Showing posts with label apps. Show all posts
Showing posts with label apps. Show all posts

Making friends at Cons: the art of ConnectiKon

29 AUGUST 2014



 
A few months back, I posted about a new app called ConnectiKon. Designed to help Comic-Con attendees make friends and find events aligned with their interests, the app was a huge hit at SDCC – not only with attendees and fans but also with exhibitors and local businesses.
 
Here's how it works. You tell the app what city you're in, tap the keyword reflecting your interests, and see a list of users who match up. You can check them out and send them an Instant Message if you want - and you can post your own keywords too. And you can do all of this safely and privately, because you only reveal the information you feel comfortable sharing. 
Given that Labor Day Weekend is our entry into the second half of Con season, I decided to go back to creator Adam Klugman and revisit the app’s potential for other Cons. Dragon*Con kicks off this weekend, Salt Lake Comic Con is next weekend and that’s followed by Rose City Comic Con, New York Comic Con, and San Diego Comic Fest just weeks after that – all of which are prime breeding grounds for ConnectiKon users.
 
Adam, remind me again: what was the impetus for creating this app?
Well, we noticed that social media space was all about sharing. That’s how people use it, generally. We wanted to expand the horizons of what was possible in social media and evolve it - not technologically but through how we use it. We feel that’s the next evolution in social media: how people are using these platforms. We felt that it was time to move past using social for just sharing and virtual connections and move on to using it for real world connections.

Several studies have shown that many social media users have actually become more lonely and isolated – their virtual connections don’t satisfy their needs for real human connection. Our goal was to create an app that fostered real-world interaction.

I know the app launched right before SDCC this summer. What was the reception?
It was great. Of everyone who tried it, 70% returned to use it again, and most spent a fair amount of time on the app; the average use time was 12-15 minutes. What surprised us was that it wasn’t just attendees using it to find events and meet each other; vendors used to advertise offers and local businesses and restaurants used it for promotions. For instance, McFadden’s used it to advertise their cosplay events.

What we think is so great is that any group can find anything – Spiderman lovers can find other Spiderman lovers; Bronies can connect with other Bronies. It’s an app where you can get your arms around every community. You just have to put yourself out there.

Will it ever be available for Android?
We’re working on the Android version. Our idea is to keep tweaking and perfecting this version, then create a clone for Android. That should happen within the next 6 months.

Inquiring minds want to know: what’s your specific nerd background, besides attending Comic-Con?
I’ve been an avid comic book collector since I was 10 years old. Spiderman was my favorite growing up. I even had Spiderman #1 for a while – I found it in Hollywood in 1971 for $40. But I sold it a few years later for $80 when I needed the money. I kick myself for that to this day. I’m also a big sci-fi nerd.

Are there any unusual ways the app can be used, besides finding events?
ConnectiKon is designed to be flexible and accommodate whatever users are looking for. You post your keywords and get connected to other people who share those interests. We call it the dating app for people who aren’t looking for a date, so theoretically people can use it in many ways. I have to say that I’m looking forward to users showing me the creative ways they use it.

Based on how flexible it is, it sounds like ConnectiKon can be used at business conferences and other big events – or even just at home.
That’s true. It’s the people’s app. There’s no intermediary; you can use it to find a racquetball partner or find a date or a find a group that shares your interests. It’s about finding your crowd and connecting with them. That’s why it works at Comic-Con and that’s why we designed it with the Con in mind - because nerds are playful, tech savvy and open to new things. But it could also work at the Olympics or anywhere else your kind of people are, anywhere you have greatest opportunity to connect.



So there you have it; at just a few months old, ConnectiKon is thriving and ready to help you go to more parties, make more friends, or just locate the one vendor at the Con who has the lost collectible you're hunting. Maybe you're trying to find a Star Trek party at Dragon*Con this weekend. Maybe you're thinking about organizing a meetup for your favorite show at Rose City Comic Con next month. Whatever's on your agenda, ConnectiKon can probably help - so live up to its tagline "Do Something" and give it a try.

Best apps for San Diego Comic-Con

16 JULY 2014



With an eye toward keeping it simple:



  • The SDCC App. Obviously.
  • MySchedule. Organize your panel choices, sync across devices and share with friends.
  • Marvel Events. This includes signings, parties, panels, etc.
  • NerdHQ. Keeps you informed of panels, celebrity appearances, photo ops and more.
  • ConnectiKon. So you can leave your cocoon and metamorphose into a social butterfly at the Con. 
  • mTicket. You can buy Trolley tickets without waiting in line. 
  • Bathrooms.io. When you have to go, you have to go. This app (created and contributed by Vince at CInli) helps you find a restroom in San Diego.
  • Local Mind. Theoretically you can use this to check on lines with other people. It just depends on who’s using it.
  • San Diego Guide. If you want to get out in the city. 
  • San Diego Restaurants and Bars.Self-explanatory. 
  • Coronado. Can help you navigate the island if you take the ferry over. 

If you know of any others, please say so in the comments.

New app lets you meet SDCC attendees, find parties

14 JULY 2014



Admit it, you want to reach out and mingle with your fellow attendees. All those strangers passing you by in the Exhibit Hall, on the street, sitting next to you at panels - who are they? What parties are they going to? Now you can find out.


We all meet people at San Diego Comic-Con but it's usually through happenstance. Someone's in line behind or ahead of us, or sitting in the hotel sauna when we walk in, or they commiserate with us over the price of nachos in the Exhibit Hall. But now you can meet attendees who specifically share your interests through a social media app called ConnectiKon.

ConnectiKon promises to "give people the power to engage each other, in the real world, based on their own interests and passions, regardless of how unique or quirky those might be." In other words, it helps you connect with Comic-Con people, panels, parties and other events. This is not about making online friends, but about real-life, in-person encounters. I don't mean that in a Grindr/Tinder sense of the word. I mean in the sense of enjoying a more social experience at Comic-Con. Despite being surrounded by 130,000 people, it's quite possible to go all 4-5 days speaking only to your friends - which is a terrible waste of an opportunity.

The app was developed by Jesse Singer, a  former Yahoo executive. He claims to be one of us: “We chose to launch ConnectiKon at Comic-Con because these are our people. They are super active folks who love to engage with each other live and in-person. That’s perfect for us because CKON is all about finding that great after-hours poker game, the Yoda beer pong party, the Storm Trooper breakfast. It’s not about sharing something with old friends, it’s about doing something with new people and having fun together.”

Here's how it works:
  • Download ConnectiKon from the App Store.
  • Add your events, using San Diego as the location tag.
  • Browse existing events and profiles to connect with people who have similar interests.
  • Connect.


You can get as creative as you want, entering any three words you want to ‘tag’ activities. Those tags appear on a word cloud where other users discover and tap them to find out more about the activity and the person who posted it. And it's not just for San Diego Comic-Con - you can use this globally.

This is a ginormous opportunity, considering how often you find out about parties the day after they happen. Because that's how people usually use social media at the Con: to post pictures and brag. ConnectiKon can help you connect with people who share your specific collectible passion, or point you to a cosplay party, or find a meetup of fans from your favorite show. I'm sure you can use it to meet people one on one too. (Don't pretend you weren't wondering - people ask me all the time how they can "meet someone" at Comic-Con.)  

Basically, this is a way to ensure you don't miss out on something fun and unique. Don't just spend Comic-Con with the same 3 people you hang out with every weekend. Reach out and stir the social pot. There is no other opportunity in the world quite like this one.