Thanks, that's really good advice. We're super early here so the hour long window is kind of chosen for the beta.
I would love to talk to you if your open to sharing some of the things you learned on your project! If so reach out to george [at] stilllife [dot] studio
We've used amazon a lot for ordering seltzer in our offices, and it doesn't have the selection (1/10th of ours). There's also a pain about managing delivery times. Amazon is optimizing for 'real-time' delivery, but what I care about is not having to think about my seltzer and just have it be taken care of. Amazon fresh experience is _not_ this. We're looking to remove as much mental overhead as possible, by simply always having your flavors, having predictable delivery, and making getting what you a delightful experience.
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[ 7.3 ms ] story [ 64.5 ms ] threadWould love to hear feedback or any questions (especially if you're in Boston)!
We have built our first cohort of subscribers and are running a beta with them and hope some of you want to be part of the seltzer club.
I would suggest two hour delivery windows unless you have massive density.
Trust me :)
(I spent almost two years of my life doing this thing except for food & laundry, not seltzer)
I would love to talk to you if your open to sharing some of the things you learned on your project! If so reach out to george [at] stilllife [dot] studio
We've used amazon a lot for ordering seltzer in our offices, and it doesn't have the selection (1/10th of ours). There's also a pain about managing delivery times. Amazon is optimizing for 'real-time' delivery, but what I care about is not having to think about my seltzer and just have it be taken care of. Amazon fresh experience is _not_ this. We're looking to remove as much mental overhead as possible, by simply always having your flavors, having predictable delivery, and making getting what you a delightful experience.