Social media is a hard nut to crack as a founder. To go up against titans like Facebook, Instagram, and Snapchat and carve out a piece of the pie is no easy feat. How many new social apps have we seen wind down just as fast as they pop up?
Thatβs why a new social app built by Gen-Z whisperer, investor, and former Product Hunt employee Tiffany Zhong is raising eyebrows. Noplace is an app backed by Alexis Ohanian that aims to bring back the more whimsical days of social media and friend-finding. It opened to the masses this week and immediately shot to the top of the app store charts, clinching the number one spot.
Itβs like old-school MySpace, where users can create colorful and customizable profiles to share anything from mundane status updates to what theyβre listening to and their relationship status. Itβs designed to appeal to a younger generation and create more community amongst young people.
It doesnβt have more features than traditional social mediaβit has fewer, and thatβs where I see the appeal. Itβs entirely text-based, so there are no photos, videos, or files. It also has no vanity metrics such as likes or reposts. All you have is a number that shows how many responses a post gets.
Noplace also ditches the algorithms other social apps use to keep us hooked on the endless flow of content. Instead, it uses AI to moderate and curate content between two feeds: one made up of your friend's posts and the other, which is kind of like a global messaging board where you see original posts and ones in response to them.
Profiles follow the same theme of simplicity. You get a profile picture, a bio section, an add friend button, and your wall β the home for everything you post.