# Q2 Brainstorm — Hatchet & Loop Studio **Date:** 2026-04-15 **Present:** Mira, Devon, Sofia, Theo Annual Q2 ideation. We're hunting for our next side-project-that-could-become-a-product. Format: 10 minutes wild ideas, 3 minutes per idea on quick takes, then we vote on one to dig into. ## Round 1: Everything goes (10 minutes, no filtering. We just throw stuff out.) - A weather app that tracks your mood alongside the forecast (Devon) - Meditation chime that learns your sleep cycle and chimes only at the right wake-window (Theo) - A podcasting tool for non-podcasters — like, you record voice notes and it auto-edits and posts (Sofia) - Craft beer subscription with detailed brewer notes you can read while drinking (Mira) - AI sommelier app that tells you what wine to buy at Trader Joe's based on a photo (Theo) - Office-plant-care subscription with auto-replacement when one dies (Devon) - Neighborhood ride coordinator — like a private Uber pool for one neighborhood (Mira) - Neighborhood compost coordinator — connect people with food scraps to people with active compost piles (Sofia) - Cookbook app where you click "I'll cook this Tuesday" and it auto-generates the shopping list and sends it to your delivery service (Devon) - AR home staging — point your phone at a room and it shows you what it would look like with different furniture (Theo) ## Round 2: Quick takes ### Weather + mood Devon: "I'd use it." Sofia thinks the data correlation isn't strong enough to be useful — interesting concept but the science doesn't support a product. Park. ### Sleep-cycle meditation chime Theo's pitch — exists already (Sleep Cycle, etc.). Differentiation would be the chime, which is hardware. Out of scope for a software-first studio. ### Podcasting for non-podcasters Sofia: "There are like fifty of these." She's right. Skip. ### Craft beer subscription Mira admits this is mostly her wanting it for herself. We're not in the logistics business. Skip. ### AI sommelier Theo: "The model would have to be incredibly good at label recognition." Sofia: "And there's already Vivino." Skip. ### Office-plant-care subscription Devon: "I worked at a place that had this. They were always sad plants." Operational nightmare, low margin. Skip. ### Neighborhood ride coordinator Mira: "Saturated. Lyft and Uber both have pool features. Uber Neighborhood was a thing and they killed it." Skip. ### Neighborhood compost coordinator Sofia: "Hear me out. Cities are mandating organic waste separation but most apartments don't have a composting option. People in single-family homes often have active compost piles and would love more material. There's a missing match-making layer." General agreement this is more interesting than the others. Theo: "How do we make money?" Sofia: "Eventually a small fee on the compost-pile-host side, but for MVP just free and prove the demand." Group lights up. We agree to dig into this in Round 3. ### Cookbook → shopping list Devon's pitch. Already exists (Mealime, Plan to Eat). Skip. ### AR home staging Theo: "IKEA already has this." Skip. ## Round 3: Compost coordinator deep dive We spent 45 minutes on this. Notes: **Who is the user?** Two-sided market. Side A: apartment dwellers and renters who generate food scraps and want them composted (motivated by environmental values, sometimes by city mandates). Side B: people with active backyard compost piles who want more "browns and greens" — single-family homeowners, urban farmers, school gardens, community gardens. Sofia thinks Side A is the harder side to acquire (weak intent — recycling-adjacent behavior). Side B is easier but smaller. The product has to be designed around Side A's friction points. **Geographic scope.** Hyperlocal — neighborhood-level, not city-wide. The whole point is short-distance handoff: Side A doesn't want to drive their food scraps across town. We're talking 5-block radius matches. **Business model (later).** Free at launch. Eventually: subscription for Side B (compost-pile hosts) — they pay to access more matches. Side A always free. Possibly partner with cities that have green-waste mandates (B2G channel). **Technical approach.** Web app first, mobile second. Map-based discovery. Identity verification light-touch (apartment dwellers are skittish about strangers; need trust signals). Match-and-message pattern, not real-time logistics. **Competition.** ShareWaste exists but is global and not focused on hyperlocal density. Some city-specific apps (NYC's GrowNYC). No one has cracked the neighborhood-density model. **MVP scope.** One pilot neighborhood. Sofia knows people in a Portland neighborhood (Sunnyside / Hawthorne area) where compost culture is strong. Start there. **Open questions.** - How do we acquire Side A (apartment dwellers)? They have low intent and lots of competing options (just throwing scraps in trash, paying a service, signing up for city pickup if available). - What does the trust layer look like? Reviews? Vouching? Real-name only? - Does Side B saturation become a problem fast (one compost pile can only take so much)? How do we route demand? ## Action items - Sofia: write up the compost coordinator concept as a brief by next Wednesday. Take it to Mira and Devon for first read. - Devon: research ShareWaste's user numbers and any teardowns of why they haven't dominated. - Theo: sketch the trust-layer UX concepts. - Mira: talk to Sofia's Portland contacts about doing user interviews. Next meeting: 2026-04-29 — review brief draft, decide on go/no-go.