Group Members:

Paul Woods, David Thomas

Problem Statement

The problem:  

Many students at MIT would like to throw small parties to meet new, random people.  However, mailing lists do not provide adequate filtering and Facebook is most useful for small parties with people who are already friends and large parties.

The solution:  

A website for hosting small parties and finding parties to attend.

Tasks

Task 1

What is the task being done?
Preconditions
How often is the task performed:

Task 2

What is the task being done?
Preconditions
How often is the task performed:

Task 3

What is the task being done?
Preconditions
How often is the task performed

Task 4

What is the task being done?
Preconditions
How often is the task performed:

Task 5

What is the task being done?
Preconditions
How often is the task performed

User Analysis

Eric Reuland (2010 MIT Graduate):

From Eric we got the idea of the request system and allowing the host to decline guests. Eric also opened our eyes to the different priorities party goers have and how we can group them to match people with parties that are most inline with their interests.

Caine Jette (2010 MIT Graduate):

Caine really emphasized having critical mass. This will definitely be important as we move forward and consider launch strategies. It helped us to shift our initial user base from 22-30 year olds to college students.

Sam Markson (MIT Senior):

Sam was really passionate and encouraging about our idea. He showed us that our solution might be more suited for certain smaller communities, like East Campus.

Focus group consisting of 6 undergates:

This larger group meeting emphasized the commonly felt desire to interact with new people. Everyone in the group agreed that interacting with new people is more thrilling even if it occasionally is a let down. This group was strongly opposed to the ranking system. Moving forward we will definitely have to stay open minded and be willing to rid of it all together.