Stiki gives teams a central location to capture and structure crucial company info. That way new hires can go to Stiki, educate themselves and get up to speed faster. Stiki makes employee onboarding simple.
Hey, Tobi from Stiki here. Today, I want to show you Stiki!
I developed the initial version of Stiki earlier this year.
After years of running a design agency and working with startups, Stiki was created to solve my own frustrating problem.
See, every time we made a new hire, momentum stalled and focus wavered as we all (quite rightly) slowed down to get our new crew member settled in and ready to kick ass.
Internal communications were a patched together mess of email, Slack, Google drive, and that late night SMS (which usually contained ideas for some of our best work).
I knew we needed a process to streamline how we shared information and knowledge. A portal, where team members could not only go to get informed, but also to be inspired.
Stiki is now available to everyone.
- It's simple to use and intuitive
- It's Login with Slack so no extra user accounts/logins needed
- It works on every device so your team can access your company info from everywhere
For our launch we offer you a Stiki lifetime license for unlimited users for only $100.
Checkout www.thinkStiki.com to test the app up front. Let me know your thoughts and feedback!
@thetwopct It's still early for Stiki but the product is ready and fully useable. Now, instead of implementing the whole lifecycle of a subscription (trial, recurring payment, retention emails blablabla) we went for a fast launch and one time signup fee to make it also a sweat deal for our next bunch of users.
Soon, we will work on the subscription.
On that note it's also worth mentioning that I'm not a big fan of the classical per user/seat pricing.
Knowledge management is for the whole team. I don't want to put anyone into the situation to decide if the new intern is worth the extra bucks per month so she/he can access Stiki and benefit from the content that your team curated there.
That way, we have also Slack communities with > 1.000 users using Stiki. It's not only about "employee onboarding" but also "member onboarding". This would be impossible with a per seat pricing. And let's be honest.. nowadays.. scaling software costs shit. So why not letting the users benefit from it too?
@tbsthl yes! Makes perfect sense. Hadn’t thought of it that way. Certainly opens out the potential user base and is a great incentive for early users 👍
@thetwopct@tbsthl Love the idea of not making things per seat. Per seat is why my team(s) don't adopt and use new tools; it's just too expensive to get engaged and prove things out.
When you come from a traditional wiki system, you're used to six level deep nestings of folders, desperately trying to somehow organize your information. That leads to a lot of nearly-blank placeholder pages and makes you used to pages that contain little to none useful stuff. With a top-level-only approach and dynamic structures via tags my workflow became super flexible - to be honest: it wouldn't be such a great experience without the filter search, as you tend to have a lot of pages. But that's part of the app, so combined it works like a charm.
Pros:
It's simplicity and therefore the increased visibility of information - oh and the rad design.
Cons:
Completely keyboard-based authoring experience (more shortcuts, full markdown support)
Stiki
This is Broken
Stiki
This is Broken
When you come from a traditional wiki system, you're used to six level deep nestings of folders, desperately trying to somehow organize your information. That leads to a lot of nearly-blank placeholder pages and makes you used to pages that contain little to none useful stuff. With a top-level-only approach and dynamic structures via tags my workflow became super flexible - to be honest: it wouldn't be such a great experience without the filter search, as you tend to have a lot of pages. But that's part of the app, so combined it works like a charm.
Pros:It's simplicity and therefore the increased visibility of information - oh and the rad design.
Cons:Completely keyboard-based authoring experience (more shortcuts, full markdown support)