Aaron got an email today from Mike. You can check out Mike here.
Mike has a photography studio he’s co-opting with other photographers and wanted an online system.
Here’s an edited of Mike’s emails:
Hey Divvy Team
I was writing because I’ve spent the entire day poking around delicious, google, twitter, etc looking for time and space management tools. I think I’ve created about 14 different account on sites today that didn’t end up fitting what I was looking for.
I *finally* found Divvy and flipped out cause it’s exactly what I needed. I have a photography studio space that I’m co-opting and we wanted to allow other photographers in town to use it, if they needed more professional lights, or backdrops, so on… so Divvy looks like *the* best tool for this. Nothing else I’ve found has come even close.
I’m sold! I’m so excited about this site.
Anyway, I’m going to keep experimenting with the site. Cause, like I said, nothing else has even come close. Keep up the great work! The site is really, really useful. Thanks!
- mike
Mike suggested we add in Facebook connect as well as a clickable calendar.
We love customers like Mike. They love what we offer, they might run into a problem or two but figure it out and they give us great suggestions.
This afternoon I ran out to pick up a prescription and some groceries at Trader Joe’s and on my way home, I saw a woman at the bus stop hitchhiking. I flipped a bitch (aka, a u-turn) and picked her up because she was close to my mom’s age and I couldn’t stand the thought of some creepy guy picking her up instead. So she got in the car with relatively un-creepy me and we had a great conversation.
She was a stylist at Gene Juarez for 15 years, she just performed 16 hours of community service instead of paying a fine for not having a pet license for her cat, she plays her music too loud in her apartment, she’s had liposuction several times, and she just sold her car (a Mercedes SLK) and thought she could get by with the bus. She said for the most part she can, but a few days a month she needs to rent a car. She said she’d rather rely on her community of friends and people she knows, though, instead of paying a company.
So THAT interesting conversation happened (I love picking up hitchhikers. You hear the most interesting things about their life. I imagine it’s like what taxi drivers hear all day.) and then I got back to my email and Aaron and our friends at Scoville PR sent this article from the Washington Post.
My favorite part of the article:
“You can’t change the economy. You can’t change the recession. Maybe you can get a better job, but that won’t be instantaneous. What do you do?” she said. “Sharing is one of the things that first of all makes you feel better about yourself. . . . We’re moving into ‘How can we establish these kinds of personal connections, this helping others, sharing, being a bit more neighborly?’ “
Have you found yourself helping out your neighbors, friends and even strangers more these days? If you have any good stories, email me or hit me up on twitter. jenny@divvy.com or iloveshoes or doyoudivvy on Twitter.
When I first heard about cohousing I assumed it was for weirdos- like people who wore clothing made of hemp, wanted to live in a commune, and were ‘one’ with nature. Or I assumed they were like retirement communities.
I was wrong.
First, there’s tons of cohousing communities across the country from Brooklyn to the islands off of Washington state. Typically these communities have 20-40 residences and the residents eat many meals together, take care of common resources, and have an emphasis on sustainability. From the cohousing.org site:
Cohousing communities are old-fashioned neighborhoods created with a little ingenuity. They bring together the value of private homes with the benefits of more sustainable living. That means common facilities and good connections with neighbors. All in all, they stand as innovative answers to today’s environmental and social problems.
In a cohousing community, you know who lives six houses down because you eat common meals with them, decide how to allocate homeowners dues and gratefully accept a ride from them when your car’s in the shop. You begin to trust them enough to leave your 4-year-old with them. You listen to what they have to say, even if you don’t agree with them at first, and you sense that you, too, are being heard.
I discovered there are 18 cohousing communities in Washington alone! I had no clue and one of them is right down the street from my house.
It’s one of those ideas that gives me the ‘warm-fuzzies’, ya know? I don’t know my neighbors and I live in a great neighborhood. If I needed help with something, I certainly wouldn’t go knocking on their doors and that’s kinda sad.
I started researching coworking spaces after Aaron mentioned them as being a great candidate for Divvy. These communities have to share common amenities (like the kitchen or common great room) and responsibilities (weeding the garden, fixing meals, watching kids, carpooling) and Divvy can help them schedule all of this.
So as I go about my work and check out these communities, I wanted to share the concept with you. If you live in a cohousing community, let me know. I’d like to learn more.
Aaron wrote a “2-pager” for Divvy over the weekend and also created this Wordle- pretty cool looking, huh? (Click to see the closeup. I couldn’t figure out how to get it into the blog in a larger size….so if I do, I’ll update.)
This has been out for a while, but it’s well worth it to watch it again from time to time.
At Divvy, we’re trying to change our patterns of consumption. Do we really need a new lawn mower? Another bike? A new car?
I like the whole Story of Stuff, but if you have to watch one chapter, watch this one on disposal of our stuff. This is where I think Divvy can have the largest impact- share your things instead of throwing them away, curtailing new purchases and also avoiding sending things to the dump where they can’t be useful to anyone else.
i haven’t blogged in awhile; i’ve been letting jenny take the lead on doing so. recent events, however, have motivated me to join the conversation.
first, the rant: among my most favorite meals is a filet of fish (extra sauce and extra cheese) with two milks and one apple pie. ONE apple pie. i mean ONE APPLE PIE. every single time, without fail, i get pushback from the fast food technician behind the counter. ‘but two apple pies are cheaper than one apple pie,’ they protest. ‘i don’t care. i want one’. ‘but two apple pies are cheaper than one apple pie,’ they repeat, astonished that i haven’t caught the clue. ‘i don’t care,’ i say again. ‘i only want one.’. ‘but…’. i actually have to argue. each and every time. each time that i think that i’ve prevailed with the order taker, i’m soon shocked (welll, less and less) to find that the person dispensing the food has placed TWO APPLE PIES on my try. it’s astounding to me that mcdonald’s is so hell bent on supersizing america that they price two apples pies cheaper than one. and, to boot, that they train their employees to push it. it’s freakonomics, and it’s time that someone blew the lid off of this one. i hope that i just did. stop the insanity.
next, the rave. at a cristalla board meeting last week, a homeowner complained that the carpets on the 17th floor were dirty. a conversation ensued during which it was ascertained that carpets are cleaned annually, under contract. this begged the question of how to handle stains in the interim. the board president suggested that the association acquire a steam cleaning vacuum cleaner and then, unsolicited, suggested that (and i quote), “we divvy it”.
My grandmother has way too much food in her house. She lives alone yet she has a fridge and pantry that look like they’re stocked for a houseful of teenage boys. Why? Because she grew up around the depression and didn’t have much so when she could stock her fridge, she did. And now food goes bad and she keeps buying more…but that’s how she was shaped by the depression.
My generation and younger are being shaped by this recession. Instead of the crazy spending I experienced a few years ago, we’re more moderate about our purchases. Where many of my friends used to scoff at the idea of a budget, we now all have one and are addicted to sites like Mint.com (which by the way, I was alerted I went over my gas, shopping, food, restaurant and personal care budgets this month…whoopsies.)
This is a great article on how our generation is being shaped by the recession and I believe Divvy will play an important role in shaping how we share assets and time.
Katy Perry is a lyrical genius and her song Hot and Cold or whatever it’s called sums up our day here in the Divvy office.
Aaron and I both felt like crap this morning- both tired; not “feeling” it. So after a great meeting with an insurance provider who might be able to help out with insurance for divvied cars (cross your fingers) we gorged ourselves at the Cheesecake Factory. Then we lamented on how fat we felt and how hot we thought the office was so we went to Home Depot and bought an air conditioner. We also went through the McDonalds drive through and (even after complaining about how chubby we felt) we bought McFlurries.
Now we’re back in the office, setting up our R2D2 looking air conditioner unit and watched our site go offline (now back online), hopefully avoiding bad food for the rest of the day and getting back to making magic happen at the Divvy HQ.
And on that note, I’ll leave you with one of our favorite SNL videos.
Aaron and I have some really fun routines during the week- one of them is “workout Wednesdays” where we hit up Xplore Fitness and workout with Tommy, my friend and trainer of 2 1/2 years. Tommy really works us over…I mean REALLY works us over. It’s not abnormal to want to vomit, pass out and/or cry during one of his workouts, but it’s worth it.
While we’re in the middle of the torture, we tell ourselves “pain is weakness leaving the body” and we need to “make it look good in the shower.” Both of these things are difficult- no one wants to deal with pain. No one wants to put the effort in to make your body look good in the shower.
But we do.
Really, it’s a great metaphor for working at a startup. We put a lot into it. It’s difficult. It hurts at times. We want to quit, pass out, cry, complain. But we endure because the results are worth it.
Since our relaunch of the site, we have seen some amazing people and companies join Divvy to divvy out things like….
Their Pilates class at the YMCA
Their family sailboat
Their dating coach services
Their employee schedules
Their summer camps
Their hair styling services
Their inflatable artwork displays
It’s pretty cool and really rewarding! We still have a lot left to do, but it’s nice to see some results for the work we’ve put in.
If you’re using Divvy and want to tell us what you think, email us at jenny@ or aaron@ divvy.com.
We just rolled a new version of divvy, with all sorts of little tweaks and bug fixes throughout the site to make for what we hope is a better user experience. Check it out. Let us know what you think.
this last week, the folks at shareable posted an article on developments in peer-to-peer car sharing. read it here. it’s exciting to see companies like relayrides and spring ventures work on reducing the transaction costs of sharing. on the question of transformation through sharing: it’s not a question of ‘if’ but ‘when’. […]
wouldn’t it be great to buy a parking space with a few friends and then share it? you could create your own rock-star parking space anywhere one is for sale and then use divvy to deconflict use between friends. it’s like timeshare parking. parking spaces are resources that could use more efficient scheduling. www.parkatmyhouse.com is [...]
sharing is gaining momentum. sunil paul of brightmail fame is working on a peer-to-peer car sharing system to be initially launched in the bay area, and www.relayrides.com recently announced they’ll be launching in baltimore. it’s validating to see some activity in peer-to-peer rental markets. neal gorenflo, publisher of shareable.net is one of s […]
Just released new code. We spent a lot of time simplifying the UI while expanding the robustness of our quota and discount engines. That, combined with improvements to custom roles, means you can create just about any pricing scheme you can think of. Kick the tires. I’d love to hear what you think. Look for [...]
evan and i stayed up late again (evan a bit later than me – he’s on vacation in new york) to roll out divvy’s latest round of features and tweaks. the main addition this time is a quota generator – lets you establish all sorts of time- and reservation-based quotas for different users and roles. [...]
mike mathieu, founder of walkscore.com, just sent me a link to a video, produced by the congress for the new urbanism, which reveals what the greatest threat to the planet is. curious? check it out! it struck me that as our architects and city planners work on more walkable, liveable, sustainable community designs, there will [...]
We recently launched DivvyCar.com and are excited about it! So what is divvy car? Let me explain. Basically, Zipcar rocks for regular people who need a vehicle occasionally. But Zipcar kinda sucks for formal, closed communities. (I’m not crapping on Zipcar. I’m probably going to be a Zipcar customer in the next month so I’m [...]
I enjoyed this post from Urban Observations on our desire to create community. Just wanted to share! http://urbanobservations.com/2009/05/14/building-community/
We are constantly adding new features and we just released a bunch of new ones that I’m sure you’ll love! (I know I do.) We now have an advanced reservation builder for time-based and resource items. You can book multiple reservations for multiple items, all at once. For example, a church is using this to [...]