The Forum of Ancient Rome also included such important elements as the Rostra and the Comitium.
Rostra was essentially a large platform for speeches. In fact, it was a tribune, from the ancient “tribunal”. The Comitium was the original open-air public meeting space.
Standing on the rostra facing the north side of the Comitium toward the Senate building, they made speeches to those assembled between them.
Also on rostra, there were announcements placed.
We can say that it was the equivalent of Instagram, where they posted stories.
Also in the Roman forum were places for trade, which were not worse than modern shopping malls, which could include places where many goods and services were sold, such as beauty salons, dentists, cloth sales, game halls, places where you could eat, etc.
Also on the Roman forum, there was a special prison for politically important prisoners. For example in times of war with Gauls in such prison, Vercingetorix was kept, and all Romans knew that he was kept in this prison.
This was done to show the Romans the enemy and make them understand what it was for.
So let's summarize the above.
At the Rome Forum, there was a certain infrastructure that solved certain problems, and these problems are already very many years old. So when you do a startup, you should be looking for solutions to the problems that were then and are now.
In addition, the Roman Forum had triumphal arches, columns, etc. These were cases and each emperor added some new elements.
And so it turns out that the emperors of Ancient Rome can be compared to company product managers.
A good product manager added good features and a bad one added bad ones.
It's like the Facebook situation. At first, it was cool, but then it started to get more and more things, and people started to conclude that they needed something new, and that's how Instagram became popular.
Now, however, Instagram has been replaced by Discord and TikTok.Then the wave of hype around Instagram was replaced by Discord, TikTok, and so on. So we can conclude that this is an ongoing process.
Let's briefly summarize again what was in the Rome forum, and conclude the main niches in which to build a business:
- Niches related to communication and networking. It concerns any meetings, discussions, encounters, dating, etc.
In fact, those parts of the Roman forum that closed this need were analogs of social networks. Twitter, Reddit, and Facebook actually have the same format as the Roman forum.
- Newsfeed - any announcements, news, any new and relevant content
This format has always been and will always be relevant from the times of ancient Rome when all news and announcements were placed on the Rostra and important news was broadcast from it to today's news feeds in social networks.
- Temples and entertainment, services(medical, pharmacies, beauty parlors, etc.), and commerce were all located in the analogs of today's shopping malls
- Administrative buildings (court, senate, prison, bank, currency exchange, and so on)
I'm not sure, but I think there is a special software for prisons these days, because once upon a time while researching software products for different areas of business, I was surprised to find that there is a specific application category for churches.
So, from the above, we can conclude that if we analyze all large multi-billion dollar companies, they all aim to “become the Forum of Rome”.
The difference is that everyone starts with a specific area and then adds new elements to the infrastructure (nodes).
If we look at Amazon, they started by selling books, and their principle was “You can buy all the books online here”.
The question is where is Amazon now and where are the books?
I think that now book sales on Amazon are, to put it mildly, not a major part of their profits.
That's why every IT company has a basic direction, “social media first”, “e-commerce first”,
“tech first”, and then it adds additional features and things.