Sidekick (YC S20) is a new device that lets teammates work side by side during set coworking sessions. Teams at Coinbase, Brex, and Eventbrite use Sidekick to build strong team relationships while remote.
@rrhoover Thanks for the feedback!
From interviewing teams that tried the hacked together Zoom on an iPad solution, it's really hard to consistently get the team in the room. Users are constantly leaving the room for external meetings and it's unclear when anyone's going to come back. Very quickly, the solution becomes useless because nobody's in the room and it's unclear when anyone will join.
Sidekick productizes this culture of joining and staying in the room. Unlike Zoom on a tablet, it treats "always-on" as a first-class problem to solve. Some examples of product decisions we've made are:
* Push notifications to minimize being alone in the room - when someone joins as the first person in the room, we send a notification to the rest of the team. We want to get other teammates in the room ASAP because the room is only useful with more than one person.
* Meeting mode - when you have a normal Zoom meeting with someone outside of your team, you can mark yourself as "in a meeting". This silences the mic and speakers on Sidekick while also setting a status informing your team that you're in a meeting. We're also releasing Google Calendar integration soon, allowing Sidekick to automatically mark itself as "in a meeting"
On average our users are in their Sidekick rooms for 6 hours a day. They turn it on first thing when they sit down in the morning and leave it on throughout all their meetings during the day.
@rrhoover The details have made a big difference. We tried using iPads and such and it didn't stick -- hard to set up, surprisingly; wrong UI for the persistently-on use case, video consistency was hard with drops, etc. And now... this just works.
I'm an early tester of this product -- and will be the first to admit that I was pretty skeptical, both about always-on video as well as the need for a dedicated device. I'm a believer now, here's why:
- As a founder in a fully remote team, I need to stay constantly connected to my co-founder. Organic, easy information flow is a huge need in remote work. I can see if my co-founder is intensely focused and can drop in to ask questions or float new ideas if he's not.
- The sensation of actually working alongside someone in peripheral vision has actually made me *more* productive - like having a study buddy.
- Having touchpoints like waving to someone when you get to work, seeing what they're grabbing for lunch, etc. sound sort of ridiculous, but having that social foundation back really brings back the sense that you're working *with* someone and you're not just an isolated worker bee.
I'm an advocate of every product that makes pandemic work life better. ;) Really excited to see where they go with this!
Seems like this could be the missing link in remote work for some people. Having this on a second screen vs a Zoom call makes sense, as it's out of the way.
It will be interesting to see how people will use this.
My cofounder and I have been using Sidekick for the past couple weeks and we're enjoying it more and more. Being remote affects different teams in different ways but as a small team, who are in constant written (Slack) communication with each other Sidekick helps us share ideas better and solve problems faster.
@mykro Yes. They've found a way to charge $600 for a $200 Samsung Tablet by using some hyped up language to suggest that they're doing something innovate.
That's putting aside the fact that this is such an egregious breach of privacy the NSA would be proud.
You're basically creating a tool for the kind of micro managers no one wants to work for.
We have used Sidekick for our remote team all day, everyday for months. It's an easy way to feel a sense of presence, connectedness, and camaraderie with our team.
Just ordered recently, can't wait to try out. Deeply believe in in-person communication , but there were unwanted costs to in-person work before the pandemic (the commute, co-location in hiring, terrible music at your co-working spot). I can see how a single-purpose rigid device is best way to be more like physical space, especially the "it just works" factor
I've been working remote with my teammates since COVID-19 starting, and we're either juggling endless zoom and hangout links just to cover basic questions, or were isolated from one another in a way that isn't what made working on our company fun in the first place. Instead, we've been experimenting with using always-on video services in the browser, but having my team hidden in a tab doesn't feel the same. I want the ability to say hi more spontaneously, and to feel like we're working together like we used to.
I haven't actually tried using Sidekick yet (waiting for mine to arrive shortly!) but excited to try it out and looking forward to feeling like we're in the same room again!
@danielamoitinho Thanks for sharing! We built Sidekick for tight-knit teams that need to be working in the same room, but it's definitely not for everyone. Our initial users actually love being able to spontaneously talk with their cofounders.
I've been working remotely with my team for several months now and the biggest annoyance I've experienced is frantically trying to find the Facebook Messenger tab when a coworker calls me. I always end up having dozens of tabs. Having a dedicated device for this definitely seems like a no-brainer. What's the audio quality like? It would great if there was some kind of directional mic to block out background noise without needing a headset.
@mohamed_abedelmalik glad the idea resonates. We've done a lot of work on the software side to suppress background noise using RNNs while keeping human voices in the foreground - some of our early users work in noisy NYC apartment buildings and they've told us that almost none of it gets through to their teammates.
Sidekick is by far the easiest and fastest way to get a hold of someone - just tap and chat! We use it to easily communicate between us (the founders) and it really helps us feel like we're "together" even in a remote world! :)
Love it! ๐
As someone working on a remote team, this really makes sense. We generally work together on our own stuff while keeping messenger or zoom on - but this slows down my computer and takes up one of my monitors. Honestly, this sounds like a great solution.
Hi PH! We are Andy, Howard, Greg and Arthur, founders of Sidekick!
Like many of you all, we were recently forced to start working remotely because of COVID. We quickly realized that starting a company while remote was brutal:
- ๐ง No spontaneous brainstorming - All of the best features we ever built were born out of unplanned conversations at our desks.
- ๐ฃ Increased miscommunication - Being able to quickly ask teammates clarification questions is key to making sure everything is staying on track.
- ๐ญ Lack of team culture - True connections are forged in random 1-off conversations, not during scheduled meetings.
We use Sidekick every day because it's the closest thing to sitting in the same room. Sidekick is a video device that sits on each of your team members desks. On Sidekick, you schedule coworking sessions to simulate working side by side for a few hours a week.
๐ค Who's it for?
Sidekick is great for remote cofounders and other fast-paced teams that care about building a strong team bond. We're working with 20 Y Combinator companies along with teams at Bloomberg and Spotify.
We understand that Sidekick isn't for everyone! If you don't particularly want to talk to your team during the day, Sidekick probably isn't a great fit.
Until August 1st new teams get a discounted price of $25/user/month (normally it's $50/user/month). The hardware comes for free with the subscription and we cover the shipping.
We'd love to hear your feedback. If you have any thoughts or questions, please email me at andy@realismlabs.com.
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