Please review my startup: BuzzLabs (findmybuzz.com)
Always been a lurker, love what I learn on here. Would appreciate your thoughts (good, bad, ugly) on a startup I've been working on. The company is BuzzLabs, a six-person Seattle startup. We've received strategic seed funding from a large player in the local business space.
The goal is to save business owners (think restaurants, hotels, spas) the hassle of checking dozens of sites to find out what people are saying about them online. They want to focus on improving their business instead of surfing the web and figuring out what's relevant and interesting to their business.
Our technology aggregates social media activity for a local business (i.e. reviews, tweets, blog posts, etc.) into one place, and supplements that activity with deeper analysis and trends. Behind the scenes, we're doing relevance filtering, scoring, classification, and natural language processing to make the report relevant and meaningful.
We've built two separate products on the same technology platform: Find My Buzz (http://www.findmybuzz.com), and an interactive dashboard (http://www.buzzlabs.com). Find My Buzz is intended to be a lightweight, stop-and-go version of the dashboard -- simple, less-frequent printed consumption by small business owners. The dashboard is for larger businesses/chains with lots of online activity, where daily, aggregate "real-time" brand monitoring is crucial.
Any feedback would be appreciated. I can also be reached at [jason at buzzlabs dot com]
Thanks in advance, - Jason Tan, CTO
26 comments
[ 4.6 ms ] story [ 66.1 ms ] threadAlways been a lurker, love what I learn on here. Would appreciate your thoughts (good, bad, ugly) on a startup I've been working on. The company is BuzzLabs, a six-person Seattle startup. We've received strategic seed funding from a large player in the local business space.
The goal is to save business owners (think restaurants, hotels, spas) the hassle of checking dozens of sites to find out what people are saying about them online. They want to focus on improving their business instead of surfing the web and figuring out what's relevant and interesting to their business.
Our technology aggregates social media activity for a local business (i.e. reviews, tweets, blog posts, etc.) into one place, and supplements that activity with deeper analysis and trends. Behind the scenes, we're doing relevance filtering, scoring, classification, and natural language processing to make the report relevant and meaningful.
We've built two separate products on the same technology platform: Find My Buzz (http://www.findmybuzz.com), and an interactive dashboard (http://www.buzzlabs.com). Find My Buzz is intended to be a lightweight, stop-and-go version of the dashboard -- simple, less-frequent printed consumption by small business owners. The dashboard is for larger businesses/chains with lots of online activity, where daily, aggregate "real-time" brand monitoring is crucial.
Any feedback would be appreciated. I can also be reached at [jason at buzzlabs dot com]
Thanks in advance, Jason Tan, CTO
More to the point: it's not exactly clear that the user can navigate away from this page (the animation may imply to some users that something is still happening). The flow feels interrupted at this point and it seems you might better direct/capture the user to do/read something else. I'm not sure what that step might be, but it feels like a missed opportunity (for you).
And the circular tick marks above the house just scream "something's loading" as they are just too similar visually to every throbber/ajax wait symbol users are used to seeing. Hope that helps!
Great start -- small biz definitely needs good tools like these.
1) Not all businesses have a single Zip Code. It is the right idea for a restaurant or bar for example, but only if there is only one location. For example, if I owned a small chain like 16 Handles for example I may be interested in how people like my business in general, not on one store. I can see how the feature could be useful, but it should be optional (and clearly marked so)
2) When I tried to click on the screenshots, I thought that the text was way too small to really understand what you were seeing. When I squinted I could figure it out, and it did seem really cool, but I am only 20 and using Chrome on a MacBook Air, so I think you should make the font waaaay bigger for your target middle aged user on a 5 year old Dell using IE7.
Thanks for the feedback on the screenshots, definitely a common theme here and we're fixing that now.
Also, I am curious to know how Zip actually helps you. Do you use it to disambiguate similar sounding businesses?
I haven't actually tried out the report yet, but those're my initial thoughts on just the basic site. Hope that helps! Good luck.
Other than the previous suggestions, one aspect I didn't like was the hover message on the 3 pictures at the bottom. They are a bit too long, and I quickly lost interest in reading them. They should be short and to the point so the user know what to expect before viewing the content of the picture.
I feel the user today always want instant satisfaction and reading a large hover over message is not expected and not wanted.
Otherwise everything looks great, requested a report.
Best of luck to you and your team.
I agree with the others who say the screenshots are a little too small (fonts).
Also, while I think it's great that you are trying to capture emails right on the home page, it might be good if the focus shifted a little bit to the product and a little less to the sign up form. I would maybe recommend putting more weight of the design into the product (what problem does it solve for me) as opposed to "give me your email". More screenshots, etc.. would be good and still keep a nice signup form on the home page.
Again, great idea and good work!
* An obvious feedback form with a callout would help. There are numerous start-ups providing these, or you can roll your own
there's a UserVoice "feedback" button on the left side of the screen -- was that not obvious?
thanks for the feedback!
As a result, I sat there for 2 minutes or so (alternately reading elsewhere about the site), and was wondering if it was working or why it was taking so long. _Then_ I read the page. I'm just accustomed to not reading text while things are moving in that manner.
Let me know if I'm not making sense; I can attempt to clarify.
A few issues:
Your images need captions I don't like having to give an email before I know what you do I want to see examples
You are going to face competition from all sides, mostly because this is something that's fairly easy to implement. You'll need something more to differentiate yourself.