| Hi guys, I'm in the process of launching an early prototype version of a Clojure/MongoDB web application I'm working on called Wusoup (www.wusoup.com). Basically the thing functions as a people-matching and messaging service for dating/friendship/chatting purposes. The single biggest difference between Wusoup and traditional dating sites (the closest comparison), is that matching is done in a learning fashion by observing user interactions over time. I'm using cluster analysis to produce a metric space over the profiles, which lets me (or rather, will let me) do some pretty interesting stuff for matching. Now I've gone about this completely the wrong way: building a non-niche product, and building it before any kind of marketing plan. I realise the odds are pretty much against me on every front. The two biggest obstacles I see are heavy SEO keyword competition and, well, zero user base to start with. Adding insult, this isn't my field so I've got no networks to lean on for support. Despite all that, I feel strongly about the idea. If I don't pull it off now, I'm convinced that someone else eventually will: I'm convinced this is the right direction for the people-matching problem. If anyone's interested, I'll be blogging very openly about the whole startup (link on homepage). In particular, I'll be publishing detailed analytics as I go along. Would seriously love any kind of feedback from HN: especially if anyone has any particular ideas or suggestions to help get me going on the growth/marketing front. You think anyone will actually care? |