New party-goers every 15 minutes: How KC-designed Mixaba could put humanity back into happy hour
June 20, 2020 | Austin Barnes
Andrew Carlson is the first to admit he isn’t the most vocal person at a party — but even he knew 30 people trying to talk over each other at a virtual happy hour isn’t the solution to socially distant socializing.
“Right now everybody’s staring at each other behind the screen A one-on-one conversation is fairly human, but as soon as you introduce 10 more people and you’re all in the same room, it reduces the humanity quite a bit,” Carlson, entrepreneur and technical architect at VMLY&R, said of the genesis for his latest creation — Mixaba.
“The idea is small groups that you don’t talk over. Little groups of people that you can actually make a meaningful connection with,” he explained of the free video conferencing platform that randomly assigns members of a chat to smaller breakout rooms every 15 minutes
Click here to use Mixaba for your next virtual hangout.
Developed almost overnight — the result of a virtual happy hour hangover — Carlson believes the platform could humanize a variety of virtual interactions as they become a mainstay of modern culture, he said.
“I started playing around with ideas of how to bring back some of the feel of an in-person social event to a remote-first event and kept circling around this idea of ‘collisions,’ or serendipitous encounters,” Carslon explained.
“Tony Hseih of Zappos talks a lot about these encounters, but basically these encounters with other people draw out new ideas and connections that otherwise wouldn’t be possible.”
From speed dating to design thinking sprints, Mixaba aims to bring such collisions back to connecting with no physical proximity required, Carlson said.
“There have been a bunch of ideas that I had never even considered … that people have brought up and I’m really excited about that,” he said, noting he went into development of Mixaba — which is now in the open Alpha phase — with a fairly narrow user case in mind.
“For me personally, I’m very bad at social events and about sticking with the same group of people. … I’ll pretty much stay within my comfort zone and that’s a weakness of mine. But what this helps me with personally, is that exposure to new people,” he said.
“I think that oftentimes we take technology to the furthest extent and it dehumanizes the people who are behind the screens. Our intent is to bring back that human interaction.”
Interaction with consumers exploring Mixaba is another priority for Carlson as the product continues to develop.
“More than anything, I would love to see how people start using it,” he said. “I think there’s a lot to explore around making interactions online more human, and trustworthy. I’d love to see this become a go-to app that people use when they can’t be physically close to people but want to make remote parties and events more fun.”
Users are encouraged to share feedback using Mixaba’s live chat feature or with Carlson on social media.
Mixaba is Carlosn’s second entrepreneurial endeavor in a year. In 2019, he launched Paloma Post — a customizable greeting card startup — alongside friend Julie Korona.
Click here to read more about Paloma Post which is currently retooling.
This story is possible thanks to support from the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation, a private, nonpartisan foundation that works together with communities in education and entrepreneurship to create uncommon solutions and empower people to shape their futures and be successful.
For more information, visit www.kauffman.org and connect at www.twitter.com/kauffmanfdn and www.facebook.com/kauffmanfdn

2020 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Dreamgirl hits the start button at SXSW; why the KC band tells its peers to break out of the Midwest
Editor’s note: The following story is part of Startland News’ coverage of the SXSW conference in Austin. Click here to read more stories from the 2022 trip. AUSTIN — Dreamgirl describes itself as a family — a bit dysfunctional at times, but nonetheless family, members of the Kansas City-based band shared, laughing the morning before their…
Climate change innovation, leadership must be built at the local level, Buttigieg tells SXSW
Editor’s note: The following story is part of Startland News’ coverage of the SXSW conference in Austin. Click here to read more stories from the 2022 trip. AUSTIN — The keys to solving climate change could already be in the ignition, Pete Buttigieg said, empowering a crowd of innovation leaders to sit in the passenger…
Sit Foundry takes a stand for ‘lost art’ of upholstery amid fast furniture’s climate threat
Alex Krause Matlack is bringing what she teaches in the classroom to Kansas City’s entrepreneurial ecosystem as she pursues Sit Foundry — an all-inclusive reupholstery design studio. “In the first week of my Intro to Entrepreneurship class, I tell my students to go out into the world and take notice of the problems they face.…



