Try Out Poncho And You Will Never Want To Open Another Weather App Again

Poncho
Poncho

Business Insider / Jillian D'Onfro

The Poncho team. See them without masks below!

It’s not yet 5 a.m. on a misty morning in late April and Kuan Huang has shaken himself out of sleep to squint into the cool light of his computer screen as he frantically checks the weather forecast for the day.

It’s too early for New York City’s morning commuters to rouse themselves out of their own warm beds, but when they do, they might get a forecast-infused text message from Huang. But the text message won’t actually come from Huang: It will come from a little orange cat wearing a yellow rain slicker.

It will come from Poncho.

A new weather service launched out of startup factory Betaworks, Poncho lets subscribers skip the chronological list of temperatures they’d find on weather.com or a smartphone weather app. Instead of a slew of highs, lows, and percentages, they can sign up to receive a text message or email with actionable advice about the day’s forecast.

Bring an umbrella. Put on that extra layer. Keep the sweater-to-scarf ratio strong.

With Poncho—Huang’s weather app with the cute cat logo—he knows that more data isn’t always a good thing, and that, for many people, simple, personal, and timely advice trumps the detailed forecasts of any weather website out there.

Huang wants to perfect his delivery process, because after all, weather dictates a huge chunk of our lives: what we wear, our plans, the small-talk that we have in the elevator, and so on. By automating updates and giving people an easy way to know what to expect and how to prepare before they’re caught out in a blustery day without a jacket, Poncho makes our relationship with the daily forecast much more seamless.

The Beginning

Betaworks, Poncho’s parent company, is hard to define. To keep with our weather theme, it’s like a big umbrella: it’s one entity, but it oversees a lot of different smaller (and not so small) companies. It buys, spins-off, starts, and runs startups.

Kuan Huang joined Betaworks from Hatch Labs (where dating app Tinder was born) back in January as part of its inaugural Hackers in Residence program. Despite its newness, the Hackers in Residence program has already spawned hits like the addicting iPhone game Dots and GIF database Giphy.

When six bright, young builders first joined the program in January, they each had several weeks to brainstorm ideas. Huang’s first few flopped with Paul Murphy, the Senior Vice President of product at Betaworks who oversees and offers advice for the Hackers In Residence program. To inspire Huang, Murphy made a suggestion: Betaworks is interested in the weather space.