THE BRIDGE

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Moe the World: Add fun anime flavor to your mobile photos

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As we head into the weekend, here’s a fun photo app from Higher Bridge Inc. called ‘Moe the World’. I’m not going to try to accurately explain what the Japanese term ‘moe’ means (Wikipedia does a better job than I would), but rather I encourage you to try out this photo decoration app, which in a nutshell enables virtual cosplay. The application, which initially launched back in December, received a new update this month with more manga eyes and wigs to add to the existing decorative elements. So if you’re in the mood for adding some fun to your cherry blossom party photos this season, do check out Moe the World over on the App Store.

moe-the-world

As we head into the weekend, here’s a fun photo app from Higher Bridge Inc. called ‘Moe the World’. I’m not going to try to accurately explain what the Japanese term ‘moe’ means (Wikipedia does a better job than I would), but rather I encourage you to try out this photo decoration app, which in a nutshell enables virtual cosplay.

The application, which initially launched back in December, received a new update this month with more manga eyes and wigs to add to the existing decorative elements. So if you’re in the mood for adding some fun to your cherry blossom party photos this season, do check out Moe the World over on the App Store.

Fashion coordination app ‘Wear’ hits number 1 on Japanese App Store thanks to new commercials

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Start Today, the company behind Japanese fashion commerce site Zozotown, began running television commercials for its fashion coordination app Wear (wear.jp) back on March 19th. And as we have so frequently seen here in Japan, that investment has – at least momentarily – paid off, as Wear has held the top overall iOS app position for the majority of this week. The Android version of Wear has also moved up the rankings significantly, reaching fourth position in the lifestyle category. The Wear commercials feature famous model Emi Suzuki (above), and if you’d like to check them out, you can find them all here.

emi suzuki

Start Today, the company behind Japanese fashion commerce site Zozotown, began running television commercials for its fashion coordination app Wear (wear.jp) back on March 19th. And as we have so frequently seen here in Japan, that investment has – at least momentarily – paid off, as Wear has held the top overall iOS app position for the majority of this week. The Android version of Wear has also moved up the rankings significantly, reaching fourth position in the lifestyle category.

The Wear commercials feature famous model Emi Suzuki (above), and if you’d like to check them out, you can find them all here.

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Wear on iOS
Wear on Android
Wear on Android

Japan’s bookmark-driven news app ‘Presso’ launches, but fails to impress

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Last week I mentioned that Japanese internet company Hatena would be launching a mobile news app based around its Hatena Bookmarks service. Yesterday that app, dubbed Presso, was made available on the App Store, so I decided to take it for a spin. For those not familiar with Hatena Bookmarks, or ‘Hatebu’, the service began way back in 2005, offering the same sort of social bookmarking as Delicious (2003) but for the Japanese market. As I mentioned last week, the company has built a useful ‘hot entry’ portal based on most frequently bookmarked media from users, and this new mobile app brings that same valuable content on to mobile. What’s useful about Presso is that the available news categories are rather robust and customizable. So for example, if I’m interested in news about ‘mobile apps’, ‘business’, and ‘cameras and photography’, I can simply select those to create a very personalized news service for myself. There are more diverse topics included as well, such as ‘Government/Economics’, ‘Manga/Anima’ [1], ‘Lifehacks’, ‘Travel’, and ‘Blogs/Journals’ (see below). You can even add your own tags on your own, which is perhaps the most useful function. As I expected, Hatena’s new app puts more focus on…

presso

Last week I mentioned that Japanese internet company Hatena would be launching a mobile news app based around its Hatena Bookmarks service. Yesterday that app, dubbed Presso, was made available on the App Store, so I decided to take it for a spin.

For those not familiar with Hatena Bookmarks, or ‘Hatebu’, the service began way back in 2005, offering the same sort of social bookmarking as Delicious (2003) but for the Japanese market. As I mentioned last week, the company has built a useful ‘hot entry’ portal based on most frequently bookmarked media from users, and this new mobile app brings that same valuable content on to mobile.

What’s useful about Presso is that the available news categories are rather robust and customizable. So for example, if I’m interested in news about ‘mobile apps’, ‘business’, and ‘cameras and photography’, I can simply select those to create a very personalized news service for myself. There are more diverse topics included as well, such as ‘Government/Economics’, ‘Manga/Anima’ [1], ‘Lifehacks’, ‘Travel’, and ‘Blogs/Journals’ (see below). You can even add your own tags on your own, which is perhaps the most useful function.

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As I expected, Hatena’s new app puts more focus on photos as most modern news applications do. And I while I really like the way you can swipe right or left to go to the next news category, Presso occasionally feels slow when loading those categories. I had hoped that Presso would apply its the same minimalist reformatting on article pages that we find in apps like Instapaper and Pocket, but it doesn’t – which I think is a mistake. Similarly, I think they’ve wasted an opportunity in the video category by not pulling in videos for consumption within Presso.

One interesting feature is the optional four push notification times (8am, 12pm, 6pm, and 11pm, as you can see above), which are ostensibly intended to coincide with the times that Japanese users read news most. But overall I think Presso doesn’t bring anything to the news app space that we haven’t seen before. However, because you can bookmark articles to Hatena Bookmarks as you read them, that will feed much needed activity back into its bookmarks service, perhaps winning back many Hatena users that the company may have lost as smartphone popularity has grown.

So in this sense, I think Hatena has built this app more with its own interests in mind instead of those of its users. This might have been an exciting app two or three years ago, but in the age of startup news challengers like Gunosy and SmartNews here in Japan, I think local consumers expect a little more.

Despite the downslide of the leading social bookmarking service Delicious, online bookmarking has enjoyed something of a resurgence recently through the very geeky Pinboard. That is essentially a clone of what Delicious was when it was good, now serving a rather niche market by charging an initial one-time sign-up fee of $10, and optional caching service for $25 per year.

It would be interesting to see Hatena explore that kind of business model, but I have a feeling they never will. Nevertheless, for hardcore Hatebu fans out there, Presso is a welcome present.


  1. Perhaps a good resource for Japanese learners interested in manga.  ↩

Sensei Note: Japan’s new social network for teachers

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See the original article in Japanese Sensei Note, a new social network service for teachers, has officially launched in Japan. The service was originally started as an online market place for teaching materials, but it has since evolved into a closed social service for teachers. Its users are restricted to just teachers or to people who want to be a teacher. Sensei Note took over a year to launch its official website. We heard from CEO and co-founder Haruki Asatani about what took so long. I’ve visited teachers throughout Japan to speak with them face-to-face. I sometimes even stayed at their homes. I wanted to have a deep understanding about their needs, and even things not really related to their work. In the end, I realized that the problems they face cannot always be solved by sharing file-based content. And I became convinced that a community where teachers gather and share their knowledge is much more valuable than just a content sharing platform. The most common image of knowledge sharing in a teacher community is that it’s passed down by experienced teachers to new ones through word of mouth. But on Sensei Note, it is also possible for young teachers…

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See the original article in Japanese

Sensei Note, a new social network service for teachers, has officially launched in Japan. The service was originally started as an online market place for teaching materials, but it has since evolved into a closed social service for teachers. Its users are restricted to just teachers or to people who want to be a teacher.

Sensei Note took over a year to launch its official website. We heard from CEO and co-founder Haruki Asatani about what took so long.

haruki-asatani
Haruki Asatani

I’ve visited teachers throughout Japan to speak with them face-to-face. I sometimes even stayed at their homes. I wanted to have a deep understanding about their needs, and even things not really related to their work.

In the end, I realized that the problems they face cannot always be solved by sharing file-based content. And I became convinced that a community where teachers gather and share their knowledge is much more valuable than just a content sharing platform.

The most common image of knowledge sharing in a teacher community is that it’s passed down by experienced teachers to new ones through word of mouth. But on Sensei Note, it is also possible for young teachers to share their knowledge with experienced ones. The relationship among users is very horizontal.

The service could potentially have a viral effect, if teachers recommend it to other their peers when gathered in a school’s teacher lounge for example.

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Sensei Note bulletin board

Monetizing a community

Asatani is passionate about improving the educational environment. His previous work experience at Bennese Corporation (a Japanese educational service company) and his own personal experiences have resulted in a strong interest in educational issues. He believes it is essential to build a teacher community first, and the revenue can come later. But the most important thing is to initially create solid and thriving community.

We are trying to tie up with local NPOs, many of whom have contacts with local teachers. So when we explain the concept of Sensei Note to NPOs, they happily refer teachers to us. We also approached universities so that aspiring teacher can use our platform as well. 130 universities are telling their students about Sensei Note. The service is free, so they have no reason not to recommend it to students.

If the service is free, then how do they plan to monetize it? Asatani has an idea.

There are actually many companies that want to approach teachers, students, and their parents, many of them offering information services or selling educational materials. Most of them operate through agencies, and have no channel to directly approach teachers. But Sensei Note could them reach teachers directly by letting them provide educational content on site.

For example, one company provides videos on career development for students on Sensei Note. One such video has been watched by 400 students by teachers. The content itself is free, but companies can benefit by gaining more recognition among teachers and students.

Sensei Note wants to solve other issues faced by schools and teachers, not just using its own marketing budget but also via government funding or corporate social responsibility programs.

Advice from a friend

Asatani first announced Sensei Note a year and a half ago at a Startup Weekend Tokyo event. While I wasn’t at the event myself, I recall hearing that he left Benesse right after winning the event in order to focus on Sensei Note. It struck me at the time that he has remarkable passion for his vision. About a year passed since then his team has been focusing on developing the service without external funding during that time. Nakatani elaborated on his motivation:

After I quit Benesse, I had an opportunity to go for drinks with a friend from my university. He had become a teacher, and he talked about his passion for why he had done so. Many new teachers have concerns, but they all have to manage their classes alone. I felt that I should support them, and that feeling really pushed me to build Sensei Note.

Now that Sensei Note has finally launched, I hope the team can come closer to their vision, and find fundraising opportunities in the near future.

Mirama: An interactive virtual experience, but it comes at a price

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Wearable Tech Japan 2014 was largely devoid of startups (with the exception of Moff) in the main exhibition area. But on the corporate side, there was one interesting project from Japan’s Brilliant Service Corporation that was getting some attention from visitors. The company’s Mirama product is – in its current form – a rather heavy head-mounted display that lets you make gestures in front of your face to control the see-through onscreen interface in front of your eyes. You can perform a number gestures, including thumbs up for ok, thumbs down for cancel, and even frame a picture with your fingers to snap off a picture. The interface also lets you push on screen buttons, do handwriting with your fingers (my handwriting was pretty awful), and even send and receive email using an onscreen menu. The prototype is available for sale from the company’s website, and there’s also a SDK provided for those who would like to hack it further. Prototype packages do not come cheap however, ranging in price from 3 million yen (almost $30,000) to 200,000 yen for a Mirama sensor kit. I had a chance to try out the Mirama glasses, and it was a really fun…

mirama

Wearable Tech Japan 2014 was largely devoid of startups (with the exception of Moff) in the main exhibition area. But on the corporate side, there was one interesting project from Japan’s Brilliant Service Corporation that was getting some attention from visitors.

The company’s Mirama product is – in its current form – a rather heavy head-mounted display that lets you make gestures in front of your face to control the see-through onscreen interface in front of your eyes. You can perform a number gestures, including thumbs up for ok, thumbs down for cancel, and even frame a picture with your fingers to snap off a picture.

The interface also lets you push on screen buttons, do handwriting with your fingers (my handwriting was pretty awful), and even send and receive email using an onscreen menu.

The prototype is available for sale from the company’s website, and there’s also a SDK provided for those who would like to hack it further. Prototype packages do not come cheap however, ranging in price from 3 million yen (almost $30,000) to 200,000 yen for a Mirama sensor kit.

I had a chance to try out the Mirama glasses, and it was a really fun experience. The weight of the device nearly broke my nose, but it was still pretty interesting. If you’d like to preview what happens on the Mirama screen, check out the demo video below.

‘Hi’ emerges from beta, billed as full stack writing platform

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We previously featured the beautifully designed writing/moment sharing platform Hi, taking it for a test drive last July during its private beta period. Just by chance I happened to visit the site yesterday only to be met with a brief server error. Today I know why, as the service is back online, now available for everyone. While Hi is an interesting and useful service, observing its beta period has really taught me the value of beautifully designed content. The typography and layout of articles on Hi are so good, that even you just added Lorem Ipsen text and a picture of your butt, it would probably still look incredible [1]. I suspect people want to write there because it’s a container that enhances their writing instead of just containing it. The beta period has also nurtured Hi’s community features, which have been improved leading up to launch. Having said all this, I confess that I’ve not written anything on Hi for a while. I still prefer to own my content myself, in a way that works for me. But all the same, I do have some regrets that my stuff is still not as pretty as Hi. I encourage you…

hi

We previously featured the beautifully designed writing/moment sharing platform Hi, taking it for a test drive last July during its private beta period. Just by chance I happened to visit the site yesterday only to be met with a brief server error. Today I know why, as the service is back online, now available for everyone.

While Hi is an interesting and useful service, observing its beta period has really taught me the value of beautifully designed content. The typography and layout of articles on Hi are so good, that even you just added Lorem Ipsen text and a picture of your butt, it would probably still look incredible [1]. I suspect people want to write there because it’s a container that enhances their writing instead of just containing it. The beta period has also nurtured Hi’s community features, which have been improved leading up to launch.

Having said all this, I confess that I’ve not written anything on Hi for a while. I still prefer to own my content myself, in a way that works for me. But all the same, I do have some regrets that my stuff is still not as pretty as Hi.

I encourage you to read co-founder Craig Mod’s typically epic welcome post, which gives an overview of the service far more eloquent than anything I could pen here. So go read it.

I started perusing it in Pocket, but then I realized what I was doing and happily opened it in Safari instead.


  1. I have not tested this hypothesis yet.  ↩

Apple in the pink for Japan’s cherry blossom season

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Here in Japan, the annual cherry blossom season is upon us, as cherry trees have already started to flower in the nation’s more southern regions, with Tokyo expected to be blooming this weekend or early next week. Interestingly, Japan’s hanami (cherry blossom viewing) season has an almost holiday like status, and even Apple is in agreement, with a featured section in the App Store for hanami-related apps and media. The recommended apps include some obvious choices like ‘Cherry Blossoms – Best 100 in Japan’ and the somewhat pricey Sakura reference book app. But other recommendations like the Pizza Hut app certainly won’t go unappreciated by the many park-goers in Japan once they down a few beers. This featured section of the Japanese App Store is an interesting addition by Apple. Off the top of my head, I can’t think of any other naturally occurring phenomenon that has received such status from the Cupertino company. This is a good example of how a company should be aware of local customs and traditions here in Japan. The local mobile market can be a tough nut to crack, but anticipating user needs during seasonal times or holidays is one way that a company…

hanami-apple

Here in Japan, the annual cherry blossom season is upon us, as cherry trees have already started to flower in the nation’s more southern regions, with Tokyo expected to be blooming this weekend or early next week. Interestingly, Japan’s hanami (cherry blossom viewing) season has an almost holiday like status, and even Apple is in agreement, with a featured section in the App Store for hanami-related apps and media.

The recommended apps include some obvious choices like ‘Cherry Blossoms – Best 100 in Japan’ and the somewhat pricey Sakura reference book app. But other recommendations like the Pizza Hut app certainly won’t go unappreciated by the many park-goers in Japan once they down a few beers.

This featured section of the Japanese App Store is an interesting addition by Apple. Off the top of my head, I can’t think of any other naturally occurring phenomenon that has received such status from the Cupertino company.

This is a good example of how a company should be aware of local customs and traditions here in Japan. The local mobile market can be a tough nut to crack, but anticipating user needs during seasonal times or holidays is one way that a company like Apple can connect with consumers.

If you’re searching for some popular hanami spots in Tokyo, here are a few recommended ones over on The Japan Times, as well as extensive lists of spots from WalkerPlus and the Tokyo Metropolitan Park Association.

Kayac releases mobile listening training app for English students in Japan

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Japanese digital creative studio Kayac has just released an interesting mobile app to help English learners in Japan. It’s called Canary, and it’s intended to be a listening training app to be used for just a minute or two each day. Users will receive a video message from English speaking teachers [1], along with a text transcript. Given Japan’s preference for all things cute, the English speakers are (for the time being) female college students and models. Male speakers will be added soon. As for monetization, the app features a ‘berry’ virtual currency, which you can use to see more movies. The currency can be bought, or obtained by inviting friends or logging in regularly. Canary is available for both iOS and Google Play if you’d like to try it out. Similar to the English study platform Rare Job, teachers are based in the Philippines.  ↩

canary

Japanese digital creative studio Kayac has just released an interesting mobile app to help English learners in Japan. It’s called Canary, and it’s intended to be a listening training app to be used for just a minute or two each day. Users will receive a video message from English speaking teachers [1], along with a text transcript. Given Japan’s preference for all things cute, the English speakers are (for the time being) female college students and models. Male speakers will be added soon.

As for monetization, the app features a ‘berry’ virtual currency, which you can use to see more movies. The currency can be bought, or obtained by inviting friends or logging in regularly.

Canary is available for both iOS and Google Play if you’d like to try it out.


  1. Similar to the English study platform Rare Job, teachers are based in the Philippines.  ↩

In conversation with Whill, the Japanese personal mobility startup on a roll in Silicon Valley

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Based on the original article, written in Japanese Whill is a Japanese startup developing next-generation personal mobility vehicles. Currently they’re based in Silicon Valley having been selected by 500 Startups to participate in its incubation program. Kiyo Kobayashi recently spoke with CEO Satoshi Sugie for us to learn more about their product and its launch. Kobayashi: Can you give me a brief introduction about Whill. Sugie: We are developing next-gen personal mobility. Our mission is to make mobility fun and smart for everyone. Kobayashi: You are based here in San Francisco now. What is the advantage of having the office here? Sugie: We have more users here. The market here is nearly eight times bigger than the Japanese market. We thought we would eventually have to expand in the US even if we had started in Japan. But then we thought it would be better to start in the US from the beginning, as we were getting more inquiries from American users. So this was a natural decision. And there are many more early adopters and gadget enthusiasts here. It could be a good idea to export our products from the US to Japan. Kobayashi: What is the most challenging…

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Based on the original article, written in Japanese

Whill is a Japanese startup developing next-generation personal mobility vehicles. Currently they’re based in Silicon Valley having been selected by 500 Startups to participate in its incubation program. Kiyo Kobayashi recently spoke with CEO Satoshi Sugie for us to learn more about their product and its launch.

Kobayashi: Can you give me a brief introduction about Whill.

Sugie: We are developing next-gen personal mobility. Our mission is to make mobility fun and smart for everyone.

Kobayashi: You are based here in San Francisco now. What is the advantage of having the office here?

Sugie: We have more users here. The market here is nearly eight times bigger than the Japanese market. We thought we would eventually have to expand in the US even if we had started in Japan. But then we thought it would be better to start in the US from the beginning, as we were getting more inquiries from American users. So this was a natural decision. And there are many more early adopters and gadget enthusiasts here. It could be a good idea to export our products from the US to Japan.

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Kobayashi: What is the most challenging part of running your business here?

Sugie: Um… English.

Kobayashi: I am struggling with that as well.

Sugie: This is something very basic, but it was hard to launch an office here. I had no idea and it would be such a huge challenge for me. But fortunately, we could join 500 Startups, and we were referred to lawyers and banks.

Kobayashi: My understanding is that 500 Startups has many B2B startups, but not many hardware markers. As a hardware maker, did you benefit a lot by joining 500 Startups?

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Sugie: Maybe not so much. (laughs) But 500 Startups has an amazing network. As Japanese guys who came all the way to North America, people usually wonder, who are those guys? But 500 Startups turned us into something, giving us huge credability. We pitched to investors on DemoDay, and because they knew we are in 500 Startups, the chance they would meet with us increases a lot. […] Investors take it as an indicator that a startup’s business is beyond a certain level.

Kobayashi: I heard patent issues are quite tough.

Sugie: We put our first priority on patent-related matters. Our CTO Muneaki Fukuoka has experience handling patent issues at Olympus in the past. So along with him and the international patent office, I work on these matters. We pay a lot of attention to the safety level of the product too. There is an international standard, which we have passed, in order to make our products reliable, safe, and durable.

Japanese engineering still has a high reputation for durability and high quality, and people have such a positive image of Japanese products. We created promotion video, and one American even told us to put the caption ‘Japanese engineering’ in it. I cannot think of any better advantage than that.

Kobayashi: Very interesting.

Sugie: It would be nice to produce locally for local consumption. And the best combination is made-in-USA and Japanese engineering. That’s what I heard.

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Kobayashi: According to your AngelList page, about 20 angels have funded your company, is that right?

Sugie: The ratio is 50% Japanese, 40% American, and 10% Taiwanese. We decided to accept those who have a strong network here or have strength in manufacturing.

Kobayashi: Investors are from 500 Startups network?

Sugie: I heard they looked for hardware startups from the portfolios of 500 Startups, Y-Combinator, and such.

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Kobayashi: Were there any services which were particularly helpful when launching your business?

Sugie: AngelList helped a lot. Not only in terms of fundraising, but also for hiring as well. We have five or six applications for internships every week.

Kobayashi: What skill sets do you see the most in those applicants?

Sugie: Those who want to launch a startup. And Stanford students.

Kobayashi: I remember you said you want to work with someone who has a specific vision rather than someone who is interested in money.

Sugie: Vision and skills are important. We ask for resumes and cover letters from the applicants. On cover letters, applicants write about the reason why they want to work for us.

Some people copy and paste things for their cover letter. Some letters don’t even have the Whill name on it. We screen them, and set Skype interviews for selected people.

For example, one of our team members, Chris, told us at the beginning that he had been thinking for a long time why wheelchair design was not so appealing. His father used a wheelchair and had many difficultires. I learned from him that wheelchairs can even have an influence over the users’ families.

Yet, we don’t hire right away. We let them work with us, like helping us at exhibitions and such. We spend a few months before making the final hiring decision.

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Kobayashi: I see.

Sugie: Another member, Julia, is the fourth Whill customer. She experienced an accident and started using a wheelchair, and gives us comments from the perspective of a real user.

These members have passion and actively share their ideas. We look for the type of members who can share the same mission and help establish good culture in our small team.

Kobayashi: Who are your target users?

Sugie: Our initial target users are those who are somehow self-conscious. Stylish people. We assume, our initial users are those who have a lot of interests in society or politics and who are working with people without a handicap. Or perhaps they are relatively well-off people who are thinking of buying a nice wheelchair for their kids or parents.

We want to get these early adopters and hopefully spread their influence to other users by making the product more public. When it can be more recognized by the masses in this way, we can move on to the next step and could reduce the production cost and the price.

Kobayashi: Very interesting.

Sugie: Well, we’ll keep working on through trial and error. Honestly, we had no idea how things would work out. We’ve interviewed about 300 potential users. Eventually, we had a long talk with five people who showed big interest in buying the 1.5 million yen ($15,000) product and signed the contract.

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Kobayashi: Hearing too much feedback sometimes makes it difficult to find features to focus on.

Sugie: I went to a lot of meetups, even ones that were not quite related to our business. I go to work and to meetings with Whill. You don’t know when and where you will find opportunities, it could be even on the street. I do everything I can think of.

Kobayashi: I think it is important to try every single idea. We work with that motto too.

Sugie: That’s something a lot of people advise, but you really have to put everything on the line.

Kobayashi: I agree. “Lean startup“ sounds cool, but it really requires a lot of work.

Sugie: That’s why each member needs to be passionate about the mission. I’ve seen a lot of teams who fall apart, even within 500 Startups. Skills and background experience are very important, but first and foremost, you cannot join a startup without having strong passion.

Kobayashi: How do you find out if a person has that passion?

Sugie: I let all our members meet the applicant. And unless we all think that person has something, we don’t hire him or her. It is especially difficult to understand the person when they are not Japanese.

If there are 100 applicants, 100 of them will say “My past experiences are the best fit for Whill’s business” or “I am the best fit for Whill!“ (laugh) So I got a lot of advice regarding hiring from among people spread across various fields.

Kobayashi: I think that is a very important aspect. Thank you for your time today!

About the interviewer

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KiyoKobayashi

Kiyo launched his own business exporting food in 2004 while he was a university student, and succeeded in building new sales channels. In 2005, he founded In The Cup, a coffee e-commerce site. In 2009 he founded Nobot, and that company was subsequently acquired by KDDI in 2011. In December 2013, he founded Chanoma in the US. He is also a advisor for several VCs and startups, including The Bridge.

Japanese fashion commerce site Zozotown begins same day delivery service

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Start Today, the Japanese company that operates internet fashion commerce site Zozotown, announced today that it will be able to handle same-day deliveries for items ordered before 9am in the greater Tokyo area, with deliveries arriving that evening. Orders between 9am and 9pm will come on the following morning, and orders after 9pm will arrive the following evening. On a related note, the company’s new fashion coordination app, Wear (wear.jp), which recently surpassed a million downloads, has unveiled a series of fun commercials this past week. You can check them out in their entirety over on the Wear YouTube channel. Here’s one of them below:

Start Today, the Japanese company that operates internet fashion commerce site Zozotown, announced today that it will be able to handle same-day deliveries for items ordered before 9am in the greater Tokyo area, with deliveries arriving that evening. Orders between 9am and 9pm will come on the following morning, and orders after 9pm will arrive the following evening.

On a related note, the company’s new fashion coordination app, Wear (wear.jp), which recently surpassed a million downloads, has unveiled a series of fun commercials this past week. You can check them out in their entirety over on the Wear YouTube channel. Here’s one of them below: