Biz Stone’s Jelly Launches Super So You Can Express Your Best, Craziest, Sexiest Opinions
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Twitter co-founder Biz Stone’s Q&A app Jelly didn’t quite blow up, so today he’s launching a much weirder app called Super where you can share colorful statements, opinions and recommendations. It’s a lot like the private beta version of Super I stumbled into and profiled in September, but now everyone on iOS and Android can start yelling in all caps about their thoughts.
A slew of apps like State and Amen have ended up the dumpster or with very little traffic after trying to capture “opinion sharing”. Those that have survived, like Secret and Whisper, have leaned heavily on the defining trait of anonymity. Though it’s constrained by the prompts, Super might still lack the uniqueness to make people adopt another social feed. With its more generalist approach, Super’s biggest competition might not be any of the dedicated opinion apps, but instead what he already built: Twitter.
That why Stone’s trying his best to manage expectations for the app, writing he’s “not going to proclaim that it’s the most innovative thing ever or that it’s going to save the world. It’s not, it’s just fun.” He follows up with me that “You can’t come out of the gates and say ‘we’re going to change the world’. You just have to make something and see if people like it.”
Stone says Jelly’s Q&A app will live on, though the only update currently planned is some iOS 8 bug fixes. “We’re going to keep it there, because the people who use it, love it. I don’t see why we’d get rid of it. It’s a cool little app. When it works, it really works.” It just wasn’t working for a sufficient number of people to bet the farm on.
What Stone learned, though, was that people enjoyed answering questions. “Turns out people really love to put their opinions on the Internet. Go figure”, he jokes.
Stone exclaims “Fun is the way to go. You don’t want to not have fun at work, right?”
Yes, that’s quite the privileged statement, afforded by Stone’s stake in a company worth tens of billions of dollar. No, most people go to work to make money because they don’t already have gobs of it.
Rather than trying to build a serious business, they’re using the financial freedom from past successes to bankroll a more playful approach. It prioritizes the happiness of the founders with the expectation that if they’re having fun, so will users.
Like casual, mass-market moonshots, there’s a high likelihood that apps like Super or Kevin Rose’s Tiiny will fail. But instead of building hard science technologies like Google’s moonshots, they’re social apps angling to be the next Instagram or Snapchat.
Stone recounts an old Charles Eames quote, “Toys are not really as innocent as they look. Toys and games are the preludes to serious ideas.” Stone’s version, which he says he learned from building Twitter, is that “if something’s fun, people might use it, and if enough people use it, it could be important.”