Social Networking/Online Community class projects – Spring 2009

The second installment of our new Freshman Seminar class, “Social Networking and Online Community”, wrapped up this week.  Check out these great projects from our first-year business majors:

San FREEcisco

A user-generated collection of free things to do in the city, targeting primarily San Francisco’s 72,000 students at 23 colleges and universities.  Users will be able to express interest in events, invite others, and comment on events, while friends can subscribe to events and pictures flagged by their social network.  Advertising and merchandise are the main revenue sources for this low-cost business idea.

Resume 2.0

A facebook application for uploading resumes and finding internships for college students.  Despite facebook being the hub for college student interaction, there is no serious competition for this application yet.  Resume 2.0 will offer templates and automatic upload of existing resumes, along with a possibility for instant video interviews.  Revenue will come from premium services and advertising.

San Francisco Volunteer Network

An online community focused on volunteer opportunities for San Francisco high school students required to perform community service.  No other destination is focused on making high school community service opportunities easy to find, and helping students and organizations track volunteer hours.  Users will be able to see which volunteer opportunities their friends are participating in.

YouMix

Like at popular Asian sites such as SongTaste and K8, users will be able to make their own karaoke mixes, upload vocals from their computers, and comment on other users’ mixes.  Revenue will come from ads, and a paid iPhone application.

Congrats to Peggy Takahashi and the entire Freshman Launch Program team for creating an outstanding first year business major experience from scratch.  Given the quality of work we’ve seen from the students, we now know we can do a lot more with them during their entire four years at the McLaren College of Business.

cc-by-nc-saThe Syllabus and Readings for the Social Networking and Online Communities seminar are available under open content licenses, so take a look and grab anything that might be useful.  Again, the idea was to provide an introduction to business that examined both ‘traditional’ and ‘digital’ business.  Last semester’s experience was written up in this previous post.