We got a YC interview, here's our pitch

ash1994

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Website: http://www.snip.ly

60-second walkthrough:

What is your company going to make?

Snip.ly is a link shortener that drives conversion. It lets you embed messages into every page you share across social media. Here’s an example of my Snip.ly message on Y Combinator’s home page: snip.ly/dBy. It works like a link shortener, but allows you to embed into the page your own call to action, commentary, announcements, and pretty much anything you want. You can promote yourself while sharing articles from TechCrunch, Forbes, Mashable, etc. Every shared link is a lost opportunity if you’re not using Snip.ly.

Why did you pick this idea to work on? Do you have domain expertise in this area? How do you know people need what you're making?

Sharing is huge. Facebook, Twitter, and LinkedIn Newsfeeds are filled with content people are constantly sharing. Yet few share for the sake of sharing. People share to build thought leadership, an audience, and a following, so they can ultimately push their own brand, their messaging, campaigns, and Call to Actions. Sharing is meaningless without conversion. We built Snip.ly as a link shortener that drives conversion, by allowing people to embed their own Call to Actions into the pages they share, extending their brand into shared content and driving conversion. We know people need what we’re making because we can see hundreds of snip.ly links being shared everyday. Check out this real-time twitter stream: https://twitter.com/search?q=snip.ly&src=typd&f=realtime.

What's new about what you're making? What substitutes do people resort to because it doesn't exist yet (or they don't know about it)?

Currently, people primarily use Bit.ly for link shortening. However, Bit.ly serves absolutely no purpose other than simply shortening the link. It does not drive conversion, it does not extend your brand, it does not include your call to action, it just offers extra characters in your tweet. After sitting on the front page of Hacker News with a ton of comments from the community, no one has pointed out any substitutes or similar services, which leads us to believe we’ve built something that doesn’t exist yet. Also, the fact that we were voted to the top showed us that not only is it new, it’s something that people want. We saw the same results on Reddit and Product Hunt.

Who are your competitors, and who might become competitors? Who do you fear most?

Link shortening is the vehicle of which we use to deliver our value proposition, which makes Bit.ly one of our competitors, since they’re integrated natively into many platforms. To counter that, we built a browser plugin that integrates Snip.ly everywhere for our users. Another potential threat would be social sharing dashboards such as HootSuite and Buffer, both of which could integrate our functionality. However, it’s safe to say that their value propositions are sufficiently different. HootSuite focuses on managing social media relationships across multiple accounts, and Buffer focuses on enabling consistent sharing activities. On the other hand, our value proposition is driving conversion through sharing.

What do you understand about your business that other companies in it just don't get?

What we understand is that sharing is all about conversion. It’s not just about sharing more consistently (Buffer), it’s not just about managing relationships (HootSuite), it’s not just about having more characters in your tweet (Bit.ly), sharing is meaningless without conversion. It is the underlying motivation behind sharing, and we get that. We also get that the closer we are to the true motivation, the more valuable our product is, and the more likely our users are willing to pay for the service.

How do or will you make money? How much could you make? (We realize you can't know precisely, but give your best estimate.)

We believe that when you help people make money, it’s easy to make money. Snip.ly generates a clear ROI since we drive traffic directly to the users’ Call to Action. We plan on introducing a performance-based subscription model, for example, free for up to 100 CTA clicks/mo, $10/mo for 1000 CTA clicks/mo, etc. We could also charge premium for customization features such as custom positions, sizes, colors, fonts, etc.

How will you get users? If your idea is the type that faces a chicken-and-egg problem in the sense that it won't be attractive to users till it has a lot of users (e.g. a marketplace, a dating site, an ad network), how will you overcome that?

Snip.ly is inherently viral. Every Snip.ly link that is shared serves as promotion for us since we have our logo on every Snip. The people who use snip.ly are influencers, people who actively strive to build a following, so our reach grows exponentially over time with each user we acquire. Many who follow influencers tend to have a following of their own, so the viral cycle keeps rolling. We don’t face the chicken-and-egg problem since Snip.ly is a tool that rides on natural sharing behaviors and existing networks.
 
@ash1994 So as a web developer, your technology strikes me as dangerous. The linked to page is shown in an iframe and the favicon is set to the destination site's favicon, despite the fact that you are actually on snip.ly's site. I feel like I'm being willfully tricked. There also appears to be no support for HTTPS which I'm not surprised about - how do you trick someone that you're on a different page when that page must be transferred via SSL?

This also means that you have full control over what is shown - there's no guarantee that what I'm seeing is what's actually on the site. This service is PRIME for setting up phishing schemes.

How are you addressing this?
 
@scratches As is mentioned, if you set X-FRAME-OPTIONS you're still golden for almost all browsers. If this thing spreads I'll make a point of implementing that on sites that we publish.

But this thing makes the web a tiny bit more annoying, and I don't like it. So I hope it doesn't take off. Luckily I'll have Adblock to take care of things like this.
 
@scratches Yes. This is a bad idea.

The reason bit.ly and other URL shorteners don't do this is because it ruins the web.

A URL is meant to go to the web page. It isn't meant to hijack it and put the destination web page in an IFRAME with crap people don't want to see.
 
@scratches There are a number of sites that use iframing quite widely. Sites like Digg and StumbleUpon use them for navigation while showing external pages and sites like About.com and Google Image Search use them to provide reference when linking to sites.

The X-FRAME-OPTIONS header allows any site to prevent their site from being iframed. This header is used on almost any site with heightened sensitivity, such as banks.
 
@breannak Exactly. The sites that don't have X-FRAME-OPTIONS set most likely don't know what an iframe is, much less why they should not allow their content to be iframed. Methinks if snip.ly catches on, though, they may form an opinion.

...excuse me while I go create some tutorials on how to set X-FRAME-OPTIONS.
 
@ash1994 I can see why people would want to use this but personally would hate to see this get widely used by people I follow on social networks because having bars on the top or bottom really annoys me. I would prefer people to just link directly to the content.

It reminds me of when digg implemented the 'diggbar' and it got a huge backlash , the implementation seems better than that but it still suffers from some of the same problems e.g. if you bookmark the link you are actually bookmarking a snip.ly link rather than the original site.

The idea of overlaying a advert over other peoples content also seems dubious, especially if used to create a negative message about a site as I have illustrated here:

http://snip.ly/qEY/
 
@gnomes Differently from Facebook or Twitter, this snippy bar seems like part of a webpage. Many, especially less web-literate, would think that they are on Coke website, ant there is banner to buy Pepsi.
 
@ash1994 No sign up needed, you get loads of backlinks, your product is useful from the beginning on, everbody gets it. That's how you get press and that's how you get into YC. :)

The only "flaw" I see is that you could only be a feature instead of a product as bit.ly, goo.gl and the like can simply implement the call to action feature in a week. Not that you would need to care, since that will probably benefit you more than harming you, but I'm interested what's your go-to response to that question?
 
@edolfhetlur Because they can use it as a PR angle, bit.ly copied us, Google copied us.

Snapchat got a huge surge in downloads when they were cloned by Facebook, it was all over the news. :)
 

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