Here is the thing I don't get about Crowdbooster.<p>Lots of chartsengrafs. Some of them are even interesting. I'll click over every once in awhile, see if my Twitter messages are driving followers away. But the site is not very sticky.<p>But buried on one of those graph pages --- I can never remember which one --- is a button for "schedule a Tweet", where Crowdbooster has <i>figured out for me</i> when my Tweets should get published.<p>Why - oh - why - oh - why isn't the primary interface to this whole app just a big Tweet dialog box with "tweet now" or "tweet at best possible time"? I would use that EVERY DAY.
I have been using Crowdbooster since last November (no serious reason, just felt like betatesting another YC startup) and until like two days ago when they improved their graphs a bit I honestly thought they are dead. In the last four months the website pretty much did not change at all.<p>Here is a suggestion. Maybe you can work on improving communication with your users so they know what is being changed and added to the site. I just checked out the blog for the first time like a minute ago and only once is a new feature mentioned (the #FF feature from 19 days ago). All the other entries seem to be focused on 'we are mentioned here! and we are mentioned there!'. Since I do not even read the blog, I even missed the #ff feature.
Great article. If I'm starting a new ice cream sandwich delivery service for example, it would be great to know how much influence my facebook and twitter accounts have over my revenue. On the other end, hopefully influence ratings will help services suggest places online to market new brands based on similar industry case studies.
I find this ironic since one of the top articles today is "The HB Gary Email That Should Concern Us All (Sockpuppet Management Software)" Can you easily measure crowd interest if it's becoming easy to fake online users.