Citizen vs. Nextdoor: What Are People Really Looking For in a Local App?
During my semi-weekly Zoom call this evening with my Fraternity Brothers from Tau Epsilon Phi Fraternity, Phi Chi Chapter, someone mentioned the Citizen app. I had heard the name before, but I had never really looked into it. After the conversation, I did some research — and tonight I’m starting to use it.
The more I looked, the more interesting the comparison became.
Nextdoor has always positioned itself as the digital neighborhood — a place to connect with neighbors, ask for recommendations, discuss local issues, and discover businesses.
Citizen takes a different approach: real-time awareness. It focuses on what many people immediately want to know when they open a local app:
What is happening around me right now?
Is there an accident nearby? Police activity? A fire? A safety concern? An emergency alert?
Sometimes people don't want another social network. They want useful information that affects their day, commute, family, and safety.
Nextdoor has a massive opportunity because community connections and local intent are incredibly valuable. But the challenge has always been balancing conversations, commerce, moderation, and trust.
Citizen appears to have a clearer "why open the app?" moment.
I’m beginning my own Citizen experiment tonight. I’ll see how the alerts, accuracy, usability, and overall experience compare.
Stay tuned — I’ll share what I learn.