Thanks for the feedback, we want the site/app to have an exclusivity feel to it, hence no landing page, but a description of what the site is about is underway
I get the appeal of that. I wonder though if it make sense for a website built on collaboration to be exclusive? Not that those things are mutually exclusive, but it's similar to the right click to steal issue. If people want to steal something they will, so it's not worth sacrificing the user experience here (probably); similarly, if the exclusive feel prevents people from signing up there will be less collaboration.
I guess it partly comes down to what is meant by collaboration. Is it writing together? Is it just feedback like comments or Genius style annotations? I really like the idea of either. These questions and others the users had here could be answered on the landing page. If you guys are interested in more feedback as you progress feel free to hit me up!
Perhaps showing people an example of the community before signing up might help? I was going to refer some writer friends over, but they're not the sort of folks who just give away emails without knowing what it's for. Perhaps that's who you're going after?
Upon signing up I immediately received several email notifications for default occurrences (a friend request from the creator, a private message from the creator, invitation to a group) - this isn't a great user experience, most people don't like getting email notifications en mass like this, especially for a thing they just signed up for to try out.
Also when I went to settings to try to turn off email notifications, all but one set of the radio buttons to toggle them were missing.
As a poet I would love to see a non-spammy poetry based social site take off. Best of luck getting there.
A literature network is an online community for artist of all kinds (poets, authors, published writers, journalists, educators, etc.) to share and collaborate their work/pieces with other registered members.