Not being sexist, but they seem to -want- more than us, and walking into any shopping area seems to confirm that vendors know this. My problem is that from a tech standpoint, it's hard to gauge what a viable need for them is.
I was on a first date the other week and was explaining some of my ideas and the lady I was with nearly wet herself with excitement telling me about a webapp she'd love to have. After thinking about it and asking a few other women I know, I'm going to start working on it and apply to YC with it.
Most every idea I came up with seems like someone else has already done. This one... I spent two days searching and found nothing comparable.
honestly I don't know why you got 5 points since you didn't mention anything about your app besides that your date "almost wet herself"; and I'm willing to bet that there are 5 other teams with the same idea.
In grad school I consulted for a company making CAD software for clothing designers. They said that 60% of the clothing business is women's clothing, and the other 40% shared between men and children.
That other 40%, if shared equally between men and children, means that approximately 80% of the purchasing decisions are made by women. I am basing this on the chauvinist assumption that women pick out and buy the majority of clothes for the kids. If this article is correct, that 80% holds for a lot more than clothes: http://www.clickz.com/3363331
If it is 60/40 by quantity, I bet it is more like 75/25 by cost. But you do say "60% of clothing business". So I guess the cost was already taken into account.
Most of my other ideas (other than my current Virtualmin, Inc. business) were targeted to women. One a sort of niche-focused social network, one a video/photo dating site, and one a porn site (oh, wait...that one would have mainly attracted men, I guess...but everybody in the valley has a backup pr0n plan...it's what you talk about after a couple of beers..almost nobody is really serious about it, me included).
Here's mine. You ever play Erotic Photo Hunt? It's a game on those touchscreen video kiosks in bars. Each round, you're shown two almost-identical pictures of a scantily-clad girl. You've got a minute to find the 5 subtle differences in the two photos. (It's embarrassingly addictive -- for both men and women alike.)
Build a web-based version of that. After every round, the player is given two options... "play the next round" or "see more pictures of this girl." The latter is a paid link. Weekend hack => goldmine.
Hey, thanks! Why am I not doing it? Um, all I can come up with is, "I'm working on other projects... that are more complex... and less of a sure thing." =P
Anyways, if you're inspired, go nuts. Lemme know if you want any help building it. Also lemme know if you want to hear the rest of the idea. (I think Phase 2 could get you one or two patents, and Phase 3 could disintermediate some dirty old men.)
Uh, is it weird that I've put so much thought into this?
Well, damn it, now I'm curious. I'll ask: What was this (now decade old) plan?
I've worked on some adult stuff in the past. I have no issues with it but I won't be doing anything in it again. Mostly because it's such a relatively small and boring subset of the world.
I'll leave the story for pg to tell, should he ever opt to do so.
I will say that it involved clever abuse of search engines to generate traffic for obscure fetishes (all of them). It might not work today.
Then again, now that I think of it, see http://xkcd.com/305/ for a pretty good summary of half of pg's Plan for Pr0n (the other half shall be left as an exercise for the reader).
Trevor and Rtm and I noticed that there seemed to be fetishists for just about every fetish you could imagine, and many you'd never think of. We hypothesized that there was no possible fetish so odd that there wasn't at least one person out there who would be turned on by it. So we thought we'd randomly generate thousands of pages about different fetishes, and see how many hits they each got from search engines.
It wasn't a backup plan though, just an idea for a practical joke like Trevor's Information Supercollider.
Well, I think that a webapp should be suited for anyone unless it was created for a specific group of people.
About women...
I'm a man, and as any man should know, It's almost impossible to understand a woman, so asking a lot of women about your new project sounds like a good Idea to me.
So what you are saying is that you are having a hard time understanding women's needs? ;-)
Since you asked, our company is in stealth mode on a product geared specifically for women (not a shopping, dating/rating, community or gossip site).. each demographic has their special needs, we're attempting to address those needs..
I do agree that a web app should be built for anyone. We are building in flexibility, for example, for the significant other of a female to gain value from the app as well..
According to what statistic? If you mean population count that's not very significant. There's more males under 65 than females in the US/UK. I'd also bet men use the internet disproportionately more.
Most every idea I came up with seems like someone else has already done. This one... I spent two days searching and found nothing comparable.