Archive | 2006

Entrepreneurship Series

This is to announce that I’ll be writing a series of posts over the next few weeks detailing various facets of the entrepreneurial process. Before mid-December, you’ll be seeing articles on:

Some will be posted all at once, and some will be posted in installments as I write them. Stay tuned, the first installment “Costs and Benefits of Taking Venture Capital” will be posted by the end of the week.

EDIT: I will add links to the articles here as they are posted.

Happy Birthday to Me

Thanks to everyone for the emails/IMs/Facebook messages wishing me Happy Birthday. I really appreciate all of them, it’s great to have such caring friends. It’s weird being 21, because it’s an age you look forward to as a milestone, and now that it’s here, I really don’t feel all that different :) It’s strange to think that this is really as old as I want to get, is 21 the turning point where getting older changes from exciting to depressing? I don’t think so, I just think that the milestones in your life become less age-based and more accomplishment centered (college graduation, first job, promotion, etc).

So here’s to looking forward to my next 21 years and beyond full of great friends and exciting milestones (and maybe a beer or two).

Recurring Events at Groupvine

So this is cross posted on the Groupvine Blog, but since I wrote the post, it can go here too right?

Recurring Events
We’ve gotten a number of requests for recurring events in Groupvine. So, thanks to your use of the feedback form (top right inside Groupvine), you got your wish! Today we added a recurring events feature to the “Events” tab. Just click the “Repeat this event” checkbox, and you’re on your way.

Recurring Event Preview


As always thanks for your feedback, keep suggesting features, my next post might be announcing your feature idea.

November is Birthday Month
As a final note, I’d like to wish a Happy Birthday to Scott on the 6th (today) and myself on the 8th. Scott has reached the oh-so-mature age of 23, while I’ve passed the oh-so-legal 21 year mark. So Happy Birthday to us both, and here’s to another year of better and more organized college groups!

Add WFU Specific Search to your Firefox

Here’s a quickie, but I think a number of Wake Forest students will appreciate it. I’ve programmed a plugin for Firefox to add a Wake Forest site-specific search to the upper right search box. Just click the little arrow next to the Google logo, and pick the “WF” logo, and your search will be restricted to the Wake Forest website. It’s great for finding things like OGB articles and a link to the PDF of the course catalog that you misplaced. Just go to the link below to install it.

http://www.billda.com/searchplugin/

17 Tips for Startup Founders and Employees

I came across a great pair of posts over at onStartups.com titled:

There are a few points in each article that I thought were particularly resonant (at least with me) that I’d like to point out and comment on.

Tip for Founders: Startup founders work long hours for a reason. There’s more work than there are people. If you’re seeking balance, seek it elsewhere.

This couldn’t be more true, there are never as many people to churn out your ideas as fast as you think them. However, I think the author makes the long hours and late nights seem dismal, when I think this is the most invigorating part of starting a company. When it’s 1AM and everyone else has gone home, and you have that spark, that great idea that keeps you up ’til 3, that’s the moment you don’t get anywhere but working for yourself, experiencing the entrepreneurial process. Which segways nicely into my other favorite from the Founders article:

Tip for Founders: At the end of each day, ask yourself: “Did the product get better for customers today?” If you don’t have a good answer, stay up until you do.

Haven’t we all felt that satisfaction blended with utter exhaustion after a late night of coding or brainstorming? How many companies have the motto “Better everyday” or “Improving all the time”? How many of those companies do you feel really improve every day? As a small company, an entrepreneur, you have the chance to actually make it happen, to improve everyday. You can make tangible, positive changes for your business everyday – make a new contact, add a new feature, write some documentation (I know you’ve been avoiding that one for months), re-evaluate your budget, have your partners over for some beer and brainstorming. When you turn in for the night, know that you’ve taken a stride toward success.

Now onto the tips for employees (and how different are they than the founders really…we’re all employees at this point) -

Tip for Employees: Startup founders are usually quirky people. Get used to it.

Quirky perhaps, but I think the better word would be driven. Startup founders are usually so excited for the success of his company, so wrapped up in his vision, that they sometimes come off as a bit, er…different. However, it does take a certain kind of obsession to make a startup work…

Tip for Employees: Wear as many hats as possible. Help out where you can.

What a great piece of advice. If you’re a programmer, program. If you’re a designer, make your sketches. But don’t be afraid to chime in with your business advice (as long as you’re ready to take some criticism), or sit down and help revise the business plan. You coworkers will love you for it, and you’ll be glad when they pitch in to help you when your deadline is tomorrow.

Tip for Employees: If you’re not having fun, you’re in the wrong place.

Probably the most important of all the tips, both for founder and employee. One of the best things about working for a startup is that it isn’t your typical 9-5 (as we’ve seen above), there’s a culture of fun and adventure you get with a small company that doesn’t come elsewhere. If you’ve lost that, you ought to quit now and go to work for a bank.