It’s fairly common for large companies to have internal ideation sessions – there’s a form that employees can fill out with their product ideas, nothing really happens for a while, and then you might receive a T shirt or something for your efforts. But AirBnb CEO Brian Chesky took things a notch up this year – he turned to social media to decide his company’s product roadmap.
It started with a simple enough tweet.
If @Airbnb could launch anything in 2017, what would it be?
— Brian Chesky (@bchesky) December 26, 2016
Chesky isn’t exactly a Twitter celeb – he has 147k followers, and doesn’t even tweet all that often. But this tweet, in which the CEO of a multibillion dollar company was asking users for product ideas, took off. Ideas soon started pouring in.
Some were obvious, and even easy to implement.
@bchesky @Airbnb A feature that tells you if the hosted place has a private bathroom, unfortunately none of this info does so accurately ? pic.twitter.com/8EVawPg12s
— Moaaz Sidat (@moaazsidat) December 26, 2016
@bchesky @Airbnb A super simple/minimal 'day of arrival' notification with directions, checkin door codes/key location. That's it.
— Simon Dempsey (@simondempsey) December 26, 2016
There were even ideas that would help AirBnb increase monetization opportunities.
@bchesky @Airbnb product trial suites: toiletries etc. Small fee for renter, shared w/ host + affiliate if ordered direct.
— David Walker (@walkerdavide) December 26, 2016
Some were surprising. A suggestion to accept payment via bitcoin received 200 retweets, indicating its popularity. It was an insight that folks at AirBnb had missed, and Chesky said that “didn’t expect as much interest as this has gotten on this thread.” But it was invaluable, direct user feedback all the same.
@bchesky Payment via bitcoin. Would fit nicely with the @Airbnb mission, IMO. "Belong anywhere"… via the currency of anywhere.
— Stephen Cole (@sthenc) December 26, 2016
Chesky helped things along by responding to nearly every response that came his way, either with a thanks, or asking follow up questions. And it being the internet, Chesky got his share of trolls, but handled them expertly.
@vral working on that… no joke
— Brian Chesky (@bchesky) December 26, 2016
By the end of the first day, 300 people had chimed in with their suggestions.
I've gotten over 300 ideas from this question. https://t.co/DbrBSTDlCl
— Brian Chesky (@bchesky) December 26, 2016
A days later, the number had reached 1000.
1,000 ideas have been submitted. I was expecting 10. I think I'm now hosting a Twitter Radio show. https://t.co/DbrBSTDlCl
— Brian Chesky (@bchesky) December 26, 2016
And by the end of the second day, the simple question had gone viral, and Chesky had received over 1700 responses. The AirBnb CEO had received dozens of workable product suggestions that could be implemented into his product. In addition to listening to large product teams who’d have pored over data and charts, he had the ear of his end users, and got to hear their concerns and ideas. one on one. And it was all for free.
We have 1,700 submissions. Now the fun part. 2017 will be a crazy year… https://t.co/DbrBSTlKdL
— Brian Chesky (@bchesky) December 27, 2016
CEOs traditionally needed to be leaders, understand numbers and business, and build great products. The CEOs of the future might also need a new skill – social media savvy.