Apologies for the extended delay in posting my thoughts on Xobni. I have been using it since the first cycle of an exceptionally well run beta program started and have been collecting some thoughts over time. I appreciate being given some early beta invites and dutifully distributed them making some new friends along the way. I still have some if you’d like to take it for a spin. Just shoot me an email – robertcpease at gmail dot com.
Recently the company has had some departures from the early executive team. Not uncommon, but this is pretty early in the lifecycle of a company with momentum and is curious to say the least. What I mean by momentum is that having Bill Gates demo your product as a brand new and unknown company is not a common occurrence. The turnover could be the result of a new CEO and a company trying to move from being "clever" to being real, but is worth noting nonetheless.
First off, I am a huge believer in both how bad the email problem is for the enterprise as well as the potential that awaits those companies that come up with a way to improve it. The challenge is to significantly improve it, not focus on replacing it or just rethinking the construct of the inbox.
Email is way too pervasive and ingrained in all major workflows from selling to support and it will be many moons until the Facebook generation eradicates it from the workplace. Also, for full disclosure, I spend time and energy on this topic thinking about the business opportunities that could be pursued.
Here's what I like:
- Great initial marketing and buzz
- Locating attachments
- Usable placement on the Outlook UI (expand/collapse)
- Conversation threading
- Search that is interesting and faster than Outlook search (even though it essentially the same searching)
Not so wild about:
- A quick key to draft an email that asks for a phone number that drops a bit of promotional text below the signature block that is not really appropriate in business setting.
Build your address book with less effort – http://www.xobni.com/GetTheDigits
- The "Schedule time" quick key sends a clever email with time slots for the next few days with the same cheesy promotional text at the bottom but the available times are not tied into my actual calendar or reflecting true availability requiring me to still switch between my calendar and the email I am sending to get accurate availability.
- Single channel/single platform – email only and MS Outlook only (Yahoo Is apparently in the works)
- Analytics that are interesting but not meaningful. Time of day by contact not meaningful and the graphic in the side bar seems like filler.
At this point and after using it for many months, I have not integrated it directly into my daily workflow. I still use the calendar tab to schedule a meeting and I still use "new" to start a new email. I did use it the other day to quickly find a phone number for someone not in my contacts. Xobni extracted it and made it easier for me to find – definitely a time savings but I still could have found it without the tool after a bit of digging.
A quick word about Outlook latency: there are lots of things going on when starting, using, and closing Outlook even without a plug-in and that goes for any plug-in. When I first loaded the beta version, I had some issues that they quickly resolved with subsequent releases and an uninstall/install on my part. This is why you conduct a beta program – to see what will happen when it is used on a larger scale than your dev/QA environment.
Their plug-in is not the only application (beta or otherwise) now fighting for control of Outlook as it starts on my desktop as I have Salesforce.com, LinkedIn, and a handful of other alpha/beta products vying for processor time.
On the analytics front, I learned about needing to make email data really meaningful doing email analysis at both Orchestria and MessageGate. The data on its own is interesting but even more interesting when taken in context – a new recipient, an email without text and an attachment, concentrations of traffic of certain file types, etc. Granted, my previous efforts focused on compliance issues but the need for relevance is the same if you are talking about supervisory review or personal use.
All said, I like Xobni and look forward to seeing it evolve but don't think I'd pay for it assuming that is a milestone in their business plan. If it becomes part of MS Outlook then I guess that is not an issue as that will open a huge distribution channel.
My view is not as harsh as Mark Logic CEO Dave Kellogg but I still think focusing solely on making the inbox better doesn’t solve the problem.
Hello Robert,
As you are an active blogger of topics regarding start-ups and email providers, we would like to let you know about our new service, OtherInbox.
OtherInbox is the cure for email overload – it provides consumers with a free email account (username.otherinbox.com) that automatically organizes newsletters, social networking updates, coupons and receipts from online purchases so that its easy to find the most interesting things and ignore the rest. OtherInbox shows the consumer who is really responsible for sending them spam and gives them a powerful new Block button to stop it once and for all.
Recently, we had the opportunity to be apart of the TechCrunch50 conference in San Francisco earlier this month. It was a great forum to launch our new service to the public and we were really honored to be chosen to participate. We’d like to personally invite you to join our private beta that we announced at the conference, and we’re happy to extend the invitation to your readers as well! Because we’re in private beta, you need to have a special URL to sign up. This URL will work for 26 invitations (one for you and 25 for your readers):
http://beta.otherinbox.com/signup/robertpease
We would really love for you to take a look at OtherInbox and post your thoughts through your blog.
Please let us know if you have any questions about the service. Thanks again!
~ The OtherInbox Team
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