Secret Wants To Be The Stream Of Consciousness For Live Events, Starting With CES
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Which panel at this conference isn’t boring? Where’s the after-party? Your friends and followers around the world probably don’t know or care. But people nearby might, and Secret wants to connect you to them. Today Secret launches a CES feed that only people at the conference can share to. While posts will be anonymous, the point is to create a hyper-local backchannel for temporary communities.
Secret experimented with an event-based feed on the web at SXSW last year, collecting posts tagged #SXSW or from the area. The new CES feed is different, as it’s visible right in the Secret app and can only be viewed, not posted to, by people outside the geofence in the center of the Las Vegas strip.
“I’ve been to other conferences, and people are always trying to figure out what’s going on. There’s never been a good way to get that all in one place” says Secret co-founder Chrys Bader-Wechseler. Retweets, mentions, and hashtag use by outsiders make Twitter too noisy to be a backchannel for events.
“You know how being at a conference, you’re in a panel or somewhere and want to get your opinion out there but don’t want to send it to all your followers who might not care?” Bader-Wechseler asks. Dedicated event feeds on Secret could be the answer.
Rather than sharing to your Friends or city’s feed, you open the CES stream in the Secret iOS or Android app and post freely about whatever’s going on. All recent posts will show up in the New tab for CES, while those that get the most hearts will be bundled into the Best tab.
Friends or people from your normal location won’t see what you say. And thanks to the recently added Chat feature, you’ll be able to follow-up in private if you want more panel or party recommendations, to gripe about the event, or to try to hookup. A lot of talk on the CES thread so far has been talking about their desires for *ephemeral romance* while in Vegas.
The more ephemeral, real-time chatter expected from the CES feed will benefit from Secret’s new stripped down design seen above. Last month the app sacrificed its big, beautiful images overlaid with text for a white space-heavy, text-focused feed that I skewered for looking just like Secret competitor Yik Yak.
Bader-Wechseler explains that the redesign was meant to make it feel quick and easy to post, rather than like composing a piece of visual art. The pictures were pretty, but it was the text that mattered, and now users can read a lot more posts in the same amount of time because they’re stacked tighter with less scrolling necessary.
The redesign certainly obliterated much of Secret‘s identity and style in the name of function. But if reducing the barrier to entry can turn it into the invisible social fabric weaving together people in the same place, it could pay off.