鈥楾is the season for never-ending Christmas parties, family get-togethers, and New Year鈥檚 Eve blowouts. And while you might be the Martha Stewart-type who sent out your hand-written invitations weeks ago, most people these days are using technology to create and manage their events.

The services typically used, however, are web- and email-based, not designed for today鈥檚 smartphone-driven world.

Enter Hobnob, a Honolulu-based tech startup that鈥檚 disrupting the party invitation and RSVP space with their eponymous service. It uses a combination of text messages and mobile websites to send invitations and gather both responses before the event and photos afterwards.

The service has been steadily gaining steam, and it could be the solution to your last-minute party-planning needs this holiday season.

The Hobnob team, from left, Jason Axelson, Mark Quezada, Tiffany Quezada, Tommy Hanks, Tina Fitch and George Lee. Courtesy of Hobnob

Hobnob, founded in mid-2014 by Tina Fitch and the husband-and-wife startup team of Tiffany and Mark Quezada, grew out of a combination of ideas that included photo sharing and event planning.

Fitch met the Quezadas a few years earlier, as she mentored them during their work on their first (now shuttered) startup Minded, which provided gift suggestions based on the recipient鈥檚 Facebook profile.

With Hobnob, the team set out to modernize party planning without requiring invitees to download an app or limiting the guest list to only those with iPhones. Their service lets you create and manage an entire event totally from your phone, with no laptop or design experience needed to craft and send out nicely-designed invitations.

Invitees can receive, read, and respond to invitations without ever downloading an app. That鈥檚 a huge advantage, helping Hobnob both rise above the Android-versus-iPhone debate and eliminating the need to impose an app download on your invited guests (not to mention the costs of developing native apps for different phones).

The approach seems to be working well, and it鈥檚 been enough for their team to have grown to six full-time employees.

鈥淲e鈥檙e seeing all kinds of events and all ages of people using Hobnob,鈥 said Mark Quezada. 鈥淚t鈥檚 incredibly surprising to see such a wide range, especially since we set out to target busy Moms.鈥

Hobnob鈥檚 invitation templates have a high-end look to them, showing the team鈥檚 obvious attention to design while letting users customize their invitations. It鈥檚 also allowed Hobnob to create stunning invitation themes for everything from birthdays and date nights to holidays.

Hobnob sends invitations to your guests via text message, allowing them to respond via text or by tapping on the event URL. Guests never need to download an app and can reply regardless of their phone’s operating system. Courtesy of Hobnob

鈥淲e started with Halloween designs a few months ago,鈥 said Tiffany Quezada. 鈥淭hen we added Thanksgiving designs, and now Christmas and New Year鈥檚 Eve. But we were careful not to pigeonhole the designs. So, for example, we have winter themes that would be as nice for a holiday party as for a ski trip.鈥

Once a host sends out the invitations via Hobnob, guests receive a text message with a link to a mobile website. Guests can then RSVP, add comments, get directions, and add the event to their calendar. No app required!

You might imagine this text-based service being used mainly by millennials and the younger set, as I did. Wrong.

鈥淲e have church groups using it and we have groups of metal-heads organizing concert trips,鈥 said Mark. 鈥淎nd we鈥檝e seen a lot of two-person events for date nights.鈥

Added Tiffany, 鈥淲e鈥檝e had people plan birthday parties for 1-year-olds and 100-year-olds! There have been weddings, funerals, graduation parties, you name it. We even had a cute invitation from a young girl inviting her parents to her bedtime.鈥

Speaking of cute kids, I asked the team not about working on a stressful, demanding startup together as husband and wife, but doing so while also adding a daughter to their family just a few months ago.

鈥淧arenting is pretty similar to running a startup,鈥 Tiffany explained. 鈥淏oth make you sleep deprived, both have their emotional highs and lows, and both look much more glamorous from the outside than the inside.鈥

Added Mark, emphatically yet with a hint of exhaustion, 鈥淏ut I wouldn鈥檛 recommend doing both at the same time!鈥

Hobnob has recently added the ability for attendees to text photos back to their service, allowing everyone to share their party photos. 鈥淭he event becomes a sort of container for the photos,鈥 Mark added.

Currently, only those with Hobnob鈥檚 iOS app can create invitations, but the duo said that Android and other versions should be out very soon. They also mentioned that they鈥檙e working on expanding their available invitation template designs and moving beyond sharing of just simple photos.

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About the Author

  • Jason Rushin
    Jason Rushin has nearly 20 years of experience in software marketing, consulting, and engineering, and currently works as a marketing consultant for high tech clients, both locally and in Silicon Valley. Prior to relocating to Hawaii in 2010, he led marketing at several Silicon Valley software startups. Once in Hawaii, he launched and subsequently sold his own startup, and has been an active supporter of Hawaii鈥檚 small-but-growing startup ecosystem. Jason holds a BS in Mechanical Engineering from University of Pittsburgh at Johnstown and an MBA from Carnegie Mellon University.