Inspiration

Aviato was born out of frustration.

I was actively searching for opportunities — jobs, collaborations, anything that could help me move forward. I had real skills and a solid portfolio, so I did what everyone is told to do: I reached out. I messaged recruiters, founders, and influencers who publicly said they were hiring on platforms like LinkedIn, Instagram, and Twitter.

Most of them never responded.

Some of these people receive hundreds of messages a day. Others barely check their inbox at all. But from the sender’s side, there’s no difference — your message just disappears. No feedback. No accountability. No signal that your time and effort mattered.

That experience made one thing clear: modern messaging is broken. It rewards silence, ignores effort, and offers no consequences for bad behavior. Aviato was created to fix that.

What it does

Aviato is a messaging platform built around accountability and boundaries.

Every conversation starts with a response timer. When that timer expires, the receiver’s behavior can be rated — whether they responded thoughtfully, ghosted, sent spam, or put in minimal effort. These ratings directly impact a user’s reputation and their ability to message others.

Instead of inbox chaos, Aviato gives users control through:

Community-driven reputation scores

Clear availability modes that signal when someone actually wants to be contacted

Consequences for ignoring or abusing communication

Aviato ensures that messages are earned, not ignored.

How we built it

We designed Aviato from the ground up with one principle in mind: your time has value.

We implemented:

A timed response system to create clear expectations

A community-powered rating model that reflects real behavior

A multi-layer reputation system (approval %, match %, review stars)

Six availability modes that let users control access without guilt

The product was iterated through constant feedback, focusing on simplicity, fairness, and user empowerment rather than engagement at all costs.

Challenges we ran into

The hardest challenge was balancing accountability without toxicity.

We had to ensure:

Ratings couldn’t be abused

Users weren’t punished unfairly

The system encouraged better behavior instead of harassment

Another challenge was shifting the mindset around messaging — helping users understand that not responding is still a choice, and choices should have consequences.

Accomplishments that we’re proud of

Turning a personal frustration into a scalable, community-driven solution

Designing a messaging system that prioritizes respect over volume

Creating availability modes that normalize saying “leave me alone” without explanation

Building a platform that protects job seekers, creators, and professionals from being ignored or exploited

What we learned

We learned that silence is not neutral.

Ignoring messages impacts real people — especially those looking for opportunities. When systems remove accountability, bad behavior becomes normal. But when expectations are clear, people communicate better.

We also learned that users don’t want more messages — they want fewer, better ones.

What’s next for Aviato

Next, we’re expanding Aviato into professional and creator ecosystems:

Hiring and recruitment use cases

Creator and influencer outreach

Verified opportunity listings

Smarter reputation weighting and abuse prevention

Our goal is simple: Make messaging fair again — or make it optional.

Aviato: Leave me alone.

Built With

Share this project:

Updates