Klybourne Functionality Description
About
o In several quick bullet points, tell us a little about you, what you’re passionate about, your goals, ambitions and what’s important to you.
Create
o Post anything you’re proud of or want to share, whether it falls under a
personal interest, an athletic achievement, an academic accomplishment, an award, a resume, a charitable contribution or just a thought you wanted
to share.
Interests
o What interests do you have? What activities outside of school, sports or
work do you enjoy and want to share?
Charitable
o Do you donate your time to help others and spread goodwill to your
Community?
Academic
o What academic accomplishments have you achieved? Honor roll, deans
list, competitive awards, test scores, or learning new skills?
Athletics
o What athletic accomplishments have you achieved? No matter if it’s your high school football state championship, your first marathon, a swim meet, or an Ironman triathlon, sport knows no age nor boundary, and we should all be proud to share those athletic achievements.
Portfolio
o What awards, essays, degrees, certificates or other accolades do you
want to share?
Text (Replacing ‘Text’ with ‘Thoughts’)
o Any thoughts you want to share?
Feed
o The latest updates from my connections and the posts getting the most
Views.
Trending
o Which posts are getting the most views
Recent
See what are the most recent posts in your feed
Following
o Posts from your followers only
Near Me
o Posts in your geographical vicinity
Filter
o Filter what you see based on different categories.
Chat
o Since there’s no commenting on individual posts, KB still wants you to be
able to communicate with your connections.
Capsule
This is your history, your resume, your personal portfolio, your time capsule. The capsule looks to capture the moments and achievements that make you proud and those you want to share with the people that matter most.
Refer and Vouch
Klybourne’s version of the reference that we see on so many resumes, but allows for another level of connecting others. If you refer someone, then you now vouch for them. For example, Rachel and her company are looking for a new developer, so Paul refers Justin, a talented developer, to Rachel. Now Paul has vouched for Justin. Not only has Paul connected Justin with Rachel, but he’s also volunteered to vouch for Justin, were Rachel to reach out.