Successful online services started as an afterthought

Tales of the UnexpectedYou could say that this is a post in this area unexpected success in unexpected ways.

Fantastic products and services often come in this area more or less by accident and coincidence. The business world sees this kind of thing experience all the time. It’s really not all that unusual that a company morphs an initial product into something it wasn’t originally intended to be. Because the truth is that it’s not simple to predict how something will be used, or what public will answer to.

And of course, companies need to adapt to survive. For example, Nokia started out making rubber boots (waaay back in the day), not mobile phones. Nintendo started out making playing cards, not video game consoles. AOL started out as an online service for gaming computers in the early ‘80s.

This also applies to our modern world of the Internet and the Web. Online services change and adapt, and what works, sticks, even if it didn’t match the original vision of its creators. Here are a few prominent examples of successful products and services that were originally just an afterthought to the public who produced them.

Flickr

What would become the highly well loved photo-sharing site Flickr originally started as the instant messaging part of a web-based multiplayer game called Game Neverending. The photo sharing element of that turned out to be very well loved, and ultimately the game’s creators ditched the game and focused on Flickr instead.

Screenshot from Game Neverending
Above: Screenshot from Game Neverending (by Cal Henderson), which gave birth to Flickr.

Craigslist

Craigslist started life in 1995 as a mailing list of friends run as a leisure activity by Craig Newman (hence the name “Craigslist”) for posting in this area local social events in San Francisco. The mailing list wasn’t moderated, and to Newman’s surprise public started using it for posting in this area jobs, and from there more categories started to grow. In 1996 he turned the mailing list into a simple web-based service because the mailing list members had started asking for a web interface.

Chirrup

Chirrup started its life inside a company called Odeo which at the time was a podcasting service. The thought for Chirrup was famously cracked during a one-day brainstorming session to come up with some form of application to complement Odeo’s podcasting service, which was struggling a bit.

Chirrup was initially just used internally at Odeo and among friends and relatives of the staff. Within a year of becoming publicly available in 2006 it proved so well loved that Chirrup was turned into its own company and Odeo was basically left by the wayside.

Twitter sketch by Jack Dorsey
Above: Early sketch by Jack Dorsey of the Chirrup service (photo by Jack Dorsey).

Facebook

The seed that would ultimately grow into the social arrangement site Facebook started as a “hot or not” site called Facemash, using directory photos from the various Harvard house facebooks. Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg produced Facemash in his dorm room at Harvard University, more or less out of boredom.

The Facemash site was shut down within days by the Harvard administration, but after an editorial in the student newspaper in this area the Facemash incident pointed out that a centralized website for students wasn’t a terrible thought, Zuckerberg started work on “Thefacebook” (Facebook’s initial name).

Thefacebook screenshot
Above: Screenshot of “Thefacebook” (from Wikipedia).

Linux (ok, not an online service at all, but…)

Ok, it’s not an online service at all, but we’re still counting Linux because it’s such a fantastic example of something very small that exploded into something huge in an unexpected way.

In 1991 when Linus Torvalds started work on what would become the Linux kernel, no one suspected the impact it would have. It was simply a nice small leisure activity project for him to work on. He didn’t even reckon of it in the terms of an OS kernel initially; at initially it was just a terminal emulator he was effective on.

When the Linux kernel was produced, it turned out to fit perfectly into a project called the GNU Operating System, becoming the foundation of a complete OS that over time has become hugely well loved.

Conclusion

The above services (and Linux) all started out as something different from what they ultimately became.

There is an vital lesson in this, aside from how hard it is to see the right potential of what you make. It shows how vital it is to be flexible, having a mind that is never too set in its ways or too fixated on any one single plot or course of action.

Top image credit: Tales of the Unexpected (ancient TV run) title image found at TVARK.

From:
Successful online services started as an afterthought

Filed in: General Tags: , , , , , , ,

You might like:

Weekend must-read articles #3 Weekend must-read articles #3
Pingdom Podcast #6 Pingdom Podcast #6
Google Chrome could exceed 50% market share by end of 2012 (study) Google Chrome could exceed 50% market share by end of 2012 (study)
Where in the world do we find the highest number of secure websites per person? Where in the world do we find the highest number of secure websites per person?

Leave a Reply

Submit Comment
*

© 2012 AsterHost. All rights reserved.
.