You suppose your app must be intuitive for college students. But is it? The surest way to find out is to hire market researchers who are students themselves. Have them hit the campuses, show the apps to their fellow young men and women, and get honest feedback.
Thats the premise behind Campus Insights, a startup Riley Soward 18 founded as a freshman in the Boston College Carroll School of Management. And big companies like Airbnb, Venmo, and GoFundMe agree with that premiseall are Campus Insights clients. Now, as Soward winds down his final year on the Heights, hes turning over the reins of his creation to the largest student-run company in the world: Harvard Student Agencies (HSA) acquired Campus Insights this month.
The sale was announced on February 13, prompting articles in such outlets as the (details about the terms were not disclosed). According to Soward, the deal preserves the companys business model and ensures that clients will continue to get the kind of user experience data theyve been paying forreal talk from the kids.
We started Campus Insights because we knew high school students, college students, and recent grads would be most comfortable and candid when being interviewed by a researcher in their age group, said Soward, a computer science student who launched the company in 2014 with his brother Stephen Soward, then a junior at the University of Michigan. (The brothers grew up in Silicon Valley.) The idea hatched in a conversation Riley Soward had with a fellow Eagle, Patrick Allen, Morrissey 13, and took its first steps on the Boston College Quad, with Soward videotaping his classmates reactions to various products.
Since then, the company has grown into an emerging leader in market research on Generation Z and Millennials, with a half-dozen employeesincluding two from the Carroll School class of 2018, Ameet Kallarackal and Kelsey Bishopconducting interviews and focus groups across the country and interpreting the results for companies small and large. Clients range from the abovementioned behemoths of short-term home rentals (Airbnb), online payments (Venmo), and fundraising (GoFundMe) to Chegg, a college textbook rental company, to Paktor, the most popular dating app in Asia.
In a sense, Campus Insights has flown the coop with its acquisition by HSA, which oversees sixteen agencies, employing Harvard students as tutors, bartenders, dry cleanersto cite a few of its businessesand, now, market researchers. As before, these students will fan out across campuses nationwide, often virtually (via remote interviews), to reach a representative sample for each survey. (They will not be simply walking around Harvard Yard with a video camera.)
While Soward is seeking a new startup to join, he and his brother are staying on at Campus Insights in active advisory roles. A lot of that will be helping on the sales side and reviewing research deliverables to make sure theyre high quality, said Riley Soward. And a small piece will be helping build Campus Insights into our long-term vision, which is a long-lasting community. One day, Soward hopes, a Campus Insights stint on a resume will serve as a stamp of approval, something people can bond over.
Asked about the part Boston College played in Campus Insights origin story, Soward ticked off the connections. First client: referred by a 勛圖厙 alum. Second client: referred by a 勛圖厙 student. Third client: referred by a 勛圖厙 professor. And then we had enough under our belt to grow. But weve consistently benefited from 勛圖厙 and the 勛圖厙 startup community. Close friends and mentors, or people I go to to bounce ideas off of, are other 勛圖厙 students working on startups, who I met through the Shea Centerthe Edmund H. Shea Jr. Center for Entrepreneurship.
Not to mention, Soward and colleagues carved out some de facto office space by squatting after hours in a classroom in Carney Hall, where they worked on research projects, he said. Ameet and I spent a lot of late nights in Carney.
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