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Archive for the ‘Startup’ Category

reason number 36 why its a good time to do a startup

Tuesday, November 25th, 2008

because “existing companies are more likely to miss new opportunities”

or to quote from The Economist leader on  November 22  (2008) All you need is cash :

One reason why downturns tend to be good times to launch new businesses is because established companies abandon promising growth opportunities too fast. Oracle and Microsoft were both born in difficult economic times.

See also Don Dodge at Startup Empire: Starting a Company in Difficult Times and Howard Lindzon at Startup Empire: Why Now is a Good Time to Start Your Startup

TinEye Mobile : iPhone visual search for stuff

Wednesday, October 1st, 2008

as demonstrated during the recent The Amazon Web Services (AWS) StartUp event in Toronto by Idee’s CTO Paul Bloore,  TinEye Mobile is soon to be showing up in the iPhone App store to melt your brains… or just take an image of product (a CD, DVD, book or game etc.) and then send you on to read reviews, sample music or do price comparisons.

Leila Boujnane, Idee’s CEO, has a video showing off TinEye Mobile and Mathew Ingram writes Idee does visual search, iPhone-style, as does Jevon MacDonald (StartUp North) in Idee’s new iphone app - TinEye Music.

Let the melting begin….

Weird Wonderful Web Links for January 27th

Sunday, January 27th, 2008

This is what is Weird Wonderful Web for January 26th through January 27th:

Rules For Startups & Evaluating a New Idea

Monday, December 17th, 2007

First up we have TechCunch’s Loic Le Meur’s Ten Rules For Startup Success (which I had written up but not posted) which had a number of points (10 actually) :

● 1 Don’t wait for a revolutionary idea.● 2 Share your idea. ● 3 Build a community.● 4 Listen to your community.● 5 Gather a great team.● 6 Be the first to recognize a problem.● 7 Don’t spend time on market research.● 8 Don’t obsess over spreadsheet business plans. ● 9 Don’t plan a big marketing effort.● 10 Focus on your users.

I would lump 2, 3, 4, and 6 under one item aka the ClueTrain Manifesto “Markets are conversations” rule. i.e. talk and listen. Items 1, 7, 8 and 9 are really all the same thing : make it good / different enough ; make your mistakes early (and cheap) ; adjust according to what works; Item 10 is gold.

Loic’s new startup is Seesmic (closed Beta) and there Community is a Loic TV, and his own blog.

So, now we have Loren Feldman ripping them a hole as only he can (via Tech Crunch), in his funny accent. Loren makes some valid comments in his usual funny and very colourful style.

Nobody said that all the “conversations” where going to be happy ones.


We also have “Will it fly? How to Evaluate a New Product Idea” from Evan Williams (of Blogger, Odeo and Twitter fame) making some very good points : Tractability; Obviousness ; Deepness; Wideness; Discoverability; Monetizability; Personally Compelling.Be prepare to address these points in your gut and figure how your going to resolve them. You need to scoring high, for at least a well defined niche, for >50% of these. (Otherwise, without a huge possible “Monetizabilty”, or even with, the opportunity is not -yet- ripe. Wait a cycle to re-evaluate.)

Evan’s “Personally Compelling” is a key point in that if your not obsessed (and or passionate about ) about the product area you are not going to hang in there the first time someone makes fun of you (see above, Loren), or do the hard work. Being “obsessed” can be a good substitute for more traditional “market research”. “Discoverability” can replace a big (expensive) marketing effort. Deepness & Wideness addresses the question “is this a product or a feature”. Tractability is about “how long do I live on Ramen” (or KD or pb&j sandwiches - pick your poison). Obviousness is about can your sell it in an elevator pitch to your target users?

It is also worth re-reading Tim Bray’s Message From the Web (Centralization is a bug; Good-enough today beats complete next year; Getting started should be free. Convince the developers. Management will go along. Try to lock them in and they’ll walk away ·Some popular tools will be Open Source ·To make money, give things away (”Monetization at the point of value.”), and the reaction, in light of the above.

So use Evan’s taste test, Listen to the web’s Message, and get that Startup out and ruling (and then show it at DemoCamp!).


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