I like the approach you’re taking with the blog post. Here’s my perspective and initial thoughts on it:
The premise of the article is that you can choose to be on/off the record. The thing with twitter is we’re always on the record regardless of whether or not the tweet is deleted. Once its out there, its out there.
I would just paraphrase and clearly outline the pain points and solution. Just easier for the reader to follow.
Re: the product
There’s already a free tool out there with a one time payment. How does your product compete with it?
On the article — yes I think you're right about the "on/off the record" analogy not being useful enough. May try describing it differently all together. And yes, outline pain points and solution is a good thing for me to work on :)
Hey Pete,
I like the approach you’re taking with the blog post. Here’s my perspective and initial thoughts on it:
The premise of the article is that you can choose to be on/off the record. The thing with twitter is we’re always on the record regardless of whether or not the tweet is deleted. Once its out there, its out there.
I would just paraphrase and clearly outline the pain points and solution. Just easier for the reader to follow.
Re: the product
There’s already a free tool out there with a one time payment. How does your product compete with it?
Thanks for taking the time to read and reply!
On the article — yes I think you're right about the "on/off the record" analogy not being useful enough. May try describing it differently all together. And yes, outline pain points and solution is a good thing for me to work on :)
On the product — There's a few tools that range from open source (gist.github.com/robinsloan/36…), to free (tweetdelete.net) to rather expensive (tweetdeleter.com).
I just figured I'd make a simpler (and more opinionated) product that can be fully set up in 2 clicks and is neither free nor expensive.