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Business & Tech

Locals Turned "No" into a New Company to Help Others

Rejection is tough. This new website allows people with product ideas to put their prototypes in front of consumers.

Last week we told you about the six-month long AOL incubator First Floor Labs (FFL). Now meet Swish.com, a member of their current graduating class. 

The company launched two months ago. It lets any creator submit a product for a 30-day pre-order campaign, so that sellers don’t feel like they’re throwing money away on a pipe dream. Those visiting the site vote for orders, signaling that a product is great, moving it up the list of orders. Users won’t be charged until their items are ready for shipping.

This has been quite the week for company founders Brad Stronger and Lolanthe Chronis, who met at MIT. On Tuesday, they had their demo day for Y Combinator – another incubator they are part of – in order to attract investors.

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They also worked to keep their website up when a surge of users went to swish for free copies of Microsoft's Windows 8 Pro and Parallels Desktop.

The entrepreuners dreamed up swish after a product they invented, a key chain pill holder, was rejected from Kickstarter, a site to raise capital, without explanation. They began recruiting sellers from trade shows and their personal Bay Area and MIT networks.

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“Kickstarter is not optimized for pre-orders,” said Chronis, who studied electrical engineering at MIT and used to work for Kayak.com. “We do the listings and the fulfillment. Kickstarter didn’t want to be the place for hardware products.”

How do the two feel about FFL and their imminent departure? 

“Incubators really light a fire under you,” said Stronger, who was a mechanical engineering major at MIT. “There are pros and cons to leaving [FFL]. It’s like graduating from college--you can’t hang out with your friends anymore.”

“It was a little loud, so it will be nice to have an isolated room to work in, but at the same time you can’t listen in on conversations of the companies.”

They pride themselves on selling items that aren’t already on the market. Current top pre-orders on the site include:

-       24,000 pre-orders: Thalmic Myo — an armband that lets you use the electrical activity in your muscles to wirelessly control your computer, phone and other digital technologies

-       6,934: Thermodo — the tiny thermometer

-       6,214: The 10-Year Hoodie — a premium sweatshirt designed for a lifetime

Next week, the company will leave Palo Alto for a new office space in Mountain View. They plan on hiring after their fundraising concludes.

More business stories on Palo Alto Patch:

Ex-Googler Starts Site for Part-time Job Seekers

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