Oink was our first test and, in preparing to move onto the next project, we’ve decided to shut it down to help focus our efforts.
So, your “new efforts” are working at Google, Kevin? The same thing is happening this week with the Posterous acquisition by Twitter. Users who have trusted Posterous as a seamless way to keep a blog now have to go through the process of exporting posts thanks to the uncertainty of the blogging platform. Posterous’s announcement notes that the service is not going anywhere:
Posterous Spaces will remain up and running without disruption. We’ll give users ample notice if we make any changes to the service. For users who would like to back up their content or move to another service, we’ll share clear instructions for doing so in the coming weeks.
Twitter, however, is not making any promises. The third issue that creates a lack of trust between users and founders is the misalignment of objectives between the two groups. For founders, getting acquired means that they get to cash in on their hard work, or at least take some money off the table if the acquisition is for a majority stake in the company. An acquisition is a score for founders because it means they don’t have to worry about where their next paycheck is coming from. But users don’t celebrate acquisitions because their service is either going to be shut down, absorbed into a product already offered by the acquiring company, or the spirit of the app will become hollow thanks to corporate control. The lack of trust is emerging as a problem for early startups especially because they need a dedicated and active user base to gain traction. If early adopters start waiting 2, 3, or even 6 months to see if an interesting app is going to still be around before they start participating in a meaningful way, then there is no way that they will survive. What’s the solution? It’s hard to say. A vibrant startup ecosystem with incentives for founders to make money is what drives innovation. Founding teams can’t promise that their products will be around indefinitely. I’m interested to see how users react in the next few years as more of the apps that they have trusted to be around start merging or getting acquired.
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