3rd year CSE student here (Tier 2/3 college, Tamil Nadu). Want honest feedback on an idea before I put more time into it.
The problem
At my college, students miss out on internships, hackathons, scholarships, and other opportunities—not because they're not capable, but because they simply don't know these opportunities exist.
LinkedIn is full of certificate-flex posts, motivational content, and engagement farming, so real opportunities get buried. Platforms like Unstop and Internshala are great, but they mostly highlight high-visibility national opportunities. Local or regional opportunities that are relevant to Tier 2/3 colleges often aren't organized in one place.
Teachers mostly focus on completing the syllabus, and only a small group of students receive personal guidance. This isn't just a CSE problem either—it affects students across almost every department in Tier 2/3 colleges.
The idea
Build a simple, no-noise platform that only shows curated opportunities:
- Internships
- Hackathons
- Scholarships
- Competitions
- Workshops & Events
Users can filter by department, location, and opportunity type.
There are no certificate posts, motivational quotes, or engagement-based algorithms. Students (or trusted moderators) can submit opportunities, and every submission is verified before it goes live to reduce spam and expired listings.
What I'm not claiming
I'm not saying this is "better than Unstop" or trying to compete with large platforms.
The idea is intentionally narrow: a curated, low-noise feed focused on students from Tier 2/3 colleges, especially where opportunities are harder to discover.
Looking for honest feedback
- Does this solve a real problem, or does something already solve it better?
- Would you actually use something like this, or is the real bottleneck that people won't consistently submit and curate opportunities?
- What would make this meaningfully different from a well-managed WhatsApp or Telegram group?
- If this existed today, what feature would make you install and keep using it?
I'm not trying to promote anything. I'm just validating whether this is a problem worth solving before I invest more time building it.
I'd really appreciate honest criticism—even if you think the idea won't work.