryption.
Communication – Does the solution you’re considering improve communication? After all, that is the goal. Look for things like automatic eNewsletters, news postings, social event listings, social groups, an online resident directory, and classified postings.
Sustainability – This isn’t usually high on the list of considerations, but it should be near the top of yours. Why? Because you want the solution you implement to work for a long time. Unfortunately, most neighborhood websites fade away in a very short period of time because they’re not sustainable. To ensure that you’re website will run for a long time, absolutely nothing can be dependent upon you or the board. It must run on it’s own without you. And let’s face it, you don’t have the time to maintain a website anyway. A website that runs on its own comes with technical support for every resident, automatic processes that don’t rely on you, and allows everyone in the neighborhood to contribute so you’re not the only one posting information on the website.
Ease-of-Use – Finally, is it easy to use? If it’s easy to use, residents will use it. If it’s not easy to use, residents won’t use it. For this reason, I’m generally opposed to custom designs. While they can look nice and be tailored to the look and feel of your neighborhood, custom neighborhood websites often sacrifice the most important feature of design – usability.
If you have a specific question, please post it in the comments so I can answer for everyone to see.
iNsanity
iPhone coverage from Yahoo, The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, and apparently the circus is in town in Manhattan. Rob Scoble is blogging while waiting in line, and TechCrunch is streaming live coverage of people in line in Palo Alto.
Having worked for Sprint for almost 8 years, I’m curious to see if the iPhone lives up to the hype since I’ve seen so many phones march to their death when the expectations were so unreasonable.
Come on people, it’s just a phone, right…?
Getting Communities Online
Ran across a video interview on Robert Scoble’s Pod Tech site today. Michael Wood-Lewis is interviewed about his community enabling web service called Front Porch Forum.
I think it’s great to see that people are genuinely interested in a neighborhood-type service that helps people get to know each other in their actual community. This bodes well for eNeighbors since we are interested in connecting communities just like Front Porch Forum is doing.
Now, if only I can get in touch with Mr. Scoble and tell him that he can set up eNeighbors in his neighborhood…
Dove: The Social Ad (r)Evolution
Dove’s “Evolution” video wins the top prize at Cannes Lions Ad Festival this year. This viral video was created as part of Dove’s “Campaign for Real Beauty” and promotes Dove’s self-esteem charity efforts.
Why is this important?
The social movement on the internet (i.e. web 2.0) has allowed this ad to be viewed and dicussed at unprecedented levels. This ad campaign was fueled by the masses. Five (heck, even three) years ago, this type of awareness and communication simply did not exist.
Pete Blackshaw of Nielsen Buzz Metrics has a great post that details out the specifics of Dove’s marketing success.
This just proves that the social web matters in the “real world” and can be used for more things than the MySpace crowd’s party shout outs and obsessive niche markets like twitter and Google Earth. When companies start talking to us about stuff that matters, we get engaged and become part of the community.
Welcome to the (r)evolution.
Supernova 2007
Guys like Mike Arrington, Reid Hoffman, and Max Levchin are all hanging out at Supernova 2007 this week in San Francisco.
From the site:
At Supernova, we attempt to answer “what’s next” after everything is connected. Supernova is the only event that assembles the most compelling people and companies from the converging worlds of computing, telecom, and digital media to put decentralization issues into meaningful social and business contexts.
In addition, Google, Yahoo!, AOL, Comcast, Verizon, Cisco, Sun, and IBM are all represented as well.
Some interesting topics of discussion include virtual worlds, user-generated content, online identity, social commerce and media, net neutrality, advertising, and copyright.