Ask HN: Why are tools for local events a "perennial tarpit"?

11 points by typicalday ↗ HN
Hi,

In PG's essay on reasons startups fail (http://www.paulgraham.com/startupmistakes.html) he mentions in #10 that "...[servicing] People interested in local events...is a perennial tarpit."

I'd like to understand people's thoughts on why. Is the space too crowded? Are the typical solutions simply bad or not specific enough?

Thanks for your thoughts!

3 comments

[ 3.4 ms ] story [ 9.8 ms ] thread
My guess would be that there's very little money in it, and for what money there is (advertising of such events, perhaps), competition is fierce.

But if you've got a good way to disrupt it, go ahead!

I'm not disagreeing with @pg but instead of trying to build a business/startup I'm developing a FOSS project called SmallCommunities (http://github.com/billsaysthis/SmallCommunities). It's written in Rails and is intended, at least at first, to handle groups which have regular events and (paid) members. Always happy to have more collaborators.
I think there is a trick to this. If the local event you're developing your product around is actually specific to one location, I would say it's probably a bad idea. For example, I'm in the DC area (for now) and I would consider it to be a bad idea to make a "Lincoln Memorial-centric App" because people can only see the Lincoln Memorial if they are in DC and thus I immediately limit my market to those who live nearby and those who visit. On the other hand, an app meant to socialize something like eating is probably a better idea because while eating is a local event, it happens everywhere. A good example for these "hybrid-local/global" companies would be grubwith.us or geo-caching services. Hope this was clear. Not much time to write :)