I had a friend who wanted to start a coin counting by mail business. The customer mails the coins in a flat rate package and then you count them and in exchange the people get a gift card to a local restaurant.
I had a friend who wanted to start a coin counting by mail business. The customer mails the coins in a flat rate package and then you count them and in exchange the people get a gift card to a local restaurant.
When I managed the branch of a staffing firm, I went to a lot of startup networking events. Here’s some doozies that I’ve heard:
A fashion app where you had to scan and catalog every item in your closet, and it would make suggestions on what else you should add to the outfit. Yes, like the movie ‘Clueless’, but being pitched by a super serious 50yo man.
An on-hold waiting service that would let you schedule a phone call with a service, and basically wait on hold for you until a human answered, and then call you back. Not a bad idea, but he just couldn’t get that last bit about guaranteeing an exact call back time (i.e. a human might answer earlier or later than your request), and most companies started offering call back options.
A 23yo recent graduate who swore that his scheduling/calendar app was the most innovative thing ever. “The Uber of efficiency apps,” he called it. He kept talking down about the two equally young people who were his developers, and I don’t think he opened his eyes during his entire pitch. He had that super rich “I’m too bored for this” sort of inflection in his voice. Oh, and this was during a “Women in startups” pitch event - they let him present because he was the only male in his entire company.
The only one I saw that was good was an aerospace machinist with a home workshop. During the height of the fidget spinner craze, he hand-tooled some beautiful titanium spinners, and sold them for $250 each, with a lifetime guarantee. Made enough to buy a new BMW M3!
Went on an ‘interview’ with the CEO of the best ever Fashion Assistant app, that sounded A LOT like the one you described. But it was ran by a women in her 30’s, who was more invested in going to parties to ‘network’. But nothing ever got done. Her idea was to have someone working on the app catalog your entire closet and they would send you daily or weekly styling tips depending on your membership. This was like 10ish years ago when I was living in San Francisco. The chick didn’t even look me in the eye and was too busy on her phone. Also, she was pitching this all around town and didn’t have the app made. Just photoshop images of what the app looked like.
My cousin made a prototype app for that fashion app idea. I’m wondering if it was the same thing (he was like 25 at the time though, not 50)