SourceCow answers the biggest question we've all asked ourselves- why is that person following me?
I sort of doubt this is, in fact, the biggest question for most people. Or even most people among those on Twitter, who are a small fraction of the total population. Or even those users of Twitter who have fallen within its reality distortion field and think that their follower count means anything, since the reality distortion field suggests that the count is important rather than the individual followers.
Your startup requires that X perform an operation which is expensive in terms of time, effort, and perceived risk (installing a plugin and then commenting) without receiving value so that Y can receive value. That is a virtually perfect recipe for not gaining traction.
"Why do people follow" to me does not indicate the presence of a real market for a software product, but a medical product to deal with paranoid narcissistic delusions of grandeur.
sourcecow is really orientated more toward the person starting out on twitter vs the person with an established 500 followers/friends. the plugin detects a "follow" event on twitter and window appears the moment you follow someone, at that time you're asked 3 questions, why, how you found them, what you hope to gain by following them.
without a plugin or a way to hit the person at the moment they decided to follow someone you'd have to care to come to the site and tell why afterwards etc. the plugin just facilitates the "get'm now while its hot in yer head"
I sort of doubt this is, in fact, the biggest question for most people. Or even most people among those on Twitter, who are a small fraction of the total population. Or even those users of Twitter who have fallen within its reality distortion field and think that their follower count means anything, since the reality distortion field suggests that the count is important rather than the individual followers.
Your startup requires that X perform an operation which is expensive in terms of time, effort, and perceived risk (installing a plugin and then commenting) without receiving value so that Y can receive value. That is a virtually perfect recipe for not gaining traction.
Very nice design, though.