“What if I figured out a way to take Facebook from 2004
and bring it to 2016? What if every field in your profile was a full
video?” asks Facebook’s 19-year-old product prodigy Michael Sayman.
The answer is
Lifestage, a standalone iOS app
for people 21 and under, which Facebook is launching today. It asks for
your happy face, sad face, likes, dislikes, best friend, the way you
dance and more, but instead of filling in this biography quiz with text,
you shoot videos. Lifestage turns those clips you recorded into a video
profile others can watch.
While technically anyone can download Lifestage, anyone 22
or older will only be able to see their own profile. That’s because
it’s built for high-schoolers to learn more about their classmates. A
quick swipe lets you block and report people, too, in case anyone
sketchy tries to creep on the kids.
When you sign up, with no need for a Facebook account, you
select your high school, and will then see the video profiles from
people at your school or ones nearby. And for added virality, Lifestage
only shows you other people once 20 people from your school are using
it. That way, you nag your friends to join. In that way, it mimics the
way Facebook was originally launched — school by school — because social
apps are no fun if you don’t know anyone using them.
App Store Cinderella
Sayman isn’t another 30-year-old product manager from an elite
college. His parents from Peru and Bolivia raised him in Miami. There he
taught himself to code at age 13 with tutorials he found on Google. His
first product, a $1 app with tips for the Club Penguin game, earned
thousands of dollars. That money helped his family stay afloat during
the recession after their house was foreclosed upon. You can
read about his journey in Carmel DeAmicis’ profile of Sayman.
![Michael_Facebook[1][2]](https://tctechcrunch2011.files.wordpress.com/2016/08/michael_facebook12.png?w=320&h=297)
Michael Sayman, Facebook product manager and creator of Lifestage
His
big break came when he overheard his sister on the phone, sending
photos to a friend and trying to make her guess which word they
represented. That inspired Sayman to build 4Snaps, a photo-charades app.
Thanks to a revenue share partnership with marketer Instafluence,
4Snaps reached No. 1 on the word games chart, with a few million users.
By then the app was overloading the free tier of Parse, the
Facebook-owned mobile backend hosting service. Sayman negotiated a
massive discount that let him keep operating 4Snaps. But Mark Zuckerberg
ended up inviting Sayman to come visit Facebook, create a special
presentation for its F8 conference and eventually intern there.
He’s spent the last two years getting acquainted with the social
network and coming up with the idea for Lifestage. “I wanted to work on
an app that my demographic would relate to, or at least that my friends
would want to use.” Along with a team of three engineers and one design
contractor, Sayman is now ready to ship his brainchild.
Your life on a stage
To build Lifestage, Sayman tells me “I went back and looked at
Facebook from 2004. At the time I was in second grade.” Thanks for
making the rest of us feel old, kid. Back then, Facebook opened to your
own profile, not the News Feed. Lifestage works similarly. You’ll see a
bunch of bio questions you can answer with videos. The more you fill in,
the more questions are unlocked.
In the feed you’ll see people from your school who have recently
updated their profiles, which you can tap through to see specific
answers, or swipe through to skip to different sections. To instill some
gamification, people get ranked with higher levels if they’ve added
more to their profile. You’ll also see a sunglasses-smile emoji by
people who recently updated, while those who’ve let their profiles
languish will show a frown or even the poop emoji.

There’s
no way to contact people directly in Lifestage, since Sayman explains
“my friends and I have a bajillion messaging apps we already use and
love, so what’s the point of having another messaging app? It just seems
annoying to me.” Instead, each users gets a “Reach Me” line of text
that appears beneath their name, which could be used to show off their
Snapchat or Instagram handle, or another piece of contact info.
Lifestage could capture the attention of teens that Facebook fears
might slip away to Snapchat. When asked about Snapchat, Sayman said “I
think of it like really great competition. They’ve got a great product
and there’s a lot to learn…about how people have started to evolve the
video space.” That said, he does note that his Instagram Stories are
getting more than his posts on Snapchat.
The worry for Lifestage is that Facebook has a poor track record with
standalone apps, having shut down Poke, Slingshot, Paper and Notify.
Facebook clearly doesn’t see it derailing Snapchat, because Lifestage’s
promotional materials include Reach Me text like “Snapchat me.” Oh, and
Facebook launched it on a Friday afternoon, the least-read time for
blogs. It’s almost like it’s not supposed to succeed on its own.
Instead, Lifestage could teach Facebook how to improve its profiles
with video, as Mark Zuckerberg wants “video at the heart of all our apps
and services.” Facebook launched profile picture videos at F8, but they
don’t seem all that popular yet.
Lifestage takes an innovative stance. You could say your dog is your
favorite pet, you love Radiohead or that this is who you’re dating. But
with videos, those aren’t lines of generic text. They’re totally unique
videos that truly tell the story of who you are. That same idea could
make Facebook seem fresh, even if it’s almost as old as the kids
Lifestage was built for.
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