2. Who: The app is for people of any age who may have any
allergies
What: When someone finds a piece of food and is unsure
whether or not they are allergic to it
When: Any time
Where: Any where
Why: They might be unsure of whether they are allergic or
not to it
3. People who encounter this situation of not being able to
tell whether they are allergic to the food or not could get
really ill if they eat it and find out it had food they are allergic
to in.
5. The scanner provided within the app will calculate the ingredients and
therefore will see if or if not you are allergic causing the user to not
take the risk
6. Mini Elevator Pitch
My team, CSS, is developing an Allergy App
to help people who are allergic to foods find out whether or not
there is a food they are allergic to in their food using a scanner
7. Many of the users we interviewed about this app said it
was a really good idea whoever many of them said they were
not allergic to anything so it wouldn't be useful to them but if
they did have allergies it would be very useful
8. When we searched for competing apps in the market we found that
there was none
9. The apps core feature is the scanner because without this
the problem would not be solved also the user information
we will need for this app to run is where they live (but this is
optional) and what foods they are allergic to.
What is the background situation you are addressing? Describe the context users are experiencing.Example: BuzzerBuddiez: Who? Students What? Students are studying for exams When? 7am Where? Student dorm Why? Late night cramming, student likely to oversleep
What specific problem do people encounter in that situation? Use the results from your user researchExamples: BuzzerBuddiez: your alarm does not work and you are thus late for: school, work, exams, doctor etc Transit: Many parents don’t speak English and their children have to translate the feedback that a teacher provides. When the feedback is negative students mistranslate. Oyster on the Go: You don’t remember how much money you have left on your pay-as-you-go Oyster card and run out of credit when you urgently need to get on a train Cattle Manager: You need to run backwards and forwards between the office and your cows, taking notes on paper and wasting time or loosing notes
What core question are you addressing with the app? Examples: BuzzerBuddiez: how can you avoid oversleeping? Transit: how can negative teacher feedback be translated accurately? Oyster on the Go: how can you be more aware of how much credit you still have on your Oyster card? Cattle Manager: how can you keep track of injections for your cows while you are out and about looking after them?
To introduce the judges to your team and the product, include your final min elevator pitch here.Example: - Buzzer Buddiez: Our team, [Buzzer Buddiez], is developing [a mobile app] to help [students] [who have studied late and are likely to oversleep because they hit snooze on their alarm clock] [to wake up on time with the help from friends and family]
Summarise what other solutions or alternatives you have found that already exist in the market and explain why they don’t fully solve the problem you are looking at or why your proposed solution is better.
Show here what your MVP will look like in terms of flow and if/ how you have already integrated any user feedback.
Show here what your MVP will look like in terms of the key wireframes of your app’score feature.
Show here what your MVP will look like in terms of the key wireframes of your app’score feature.
Show here what your MVP will look like in terms of the key wireframes of your app’score feature.
Summarise what you have learnt about data, content and technical feasibility. This is crucial, if your product relies heavily on any of these areas. If your product does not rely on them heavily, please explain why. This will show that your team has really understood feasibility well.