In the process of coming up with a wacky name, I came up with "farsquare". (Because it tells you how far your friend's are etc..) But I didn't mean it in a bad way or anything against foursquare.!!
When I eventually build this application, I will definitely change the name!
I just found out about turntable.fm
It does some like the same concept. I guess they beat me to the punch.
Do you have any inside contact info for the folks at turntable/stickybits? ;) I tried contacting them on twitter but couldn't find their email addresses
Thanks for the feedback Peter!
I do understand that these are a lot of features to begin with and a lot of people have mentioned this to me. I am currently working on streamlining the feature list.
Since the product will function on user generated music playlists, keeping the user motivated to come back and use the product is of extreme importance. And I do believe that one of the main motives for users these days (I call them User 2.0) is game mechanics. My objective with using game mechanics is not only to make the user "happy", but to keep them motivated/addicted
I had three types of music rooms in mind: location-based, genre-based, and friend/follower-based.
with respect to playing tracks by the most popular users, i think you've brought about an interesting point.
I am currently working on a model where, at the end of every music "round", the most popular user is decided based on upvotes scheme and he/she gets to pick an additional song for the next round.. also allowing him to unlock badges and gain more credits! So far in my user interviews, people have liked this scheme and one of the user's mentioned that a sense of "competition" enhance the playlist and the listening experience.
The third point you made is particularly intriguing and something I hadn't thought about until now..But I am sure users would want to join the room just as listeners. In that case, either the control would automatically move to the next person in queue or it would switch to a computer generated playlist based on the previously played songs.
Hi Peter,
this question came about in my second round of user interviews..
I asked users about the applications they used on a day-day basis. 9 of the 12 users mentioned Foursquare in this list.
I asked them a follow-up question to judge what made them use foursquare on a daily basis. To my surprise, all users mentioned acquiring more badges as one of their main motives. Some also mentioned the Leaderboard.
This prompted me to further ask the users whether badges and leaderboards would motivate them to use an online radio.
Although most of the responses I got were quantitative, I did get a lot of qualitative feedback as well. One of the users also added that he would love to be rated by fellow users (instead of the computer). This encouraged me to ask them about the upvotes, etc..
How would you recommend me asking the users about new features?
You shouldn't ask users if they would use feature X, their responses will be almost meaningless. You should ask users about problems they have etc., not about features.
I definitely didn't mean it in a pejorative way.
I guess my question was, even though the whole concept of Lean Start-ups has gathered pace, why aren't UX folks recruited? Because essentially, both are working towards the same goal - Customer Centric iterative development.
I definitely don't think the role of a UX Researcher is a "non-essential specialization", but it is being overlooked.