01
Jul
2011

Happy Canada Day! To You And Your Blackberries

Rachel Sklar

Hashable has spent some quality time up north these past few months – our Toronto Hashy-Hour, our event with BNotions/Third Ocean, our CEO Mike Yavonditte being featured at SproutUp – and we noticed something: You guys really, really like Blackberries. No doubt that’s hometown pride – shout-out to RIM, a great Canadian company – but it raised the inevitable question of: “Can I use Hashable if I don’t have an iPhone or Android?” And so once again we must shout to the rafters: Yes, yes a thousand times yes! (And also “oui” because we know that Canada is bilingual.) So – to mark the magical occasion of Canada Day – let’s talk about Hashable and Blackberry.

Canadians are obviously not the only ones who use and love the Berry. In fact, I (Hasher Rachel Sklar) joined the iPhone ranks only when I joined Hashable; I have always been a steadfast Blackberry addict, and still am. Yes, I am also Canadian, but still – they don’t call it the Crackberry for nothing. Why? Blackberry’s killer app, put simply, is typing. While iPhone and Androids may be flashier (and certainly app-ier), Blackberry users always cite easy, accurate typing as the Berry’s main jam.

Here at Hashable we’re not taking sides – we love all our users equally, and love even more the various ways in which they are making Hashable their own – but we did feel it was time to remind you all about how Hashable can be used happily, if not appily. See below:

(1) TWITTER – Back when an iPhone app was just a twinkle in our Dev Team’s eye, Hashable launched on Twitter. You may recall how in September 2010 your Twitter feed suddenly blew up with people cc-ing @Hashable or saying #thanks for #breakfast or #lunch, having a #meeting or throwing back some #beers. To some, that seems like long ago, now that Hashable can live in your pocket on iPhone and Android – but Twitter is still where we were born, and frankly, we’re a little sentimental about it. So here’s how to Hash a friend up on Twitter:

(a) Use a recognized Hashable hashtag: #justmet for new contacts, or remember what you did with whom using #meeting, #breakfast, #lunch, #dinner, #meeting, #call, #beers or the all-inclusive, utilitarian #with.
(b) Send a thank-you for the above, or anything else, using the #thanks tag (good manners beget good Hashcred!).
(c) Simply add @Hashable to your tweet, and we’ll pick it up.
(d) Never Hash alone! Invite your friends to join with the #invite tag, and introduce people who ought to be besties with the #intro tag. There you go, that should keep you busy.

You can do this when you’re using Instagram, Soundtracking or any third-party apps that you want to push to Twitter. Foursquare users: Hashable will automatically pick up your friends with the #with tag whenever you push that checkin to Twitter.

(2) EMAIL – Twitter is a great and easy platform for Hashing – but it’s also public. What if you want to keep your Hashing private? That option is available using email – include or don’t include it to your Hashable stream using one of two options:

(a) To make an email check-in PUBLIC: cc the email to post@hashable.com
(b) To make an email check-in PRIVATE: cc the email to dontpost@hashable.com

So easy, and so effective! A quick way of keeping track, without getting bogged down searching endless email chains or multifarious folders.

(3) WEB – You know you can use Hashable via the web, right? Go here. It’s ridiculously easy.

Er, you can use all of these on a computer, too – but you’re busy and on the go, so know that when it’s you and your Blackberry against the world, Hashable’s got you covered. And we’ll have you covered even more in a few months when our Blackberry app goes live – we are on it, fear not. But in the meantime, on this Canada Day, we just wanted to remind our Blackberry users that we care. Oh Hashada? Never mind, that totally doesn’t work. But have a great Canada Day and a great long weekend!

 
 
 
30
May
2011

Using Hashable On Memorial Day

Rachel Sklar

It is Memorial Day Weekend — the official kickoff to summer, the start of beach season, an excuse to wear white — and a time to remember those who serve their country to protect and preserve those carefree traditions.

Hashable is all about remembering — remembering the people you meet, the relationships that evolve and the great events you share. And we hope you did and do just that this weekend, from every family #BBQ to #picnics in the park, #bonfires on the beach, watching #fireworks or hanging #with friends to watch #baseball, #tennis, #soccer or the #Indy500.

But – Hashable is also about saying #Thanks – so in honor of Memorial Day, we encourage you to check in with the five branches of the U.S. military: Army (@USArmy), Navy (@USNavy), Air Force (@USAirForce), Marines (@USMC) and Coast Guard (@USCoastGuard) and send a #Thanks to our incredible military service. You can also send a #Thanks to veterans and military families through the many organizations that support them, like the Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America (@IAVA), The Bob Woodruff Foundation (@Remind), Operation Gratitude (@OpGratitude), TAPS (@TAPS4America) the American Widow Project (@americanwp) or the Wounded Warrior Project (@WWPInc) (this is not an exhaustive list!). In 2011, almost every organization is on Twitter, so it’s easy to send a #thanks of appreciation and recognition.

That’s it – we hope you’re having a great Memorial Day Weekend, and a big #thanks to you for remembering those who serve.

Relatd:
How To Use Hashable [Hashable.com]

Flag image via Wikipedia.

 
 
 
17
May
2011

Hashable on “Dan Rather Reports” – Tonight

Rachel Sklar

As some of you know, a crew from “Dan Rather Reports” has been following our team since January as part of an in-depth segment about the Internet industry.  In addition to documenting Hashable’s efforts, the segment will look at the tech subculture as a whole and features interviews with several familiar faces including Naval RavikantRobert Scoble and Jason Calacanis.

It was a blast to have Dan and his crew spending time in our offices (and following us to Austin for SXSW) – and we look forward to their take on the wacky world we all take for granted. (You can see a sneak peek of Dan’s interview with our CEO Mike Yavonditte here.)

The segment airs tonight on “Dan Rather Reports” on HDNet (8 pm and 11 pm ET – find your local channel here). You can also catch it tomorrow on iTunes. Let us know what you think – we’ve created a custom hashtag for the occasion: #DanHasher. And yes, if you use it with another person on Twitter it will auto-post the connection to Hashable, complete with points. You’re welcome.

And in other news - we’ve been working hard on all-new versions of Hashable on your phone and on the web – so stay tuned for some awesome new stuff in June! In the meantime, if we don’t look good on the TV tonight, it was totally the lighting.

p.s. If you want to see some photos of Dan Rather in our office, check out our Facebook page here –  ’like’ us to post your thoughts on the program!

 
 
 
02
May
2011

For the Love of Hashable – Welcome John Exley!

John Exley

Ssssshhhh.....

EDITOR’S NOTE:
This is a post from our new summer intern, John Exley, describing his months-long ‘journey’ (aka recruiting assault campaign!) to get a job at Hashable. His tactics were aggressive and creative, and the whole thing was so good-natured and likable – it was impossible to turn down by the end! John’s post is really worth the read. We hope you’ll agree that we’ve scored an impressive, creative, determined, social media savvy monster of an intern for the summer. A very warm welcome to you John, thanks for (insisting on) joining us, and most of all – look out New York City!

————-
NOTE: Too busy to read the entire story? I summarized what I learned into 13 lucky lessons at the bottom of the post :-)

The “new ideal startup team” has been said to consist of three different types of people: hackers, designers, and hustlers. Although I am an ‘Engineering & Management‘ major at Clarkson University, I cannot code or design. Instead, I live for the hustle. Everything I have hustled for since first becoming passionate about Internet startups has led me to the space and the story I’m about to share with you. The following is my story of how I hustled my way into winning an internship with my dream startup, Hashable.

It all started on the 11th of October, last fall. A lot was going on in my personal life. I was at American University for the Washington Semester Program. Although reading TechCrunch that day had me in positive spirits, I could not have imagined how much it would prove to change the course of the next six months for me. I came across an article by Erick Schonfeld about a new startup called Hashable. Once I was able to play with it, I realized I had never been more passionate about a startup and its mission than I was (and I continue to be) about Hashable.

WHY I BELIEVE IN HASHABLE

I was particularly interested in the space because back in the fall of 2009, I was brainstorming ways to solve a problem I was having in essentially ‘quickly remembering who I know’. I studied abroad in Singapore the first semester of 2010 and wrote a business plan there for a ‘personal CRM’ type of solution. Somehow, I’ve always wished I could tag every friend I have (in the similar manner that I still to this day tag my bookmarks on Delicious) so that my network would have a sort of ‘intelligent search’ element to it.

Since then, I have been obsessively researching what I would call the ‘personal/social CRM’ space. When I found Hashable, I was through-the-roof excited because I saw so many ways that it solves (or could solve) problems in the space I had become so passionate about. I fell in love with the product pretty soon thereafter and decided I just had to do everything that I could to try and get an internship with Hashable.

LET THE DREAM INTERNSHIP PURSUIT BEGIN

Once I got in to Hashable’s beta, I immediately started playing with the product meticulously and tweeting about using it. I read everything I could find, from analysis of the product to Hashable CMO Emily Hickey‘s extensively detailed stories of how the team was thinking during the beta process. I also started looking for videos about Hashable and interviews with their founder, Mike Yavonditte, on YouTube. My goal: to understand the many use-cases of Hashable and also to be able to think critically of how the product might evolve.

In early December after Mike started following me on Twitter, I decided to direct message him and ask about the possibility of interning for Hashable. He responded to me and basically said that I was welcome to apply. He also DM’d me about the idea of having a leaderboard at universities like RIT.

So, as soon as I got home from my exchange semester at AU in Washington, D.C., I tracked down Mike Johansson (a professor at RIT who is very respected in Rochester’s social media community). I gathered his feedback and started going to local startup and social media events to ask people about Hashable. I would explain the use-case as best I could and gather more feedback. I also evangelized Hashable over the phone with friends like Marshall Haas; gathered feedback from users like George Petriccione over email; spent hours on Skype demoing Hashable, answering questions (if I was able to), and brainstorming features with friends in Europe like Fredrik Perdahl; and essentially used Hashable endlessly to keep track of all of my interactions.

Then things started happening fast. On January 9th, 2011, I started working from home for my semester-long co-op with the San Francisco based startup Syncables. Out of nowhere on January 14th, my friend Marshall Haas unexpectedly got the ball rolling for me:

 

@hashable hey guys, you need to hire @JohnExley as an intern. He will hustle so hard for you. Plus he loves the product, as do Iless than a minute ago via Twitter for iPhone Favorite Retweet Reply


 

 

@MarshallHaas thanks love hearing that! @johnexley come hang next time you’re in the city?less than a minute ago via TweetDeck Favorite Retweet Reply

 

 

@emilykhickey @johnexley That guy oozes passion and works harder than most people I know. Will y’all be at SXSW?less than a minute ago via Twitter for Mac Favorite Retweet Reply


 

Emily asked me to follow-up with her in 2 weeks to see when I could interview with the team in NYC. Sometime over the next 2 weeks, Mike Yavo went out to Los Angeles and did an interview with the venture capitalist (and author of my favorite blog) Mark Suster for the show “This Week in Venture Capital” (aka – ‘TWiVC‘). The interview was published (watch it here) on a Wednesday, January 26th. Late Thursday night I sat down in the livingroom and started watching it.

I got goosebumps watching it. The things Yavo and Suster were discussing (mostly the part about Hashable’s mission and foreseeable evolution into a social CRM for individuals) were literally exactly what had made me become so passionate about the web for the 2.5 or so years I have been researching the technology startup ecosystem.

MY FIRST EMAIL TO EMILY HICKEY: THE INTERVIEW REQUEST

I emailed Emily that night, at 3:07am on January 28th (if you’d like to see the exact email I sent, let me know in the comments!). Basically, I recapped my background, explained why I’m so passionate about Hashable, and asked if we could schedule an interview date in February. Emily loved the email and asked Hashable’s VP of Biz Dev Jane Kim to “run point” on setting up an interview.

At that point, I put the hustle pedal to the metal and went all out. I read every page of Hashable’s website, every one of their blog posts, every article I could find, every new interview with Mike Yavo and new video of Hashable, and every Quora thread about Hashable. I researched the team and made a list on Twitter called “The Hashable team“.

One night, I even hosted my friend in Sweden Oscar Carlsson’s LiveStream NoSleepTillNumberOne (after he had stayed awake for 64.5 hours straight) and talked about my passion for Hashable and my dream of interning for them.

MARK SUSTER: AN OPPORTUNITY TO STAY ON HASHABLE’S RADAR

Then a funny thing happened. Mark Suster asked his readers on his blog if they any would volunteer to summarize his TWiVC interviews since he was becoming too busy. I was pumped – I had taken some notes during his interview with Mike Yavo and thought this would be a great opportunity to stay on Hashable’s radar. So I asked Mark on Twitter if I could summarize that interview. Thankfully, he responded (there’s an interesting little tangent story here, I told it in this video if you’re interested!) and agreed.

So, I worked really hard on perfecting the summary and emailed it to Mark on February 7th. At the time, my good friend Seva Shorin from Australia (who I had studied abroad with in Singapore) was visiting the US for a his ‘summer’ vacation. He was itching to meet up with me in NYC, so I decided it would be perfect timing to follow up with Jane and Emily about scheduling an interview in the city.

Unfortunately, Emily didn’t see the purpose of interviewing me before the SXSW conference since I wouldn’t be able to begin as an intern until April 30th, when my co-op with Syncables would end.

ROLLING THE DICE: A GAMBLE THAT PAID OFF

After telling Seva I couldn’t justify spending the money for a weekend in NYC if I wasn’t also able to interview with Hashable, I was kind of dejected. So, I decided to take a risk. Seva had made plans to visit another study abroad friend of ours in Boston that weekend. I reasoned that if I could make the relatively short ride from Boston to NYC, maybe I could convince Emily and Jane to interview me afterall. So on a Wednesday night, February 16th, I confirmed with my good friend Michael Hanna that I could crash at his apartment in Boston on Thursday night and booked a $65 one-way bus ticket from Rochester to Boston for the next morning.

About ten minutes after tweeting about my trip plans, my man Kevin Mandeville saw my tweet and called me on the spot; offering to pick me up on Saturday morning and take me to a conference called Mobile Camp at MIT. I was pumped because I thought it would be the perfect use-case for using Hashable to record who I was meeting.

So before I went to sleep that night, I took a gamble. I emailed Emily and Jane once more, letting them know that I planned to be in NYC on Monday the 21st and would love to interview. The following morning while on the bus to Boston, she, Jane, and Mike emailed me back; agreeing to interview me on Monday. The risk had paid off, and I was ecstatic.

MAKING MY OWN LUCK: HOURS OF HOMEWORK ON HASHABLE

I pieced together some places to stay for the short-notice trip to NYC (huge thanks to my bros Matt Wilson and Aniq Rahman) and got to work. I planned what topics I thought would be important to cover in the interview. I also made a list of things I thought could be improved, features I thought would be awesome, questions about product use-cases, and even sketched out an idea for adding a field to tag people in order to describe them (something I’m super passionate about).

On February 21st, Monday, I interviewed with Jane, Emily, and Mike. I detailed my weekend experience of networking at MIT’s Mobile Camp without business cards and how I evangelized Hashable in person and online throughout the conference. The interview went well and they said that they would follow up with me after SXSW. I was walking on clouds after the interview. While at a Starbucks by MSG waiting for Seva to arrive from Boston, I even randomly introduced myself to a girl named Carly Strife whom I overheard talking about TechStars. Turns out, she knew some of the Hashable engineers!

MARK SUSTER PUBLISHES MY SUMMARY ON HIS BLOG

Later that week I realized that Mark Suster hadn’t emailed me back yet. So on February 25th, I sent him another email. I tried to use the lessons I had learned from Mark’s blog about sending him follow-up emails:
- I kept it short
- I put it in context: “Just decided to take my shot at creeping back up towards the top of your inbox :-)
- I added something relevant, letting him know that I had actually just interviewed with Mike and Hashable that week
- And after seeing via my Rapportive plugin that he had tweeted about going to a Sarah Silverman show the night before, I ended it with a simple “Hope Sarah Silverman was hilarious last night!

That weekend Mark sent me a tweet letting me know that he received my summary and that it would be up soon. On March 1st, Mark published my summary of his interview with Mike Yavo (you can read it here: The Guy Who Took on Google (and now LinkedIn): Mike Yavonditte) and gave me a virtual high-five that I will not forget anytime soon:

…there is a most excellent summary below provided by John Exley. If you get a moment, as a favor to John for having produced such wonderful notes I’d be grateful if you would check out his most excellent startup blog The X Factor. Thank you, John. I appreciate the write-up and your continued support of this blog.

To add icing to the cake, Mike Yavo RT’d my summary later that week!

THE HUSTLE CONTINUES: EVANGELIZING HASHABLE AT CONFERENCES IN UPSTATE NY

Thanks to my bros Justin Groden and Conrad Barrett trucking me around, I devoted tons of my free time during the month of March towards evangelizing Hashable at events around upstate New York. At the We Live NY Summit at Cornell University, my friend Liz Roscito told me that one of the judges (Christine Tate of the ARC Angel Fund) of the startup competition was an investor in Hashable!

While standing adjacent to my friend Andrew Farah as he introduced himself to Ms. Tate, I watched as Ms. Tate apologetically told him that she had run out of business cards. I politely interrupted and offered the solution of using Hashable to exchange business cards, telling Christine of my dream to intern with the startup this summer.

Not only did Ms. Tate’s excitement bounce off the walls when I mentioned Hashable, but a couple days later Andrew unexpectedly sent this tweet to Hashable:

 

@hashable you should very seriously consider hiring @johnexley. He’s convincingly pitched @hashable_beta a dozen times since we #justmetless than a minute ago via TweetDeck Favorite Retweet Reply


 

It was really a huge blessing to have friends like Andrew supporting me as I chased Hashable. My “campaign” as Emily later referred to it was ongoing from the moment I first communicated my interest to intern with Hashable. I favorited many of the tweets from friends like Andrew who spoke on my behalf throughout the semester.

Nevertheless, it wasn’t over yet. I needed one more major push.

SCOTT EDWARD WALKER BECOMES AN INSTANT LEGEND TO ME

In early April after the SXSW conference, Hashable had not yet formally followed up with me. I was trying to think of a clever way to follow up with them when THE MAN, Scott Edward Walker of Walker Corporate Law, happened to invite me to a TechCocktail event that he was sponsoring in NYC on April 14th.

I decided that if I could find a place to crash in NYC for a couple nights, it would be the perfect time to try following up with Hashable for perhaps a 2nd interview.

A week before the event, on April 6th, I returned to Clarkson University for the first time in almost two years (after back-to-back exchange semesters in Singapore and Washington, D.C. and the co-op I was doing at the time) to give a speech to the Collegiate Entrepreneurs’ Organization that I used to be president of. I talked about my journey as an aspiring entrepreneur and explained how basically everything I had learned and become so passionate about all seemed to lead to a startup named Hashable (if you want to watch it, UNYstartups included all three videos of my speech and my slidedeck here). I demoed Hashable and explained how I was currently pursuing an internship with them.

Then it all started to come together. On a late Monday night,April 11th, my man Matt Wilson sent me a text confirming that I could once again crash at his apartment for a few nights that week. So, around 1:00am I booked a $65 bus ticket for NYC that would leave just seven hours later at 7:45am on Tuesday morning. That night I emailed Jane Kim, letting her know that I was back in NYC and would love to interview once more on Thursday morning.

She agreed.

EVANGELIZING HASHABLE ON POWER 105.1 FM IN NEW YORK

While the week as a whole was truly unforgettable, I will never forget what happened on Wednesday. On the morning of April 13th, Matt brought me to an interview he was doing about his startup Under30CEO in the Power 105.1 FM studios, a legendary New York hip hop station.

Once we got to the studio, I met DJ Suss One and started showing him Hashable. After I tweeted about evangelizing Hashable in the studio, he RT’d it to his 60,000 followers…helping to spread the word about Hashable even further:

 

RT @JohnExley: Evangelizing @Hashable in the Power 105 studio in AT&T building in Tribeca. Unreal. #hashhustlehttp://tmi.me/8NROMless than a minute ago via UberSocial Favorite Retweet Reply


 

Towards the end of the interview, the host Kim Kane invited me to go on the air. I was beyond ecstatic. After Kim introduced me, I started evangelizing Hashable on the air – talking about my passion for the startup and how I was pursuing an internship with them in the city.

INTERVIEW #2: THE DO-OR-DIE INTERVIEW WITH JANE KIM

That night, on the eve of my interview, I spent hours preparing for what I perceived as I do-or-die last chance at winning my dream internship the next morning. Having talked a lot about community management with Jane in my 1st interview, I decided to focus a lot of my research on that topic. So I dove into Quora, studying Q&A threads like who the best community managers are and what the must-have tools are for community managers.

I also outlined what I thought the many roles of a community manager are, brainstormed some ideas for engaging new users and rewarding top users, and prepared a list of questions about how to best measure the engagement of users, etc. Finally, I decided to DM Mahalo‘s community manager, Mike Bracco, and see if he might be able to jump on the phone and give me some ‘advice from the trenches’. 20 minutes later he called me and shared his best tips.

In my interview with Jane the next morning, I was as focused, persuasive, and passionate as I could be. I realized quickly that the odds were stacked against me and did my best to explain how I would approach things like customer development and converting new users all the way to passionate evangelists. And of course I reiterated that I would give every ounce of energy I have to Hashable.

THREE AMAZING FRIENDS PUSH ME ACROSS THE FINISH LINE

After the interview, I figured I had a limited window of time before they would make a final decision. I decided I would need to pull all the stops to help push my candidacy past the finish line. So I reached out to three people I really respect and believed had enough experience observing or working with me to credibly recommend me to Hashable:
1) An informal mentor of mine who has helped shape my work ethic as a hustler since early 2009, Larry Chiang
2) The CEO of AudioMicro, Ryan Born, who I met while I was volunteering at TechCrunch Disrupt NYC last year
3) An MBA student and entrepreneur at Cornell, Arthur Soroken, who I knew had met with Mike Yavo recently

All three of them speedily delivered recommendations of me to Jane, Emily, and Mike.

I then set up a meeting for later that afternoon with Matt Shampine, an entrepreneur I had wanted to meet ever since discovering one of his projects, a really cool site called We Are NY Tech. Additionally, Matt is a power user of Hashable and that morning in my interview I found out that he was good friends with Jane!

In my meeting with Matt, I explained why I love Hashable, what I thought I could do for them, and how badly I wanted that internship above any others I perceived as backup plans. Afterwards, I raced over to NYU to meet one of Hashable’s earliest adopters and one of New York’s most connected networkers, Trevor Owens. I had this feeling of wanting to tell anyone who would listen how badly I wanted the internship with Hashable.

Finally, I left NYU and went to the TechCocktail event in Union Square to meet Scott Edward Walker in person and evangelize Hashable amongst those in attendance. Seriously, Scott treated me like family. He reassured me about Hashable, shouted me out when he was announcing the beginning of the event, and gave me the perfect set up over and over again to explain Hashable to different people coming up to him during the night.

It was surreal.

When I got back to Matt Wilson’s apartment late that night, I booked another $65 bus to return home to Rochester at 8:30am the next morning. I’ll let you guess what happened on my ride back home ;-)

SECURING MY DREAM INTERNSHIP WITH HASHABLE: IT’S OFFICIAL

The following morning I randomly met a freshman programmer named Matt Hoyle in the Port Authority bus station. We sat together on the bus and I talked about Hashable and showed him a bunch of the blogs I frequent every day. He downloaded the Hashable app on his iPhone and created an account, and 2 hours later I got a call from Jane Kim with an official offer to join my dream startup for the summer. This tweet made it all official:

 

Woohooo! A big, big Hash-welcome to @johnexley – our official new summer intern – get ready New York City!!less than a minute ago via CoTweet Favorite Retweet Reply


 

Wow.

THE EPILOGUE: WHAT I LEARNED FROM CHASING MY DREAM INTERNSHIP

In case you’re too busy to read the entire post, I decided to summarize what I learned about winning your dream internship into 13 lucky lessons:

1] Know and use the product endlessly. Study use-cases and practice explaining the product to non-techie friends.

2] Think of how what ways you would improve the product if you could.

3] Obsessively study every piece of feedback you can find about the startup, e.g. feedback requests and bug reports on community forums

4] The startup might say “we’ll follow up with you in…“, but what they probably mean is “if you really want (and deserve) the internship, you’ll earn it by finding a creative way to get back on our radar and follow up with us before it’s too late

5] In your interview, explain and show what kind of work you think you could do for them. Also, help prove that they can trust you to be able to do what you say you can do by tying in a relevant examples of current or previous projects you’re hustling on.

6] Work hard to help others, and perhaps they will one day be able to endorse your work.

7] Prove you are committed to the startup and/or their space. How? Your tweets, your blog, your activity on Quora, taking the time to detail all of your relevant experience on LinkedIn, etc.

8] The modern startup interview occurs around the clock and in public (with your activity on the web) beginning the moment you first express your interest to intern with the startup. It does not end until the moment you are are given an offer or told “we’re sorry, but…”.

9] Be everywhere you can evangelizing the startup, from offline at conferences and meetups to online via Twitter, commenting on blogs and writing your own, answering or asking relevant questions on Quora, Skyping friends about it, helping new users over email, etc.

10] Be sure to communicate that you are not just interested in interning for the startup, but that you’re also very interested in beginning your career with them if possible.

11] You should be able to create a compelling proposition for what you offer and what they need. So ask lots of questions about the startup, research, and figure out how your skills and passion can tie in.

12] Can you find similarly skilled or people working similar roles at other startups? It shouldn’t be too difficult nowadays. Try reaching out to them and asking for advice about how they’ve reached their level of success in that role, and share how you’re currently pursuing an internship doing similar things.

13] Try practicing as a point of contact for new and confused users…whether you know them or not. Reach out to them and gather their ideas, feature requests, and bug reports and offer genuinely to help them become a proficient user. Many times your efforts will be public for the startup to see, but you can also offer to move the conversations to email or jump on Skype.

*****************************************THE END*****************************************

I must point out that I owe Seth Elliott, Brian Shaffer, Eric Stromberg, and Emily Hickey a virtual group hug for pushing me to share this story. Of course, there are many people who I did not name here (ahem, Jeremy Levine) who encouraged me and gave me advice along the way. I am really thankful to them as well!

Now, let the internship journey begin.

 
 
 
22
Apr
2011

Users in 126 Countries – Time for Community Mgmt! (Welcome Katie!)

admin

Some exciting news to announce!

As of Monday, we’re bringing one of our most awesome power users officially into the fold, with the wonderful Katie Felten joining the team as our Evangelist Program Manager. This is our first community management hire and it’s long overdue.

One of the greatest joys from the start with Hashable has been connecting with users and creating a family and a community around our product. Not only do we believe that building relationships with our users is as important as building the product itself, but we’ve always felt that Hashable can help serve as glue to bring communities closer together by making constituents more visible to each other. These could be regional communities like ‘NYC Tech’ or niche/vertical communities like ‘academics active in social media.’ So in many ways, community actually is the product.

When we first launched and our user base was largely in NYC, we were able to engage with the community as a  ‘side job’ for various members of our team. We now have fledgling user communities popping up in over 126 countries – with energized, passionate users emailing in on a daily basis to get our support in pulling together user groups in their hometown.

Enter Katie Felten!

Katie came onto our radar a few months ago as an emerging power user from the Midwest (w00t!). She is a LinkedIn Trainer and Evangelist who actively speaks on social media at conferences and hosts a ‘Tech TV’ YouTube show. She immediately ‘got’ Hashable – and we were impressed from the start with her natural evangelism and innate-social-media-extroversion. We selected her to be one of our SXSW Evangelists and subsequently invited her to NYC for some working sessions. By the end of the trip it was clear we needed to team up, and the question to Katie was ‘when can you start?!’

Katie will be starting as our Evangelist Program Manager this Monday, April 25th. She will be based out of the Midwest but will be making steady appearances in NYC and various other user hubs.

Job 1 for Katie will be to act as a point of contact for all our awesome power users out there. Whether you just want a more direct way to give us feedback and get in the loop on our product roadmap – or whether you want to get more actively involved in leading your local or vertical Hashable community – Katie’s your gal! If you are a power user, you will probably be hearing from Katie. She also will have her hand on the t-shirt lever, so on that front she’ll probably be hearing from lots of you!

We are extremely excited to welcome Katie to the team. Not only is she completely terrific and a great addition to Hashable, but we are so thrilled to finally have the capacity to engage with users everywhere.

We invite you all to help us in welcoming Katie at @katiefelten – and if you’ve already got ideas for her – bring it on – she’s ready to roll!

 

 
 
 
21
Apr
2011

Remember People by Where & When You Met Them

admin

Ever have trouble remembering someone you met – and wish you had a way to look them up based on WHERE and WHEN you met them?

Presto! There is a powerful new feature in your website address book that lets you sort your contacts by where and when you connected with them.

Here’s how it works:

- Every time you send a business card or check-in with someone from your mobile app, we add them to your Hashable network and tag them with the date and location of your meeting.

- We’ll automatically tag your location as a city and neighborhood based on your current location (i.e. ‘Midtown Manhattan’)

- But what’s much much cooler is if YOU take the extra step to tag your check-in with a specific venue or event – like ‘Jimmy’s Coffee Shop’ or ‘The Launch Conference.’

- You can then at any time search back through all of your contacts based on date and location and finally (with laser-precision) answer the question of ‘who was that guy/gal I met at that conference last summer‘? It is so incredibly handy!!

Again, we will automatically tag your mobile check-ins with your general location, but you’ll need to manually assign a venue or event tag.

To tag with a specific venue or event – just click into the ‘Where’ window on your posting screen, type in the name of a venue to search for it, and select a venue from the search results (you can even do a Foursquare check-in from that screen while you’re at it):

To view your contacts online according to date & location – just log in at http://hashable.com and click ‘Profile’ to access your address book. You’ll see two new filters (for date and location) – which will look similar to this screen shot below. As you can see, while it is cool to retrieve who you met by city or neighborhood, it is infinitely more powerful to be able to do this by a specific venue or event!

 

We hope you enjoy (and obsess over) this new feature! Keep in mind that only the check-ins done since February and through your mobile app will be location tagged. And that this is only the tip of the iceberg – stay tuned for lots and lots of cool new stuff coming this summer.

 

 

 

 
 
 
18
Apr
2011

Goodbye Boulder … Hello Toronto and Chicago!

Jane Kim

Well, we may have said farewell to Boulder, but it’s time we turn to the next town that we’ll fall in love with. We couldn’t decide between the US and Canada (we have Team Hashable roots in both), so we’re going to do both!   If you’re living near or around these two awesome cities (or just in town for the wonderful people, like we are), please come by and #justmeet us.  Tell your friends, we’d love to meet them too!

Here are the details for our next stops:

TORONTO – Here we come!

Wednesday, April 20 - SproutUP Toronto April @ The Courthouse (57 Adelaide St. E Toronto, ON)

Mike Yavonditte will be guest-speaking at this awesome entrepreneur networking event.  As an angel investor and tech founder, he’s played both sides of the hustle – hear him talk about his experiences and come with questions.  Afterwards, network with Team Hashable (including Toronto’s own Rachel Sklar) as they show Torontoneans everything they need to know about Hashable.  There’s going to be some awesome demos of some cool Toronto Tech, so it’s gonna be a good night…

To attend Wednesday’s (April 22) SproutUp, register here.

 

Thursday, April 21 – Toronto #HashUp @ Location TBD

We still haven’t decided where we’re going to have our #HashUp, but don’t worry – it’s going to happen!  We’re hosting an event that’s for the Toronto Tech Startup community, and adopters of cool networking technology.  Mike Yavonditte is going to go through a demo of Hashable, and the floor will open up to  and ask Mike questions about hashable and it’s inception.  We’re working with thirdOcean to create an event with some key Tech start-up influencers in Toronto.  Come with questions, or just come looking to meet founders/hackers/movers/shakers … and use Hashable to track it all!

Register here for the Toronto #HashUp on Thursday, April 21!

 

CHICAGO – CATCH YOU ON THE FLIP SIDE!

Monday, April 25 – Chicago #HashUp @ Hubbard Inn (110 W Hubbard, Chicago, IL 60654)

Come join Mike Yavonditte as he gives a demo about Hashable, and talks about the latest updates in the iPhone and Android app.  We’ll of course run a demo and will be happy to hash you up so you can learn how easy it is to use Hashable to track the people you meet.  Team Hashable will of course be there (Jane Kim, and Katie Felten) to do one-on-one demos with people – so come with questions, or just come to meet with a great group of people are the future digital networkers of the Windy City.

Register here for the Chicago #HashUp on April 25.

 

Don’t worry – we’ve got more city visits on the way – but if you would like us to make a stop, please send us a note at community@hashable.com and try to squeeze it in!

Look for updates on our travels this week and next.  Until then, happy hashing!

 

 
 
 
05
Apr
2011

Boulder: Passing The Torch

Rachel Sklar

It’s no secret ’round these parts that we love Boulder. It’s not that we don’t love our other cities – we’ve had terrific Hash-Ups from the East Coast (Boston), West Coast (SF and LA), Midwest (Chicago, Cincinnati, Milwaukee represent!), north (Great White North! Whatup Toronto?) and south (Miami please send some of that sun our way, stat) – but we really had fun in Boulder. Maybe it was the adventure of getting there in a nostril-freezing cold so bad it rendered the streets deserted, or maybe it was the four-poster, super-dreamy beds at the St. Julien, or maybe it was the continued hilariousness of Alpaca Connection jokes – something just hit our sweet spot and Boulder became, well, sort of special. It was probably that thin mountain air; now that I think of it, that accounts for how often we were convulsing with laughter. (I mean, are alpacas really that funny? Okay yes they are, they really are.) But we weren’t light-headed enough to miss the awesomeness of the community, nor their zeal in embracing Hashable, and us. By the time we rolled back into town for round two, it really felt like greeting old friends. Who were totally cool with you serving them chips, as long as it was washed down with a healthy shop at the Liquor Mart.

So it is with a lump in our throat and a tear in our eye that we, Emily Hickey and Rachel Sklar, step back from our Hashababes in the wood and leave you to grow up, alone. Let’s be honest, you haven’t needed us for a while now. You’re all growed up, goddamit. You make us so proud. So – it is time. We have made the decree, and are thus removed from the Boulder-Denver Leaderboard, to monopolize those top two spaces no more. Fly free, little birds, fly free.

And thus freed, the way is clear to now see where you perch. And lo! The all-time standings are thus: Fiona Schlachter is the clear #1, with Hashcred almost three times that of her nearest competitor, Ryan Angilly, nipping at her heels with intensity but not quite enough there yet. George Holmes takes the #3 spot – a perch near the top of the leaderboard that he has ne’er relinquished for ere these months, except to Ryan and Fiona. But soft! What light doth yonder Janine Schmenk break? We’re not sure, but she broke 290 Hashcred! Suzan Bond rounds out the top five – though watch it, killers, she’s number one with a bullet so far for the month of April. Be warned.

But, while we plot our next mile-high visit to your parts – and the Liquor Mart! – we believe that our winners have got some deliciousness coming…in the form of a SUPER-FUN ALPACA-FILLED LUNCH! As promised, Fiona Schlachter and Ryan Angilly get lunch on us – AND Fiona has the honors of inviting 5 lucky guests – thus being able to call it a “working lunch” while still enjoying some vino with her pizza at…PIZZERIA LOCALE! Italian wine on tap. Need we say more? All we ask is that you vigorously hash that lunch up so we can monitor through our activity stream and feel like we’re there. Mmm, pizza. Mmm, sexy red Italian pants.

It’s not that we didn’t consider sending you to the Liquor Mart. It’s just that we need to be there when that happens.

Boulder, we love you. We will see you soon.

xo Rach and Em

 
 
 
04
Apr
2011

Ladies and Gentlemen, The Hashable Dancers!!

Rachel Sklar

Okay, humor us for a second: Did anyone else, while watching Stephen Colbert and Jimmy Fallon’s epic all-star performance of “Friday” last, er, Friday, notice a subtle but unmistakable shout-out to Hashable? If you are someone who has started seeing the happy criss-cross combination of orange, blue and white suddenly everywhere, then perhaps you did…in the Knicks Dancers! Out they came to celebrate the gloriousness of Friday, looking just like our logo and flexible to boot.

Are we crazy? No. Just expert at decoding hidden message from The Universe. And this time, The Universe was saying, “Nothing makes a group of super-sexy dancers look better than being outfitted to look like a super-sexy hashtag.” Boom. The Hashable Dancers.

If you doubt, check it out at 3:04 and see if you don’t picture a chorus line of high-kicking Hashies. Or at least notice the resemblance between those outfits and our custom-made Hashable t-shirts at SXSW. And if you think this is just an excuse to post that incredible “Friday” video because we can’t get the song out of our heads, well, shame on you. We just want you to have fun. Fun fun fun fun fun fun fun fun.

 
 
 
01
Apr
2011

¡Ay, Caramba! It’s Hashablé!

Rachel Sklar

Hola Amigos!

So, ever since we returned from Texas, we’ve been thinking: How can we continue to find excuses for drinking Margaritas and pounding tequila shots? And how can we continue the party atmosphere that Hashable fostered between so many new friends under the blazing sun? The answer came to us in a flash – we must embrace it, and make it part of us.

So, chicos and chicas, it is our pleasure to introduce you to: Hashablé.

Yes, Hashablé!

Got a nice ring to it, right? We think it sounds a lot more zesty and fun, like a flamenco dance under the stars. Also, we wanted to avoid brand confusion with GroupMé.

Besides, not enough startups use accents! (I’m looking at you, Foürsqüare.) I think it would add a lot of personality to other brands as well. Would Mademoiselle like some champagne avec her Boxée? Why so serious, Fòódspotting? Would you like to rock out to Motley Groüpon? Hark! What tag in yonder window doth break, Fæcebook? The possibilities are endless. Frankly, this could be a really neat solution to the Libya issue – er, the other Libya issue. Now all those .ly sites don’t need to worry any more! Bit.lé! Ad.lé! Chart.lé! Graphic.lé! Lover.lé! Don’t worry – Hashablé has got you covered.

So what do you say, Senorita Hashita? You love it? Ha! Take a nombre, Hombre! We are pleased to rebrand accordingly, because we know it will make you, our userbåse, so very happy. Te adoro. No, you!

We hope you like this new and improved version of Hashablé and continue to use it to connect with friends new and old. #Olé!

Besos,
El Equipo Hashablé

p.s. We are totally re-enacting this in our office right now. Mike Yavo looks terrific in white pants!