Best & Worst Decisions Starting Companies 127
markfletcher writes "Today I launched a new site, Startupping, dedicated to helping Internet entrepreneurs. For the launch I asked several successful entrepreneurs about lessons they learned starting and running Internet companies. The first set of replies includes responses from Paul Graham, John Battelle, Chris Pirillo, Ross Mayfield, and Dick Costolo."
What are the rates for a slashvertisement? (Score:5, Insightful)
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Re:What are the rates for a slashvertisement? (Score:4, Funny)
My advice (Score:2)
Re:What are the rates for a slashvertisement? (Score:5, Funny)
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(I forget if
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to better your odds of getting on slashdot (Score:2)
No need. Just do something useful.
Get link on /. (Score:3, Funny)
2. Pay bandwidth overages.
3. ???
4. Profit
Sorry but... (Score:3, Insightful)
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Ah, so its the "blatant" part that separates it from the rest of the dot;-) Maybe instead of the Intel section they should just call it Slashmarketing Sponsored by Intel (Until AMD Pays Us More), and then we can throw them all in there.
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uh, wait! Wait! (Score:2)
(damn, I wonder if shutupping.com is taken. Well, I'm sure it is by now)
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So, do like the rest of us and don't RTFA
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And i-bullshit too! (Score:5, Insightful)
To have a business, you need to understand cash flow (current & projected), customers, your product and how the hell you're going to get the product in front of the customer.
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Yes, but this is more an opinion of your, than anything else. Somebody who has a business head, that can be told by asking a few questions. But the value of the product, that can me debated endlessly. I am sure you expert vision of the future would have turned down such products as google (we already have search engines), myspace (we already have geocities), 8086 (nobody will want a computer of their own).
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Sound like Microsoft and Windows and it works for them!
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Re:And i-bullshit too! (Score:5, Interesting)
What truly matters for a start-up is the team behind the business plan.
I can easily hire a good consultant to write the business plan (and I did it once). I will add a nice SWAT chapter, a competition review (based on a Jupiter analysis), 3 years projection (with 3 different projections: pessismitic, break-en, optimistic) and so on...You know that they expect a break even on the first year and a 120% ROI on the second year? Well simply change your Excel sheet.
Investors (at least experienced ones) know that the reality will be different from your business plan. It will just help you to structure your ideas and nothing more.
So what they are truly looking for is a team. Personnalities, experiences, motivation, etc..
And of course the idea.
If you want to be a CEO...You have to prove your leadership and your ability to convince the right people to join your boat, (or at least be ready to join in once there are some money). Otherwise you will remain a brilliant isolated inventor/engineer/salesman...
IMHO 70% for the team, 30% for the idea/product/service/whatever.
This was my biggest mistake. And my biggest success was to recognize it
Olivier
Re:And i-bullshit too! (Score:5, Informative)
The rest of the wiki is equally useless.
The forums are not exactly active.
The blog aggregators might be useful.
The Startupping blog itself consists of the one article linked to. That post itself has nothing earthshaking. Old advice like "do something you love", "hire good people", "stick to core competencies" and "don't be afraid to take risks".
Why exactly would anyone want to visit this site?
iBullshit (Score:1)
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Sorry, couldn't resist this early in the morning.
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The American Dream is a lottery, and with Domain's going for $5 hosing going for $7 a month and Ruby/CSS/Flash/Sql texts available for free... there really isn't any cost involved.
Sure you're going to be shouting in a screaming convention so some marketting skills are required.
Other Startup Sites (Score:4, Interesting)
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nolo.com (Score:4, Informative)
BTW, you almost certainly want to go LLC.
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How do you know that? (Score:2)
Choosing to LLC vs S-corp is a cost/benefit scenario. There are some very good reasons to go S-Corp, specifically, for liability reasons.
So, to the parent -- go research both and see which is right for your situation. I've done that and I decided an S-Corp was the way to go for us.
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S-corp is much harder and it's easy to lose your S-corp status if you're not careful, especially retroactively in the case of an acquisition and then you're in for all kinds of tax hell. I wouldn't run an S-corp without vetting every major decision with an attorney and accountant, especially if I was planning on doing a 338(h)(10) election.
I'm curious, what kind of liability protection does an S-corp offer in your jurisdic
reply to both of you (Score:2)
I only meant there are liability concerns - but, again, it depends what line of business you are in. For certain industri
Robert A. Cooke (Score:4, Informative)
A place to discuss contract terms, get recommendations for legal help, advice on whether to go LLC or C-corp - or one of the million other questions that come up.
A fellow named "Robert A. Cooke" has written several easy-reading tax law/accountancy books, very much in the mould of what you might call "The Idiot's Guide[s] to Teaching Yourself Corporate Tax Law in About 24 Minutes Flat": Be aware, though, that Congress has a bad habit of changing the "laws" about every five minutes [and dittoes as regards the IRS & the "regulations"], so at any one point in time, no single person on the entire planet is entirely certain of the precise state of all the laws and all the regulations at that very moment.
But I'd recommend Cooke as a good place to start to get an overview of the big picture.
The best... (Score:1)
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I've got a successful startup under my belt- almost 100 employees, throws off a lot of cash, happy customers, etc. Get in the habit of talking to people to find answers to questions rather than running to the internet. Need legal help? Contact the bar association. Talk to a couple la
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http://www.nolo.com/ [nolo.com]
http://www.sba.gov/smallbusinessplanner/index.htm
Customers! (Score:5, Insightful)
The ONLY successful ideas I have ever seen start with a _customer_. The first thing you say when somebody asks you what your idea is should be to describe who will buy it and why. Not what it is. I can't tell you how many entrepreneurs I've heard touting their latest venture with a pitch such as: "Think of it as a cross between grid computing and a web of trust, and it uses these applets that run on your back-end server... etc etc". This drivel often comes from seemingly smart people who have had impressive successes in the past. But who the fsck is the customer?
What is really astonishing is that it's the worst of these ideas, which happen to have just the right buzzwords du jour, which get funded by VCs. And it just gets more out of control from there. Even today, 7 years after the dot bomb, I know of several companies which have grown to 100+ employees and are on their fifth round of venture money without a profit in sight.
If your customer is not the #1 thing on your mind at all times, don't even bother!
(BTW dot coms DID have customers - it's just that the customer was not the guy buying you non-existent product, but rather the "bigger fool" who would buy your company. They eventually failed for the EXACT same reason - people kept starting companies even after they could no longer identify that customer.)
Re:Customers! (Score:4, Insightful)
Note the phrase "who will buy it", because it's important.
A business can make a perfect product that people love because it overwhelmingly satisfies their needs, but if those people aren't willing to pay for it (or pay *enough* for it that the business can make some profit), then it doesn't matter and the business is screwed. Therefore it is not always in a business's best interest to bend over backward to please consumers at the expense of other factors. A product's quality will reach a "good enough" point, beyond which additional improvement just increases costs without making people willing to pay more for it.
You see great examples everywhere of major businesses consistently making this mistake. Look at Apple -- great PCs with strong user satisfaction, great image relative to Microsoft -- yet very few people are willing to pay the price Apple needs to ask to turn a profit per unit, so in the end it's not a very smart business strategy. Steve Jobs keeps making the stupid mistake of maximizing product quality over all else, when a smart business person understands that product quality is just one of many factors that must be balanced to maximize profits.
Product quality. (Score:3, Interesting)
Steve Jobs keeps making the stupid mistake of maximizing product quality over all else, when a smart business person understands that product quality is just one of many factors that must be balanced to maximize profits.
I don't buy Macs because of their superior quality. I buy them becasue Apple computers tend to be comparatively well designed (at least the laptops are), the Apple desktop environment has better ergonomics than Windows (in my opinion, your milage may vary), personally I value the fact that OS.X is Unix based and Apple hardware tends to age better than many (but by no means all) PC computer brands, there are PC brands that do just as well as Apple. I don't think that Apple computers or products in general a
Re:Product quality. (Score:5, Insightful)
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Last I checked Apple was turning a pretty big profit. When you are able to successfully run a multi-BILLION dollar company and provide amazi
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I love it when some random Slashdotter claims to have a better understanding of business than Steve Jobs.
AAPL isn't exactly hurting these days -- even with stagnant growth in the computer market, stock is selling near the highest prices it ever has.
Sure, they'd have a larger market share if
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If Apple didn't differentiate themselves on quality/features then they'd just be a competitor to Windows which wouldn't seem to be very smart. Instead, Apples have positioned themselves in a different up-market segment, and despite continual rumour of them going out of business appear to be doing quite w
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VCs tend to be smarter since the dot-bombs. The ones I've dealt with directly and indirectly have made a much greater push for business plans, existing customers, and the usual signs of life at a proposed business venture. They still sometimes chase technology buzzwords and the fantastical dream of "license revenue" rather than building the business themselves, but at least they're dealing with business ideas not dreams.
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I believe the second approach you're talking about is called "flipping" a company. Building it up for the sole purpose of selling it to the highest bidder.
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I built some really good car models, they were truely 3D (as opposed to typical SL cars which are more like textured cubes), was painstakingly textured, had very good scripts to handle the driving; I can safely say they're the best you can get in SL and it took me weeks to get there. So I asked a relati
I'm about to launch a site too (Score:5, Funny)
My partner and I are about to launch a new site, how much for a link from the front page?
We can guarantee:
aPaddedCell.com [apaddedcell.com] for a sneak preview, see we've even got an Internet Explorer hate piece on the front page!
MOD PARENT DOWN ! (Score:1, Informative)
1) Make a funny post (as AC, so you d'ont care about Karma), with the URL of your website at the end of it.
2) Get modded up "Funny"
3) Your URL is visible to all Slashdotters
4) Visitors => Profit !
Too bad I have neither a website nor a blog, so I can't try
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Don't forget the increased page rank...
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FUCK PARENT IN THE ASS (Score:2)
I hate you MOD-PARENT-SIDEWAYS-TO-NEXT-TUESDAY-people. Look. Either you have mod points or you don't. Stop telling other people how to mod.
And stop posting AC in fear of retaliation. Damn spineless assholes, not willing to stand behind their words.
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:)
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The idea is to encourage Web Design/Development newbies who've started out with haxxored versions of Photoshop, Illustrator, Dreamweaver etc. to switch to GNU/Linux. Promoting how they'll be using GNU/Linux on their web server, so it makes sense to use it for their desktop. Not only that, they'll have the benefit of having legal and free (as in freedom) software, instead of the pirated stuff th
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You could not be further from the truth. I work with Zend Studio at a Fortune 500 working on very large scale projects. Please do tell, where is this alternate "enterprise" PHP IDE? Can you provide a link along with your claims? I recall about 10 years ago some UNIX geek making that same claim about my use of Linux in the enterprise. Baseless claims are too easy to make, especially as an anonymous use
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Worst idea ever (Score:5, Funny)
Worst Decision (Score:5, Funny)
Coming up with a domain name that can be read as "Star Tupping [urbandictionary.com]"
Tales from the pen of the latest boyband member, maybe?
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I'd like to assume it was because StartingUp.com wasn't available, but there's a trend to use unique constructions in order to get ownership of the unique keyword for search terms. I'm sure that's one of the reasons why Nintendo's Revolution was renamed the Wii.
In any case, the reading of it as "Star Tupping" gives it some added resale value. It'll be worth even more if he can get a lot of links to it as it is now before eventually selling it off to become
Observation (Score:4, Insightful)
1st bad decision - domain name (Score:5, Funny)
Re:1st bad decision - domain name (Score:5, Funny)
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Or Mole Station Nursery? http://www.molestationnursery.com/ [molestationnursery.com]
Right off the bat (Score:3, Interesting)
1. Invent a verb.
2. Take the gerund of the verb and register it as a Web domain.
3. Launch a new Web site. There are already too many and yours sucks too.
4. Advertise your site on Slashdot, where opinionated fussbudgets, girlfriendless nerds, and Grammar Nazis (often all the same thing) will gleefully and mercilessly attack your competence and judgement.
Re:Right off the bat (Score:4, Funny)
2. Take the gerund of the verb and register it as a Web domain.
3.
4. Advertise your site on Slashdot, where opinionated fussbudgets, girlfriendless nerds, and Grammar Nazis (often all the same thing) will gleefully and mercilessly attack your competence and judgement.
A post lamenting "grammar nazis" from someone can spell, writes in full sentences, and knows WTF a gerund is?
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Look, mister, dangling participles don't scare me. Maybe pour yourself a tall one and re-read what I wrote?
Cheers.
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Oh that name. Poor name. (Score:1)
64 bytes from 207.218.203.242 64 bytes from 207.218.203.242 64 bytes from 207.218.203.242
Tip: Forget that morals and ethics exist at all. (Score:2)
When in business, forget that those two concepts even exist- only focus on the money, the product, the stockholders, the law, and finally the customers. It also helps if you can know some lawmakers willing to counter anyone who causes friction in business conduct.
There's nothing worse than a pro-consumer law that works, an immigration bill that is fully enforced, workers that have long term hope versus fear, or if you cant use Far Eastern countries as a one stop solution for that pesky domestic tal
My 9 step plan for success (Score:5, Funny)
2) Think Outside The Box
3) Harness The Internet
4) Get A Boat
5) Ask yourself, "is this good for the company?"
6) Attend Donald Trump Wealth Seminars
7) Have a Can-Do Upwardly Mobile Attitude
8) Actualize Your Dreams
9) Have Wealthy Parents
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It's sarcasm, man. Steps 1-8 are pointless whether or not you can do step 9. Excuse me, I've got to go embrace my core competencies, now. Those world-class synergies don't benchmark themselves.
Founders at work (Score:5, Interesting)
For a in-depth look at some of the secrets for a succesful start-up, Founders at Work: Stories of Startups' Early Days [foundersatwork.com] might serve as an interesting read.
It features interviews with Steve Wozniak (Apple), Caterina Fake (Flickr), Mitch Kapor (Lotus), Max Levchin (PayPal), and Sabeer Bhatia (Hotmail).
I haven't purchased the book myself, but I'm getting one as soon as I can to help me with my own startup initiatives.
Quote: All the best things that I did at Apple came from (a) not having money and (b) not having done it before, ever. Every single thing that we came out with that was really great, I'd never once done that thing in my life. --Steve Wozniak, founder of Apple, page 36
Worst. Decision. Ever. (Score:4, Funny)
Anyway, you really have to wonder what strange chain of events happened to make someone think that verbing that particular noun sounded good. Roll it aound on the tongue. Startupping. StartUpping. Hmmm. Maybe another hit of Jack. Yes, that's it. Startupping. Hmm. Still sounds lame. Maybe if we change the emphasis. STARTuping. startUPing. startupING. Yeah, that's it. Suave. Respectable. Instant recognition.
I can't imagine how this domain was available.
Slashdot... (Score:3, Funny)
Oh oh, I have a web business plan I want to share! (Score:1)
2) __________?
3) Profit!
Mission and Vision (Score:1)
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And today *I* started a new company (Score:2)
Check out my new site (Score:2)
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