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(C)ouchSurfing’s Pathetic Shutdown

Three year old CouchSurfing, a beloved service used by some 90,000 members, had multiple database crashes, critical parts of the software and data were irretrievably lost, and the backups weren’t performed properly. They are not rebuilding the service. They literally put themselves out of business.” – reports TechCrunch.

Mike says it’s ridiculous – I’ll go a step further: it’s BS.

Of course the negligent approach about backups in itself is a serious issue, and in that respect I encorage everyone to read Dharmesh Shah’s thoughtful piece on why he considers $2K a month for hosting of his pre-launch startup money well spent.

So why am I calling this BS? Dharmesh says:

What was the issue? Not lack of user interest or running out of cash or strong competition or any of the usual reasons that startups die. It was because of a series of infrastructure problems.”

Yeah, right. I haven’t been a CouchSurf-er, nor do I know the business, but I am calling it a BS, because the infrastructure problems are just an excuse – they may have been the last drop for the entrepreneur already fed up running the business, but definitely not the cause. Everyone knows that the single most difficult part in building any sort of marketplace / community business that relies on network effect is exactly that – reaching critical mass. Heck, anyone can throw together the databases, programs, infrastructure if the hundreds of thousands of users are somehow guaranteed. But of course they are not. My point is: if you do have the loyal crowd and your buiness is otherwise in good shape, you can start from scratch, and rebuild everything, no matter how bad (total?) your data loss is.

That leaves us with the other single most critical part (yeah, I am cheating, there are two “single” most critical/difficult parts…): monetization. This is where I suspect CouchSurfing may have had trouble, which turned it into OuchSurfing – after all, who throws away an entirely profitable good business after a technical fiasco?

Interestingly enough, although Dharmesh devotes his article to the importance of proper infrastructure, if you read between the lines, there is a second message there: eyeballs are not enough, you need to convert them to revenue.

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Venture Zine

Paul Kedrosky quotes OM who writes about Google checkouts, how it will fundamentally change the advertising market.

“Read between the lines – this is a dangerous and most brilliant assault on the “cost per click” (CPC) plans of Microsoft, Yahoo and everyone else who is coming to the party … late. This move is about cost-per-action advertising. It is about kicking up the online advertising business … a notch!”

[I’d say more than a notch – it’s a move back to reality. In a world of click fraud, automated bots flipping through ads like crazy we seem to have forgotten that clicks mean nothing, unless there is some material, financial transaction behind them – i.e. at the end of the day advertisers pay to SELL, not to be seen.]

Jeff Nolan approaches the news from another angle, worried about trusting Google with our credit card data. That is indeed scary…

Entrepreneurs who think it’s difficult to get through the door of VC firms will enjoy James Chen’s story about how VC’s should hunt for the companies to invest in. Upside-down world, isn’t it?

Josh “Redeye” Kopelman discusses how the “real challenge in scaling a start-up is to keep the quality and passion quotient high simultaneously.” He cites a startup that’s been interviewing candidates for a senior business development role but so far has been unable to find a “a fresh person somewhere between a newbie and a veteran, who is proud of a few key demonstrable successes in previous start-up experiences.” This reminds me of a related recent posts: Top-heavy teams by Ed Sim and one of these days when I pull myself together I’ll blog the case study of a startup that learned the hard way why it’s a bad idea to bring in a “corporate type Sales VP” at a very early stage.

Don’t be a workaholic machine, rather a thinking, creative, outstanding indiviudal – is the essence (did I get it right?) of a great story by Charlie O’Donnell: Sometimes students need gentle prodding.

 

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Enterprise 2.0: Social Bookmarking in the Corporate World

connectbeamlogo.jpg(Updated)
If there is a clearcut example of how consumer-oriented social platforms penetrate the Enterprise market, then ConnectBeam it is: what started it’s life as CourseCafe, the “Other FaceBook” is now reborn as a Social Bookmarking Service for corporations.

I originally met Puneet Gupta, Founder and CEO at an SVASE Breakfast session and was impressed by his vision – so was the VC Partner, too, but back then Puneet was just testing the water, not ready to bring in serious VC investment. A few blog posts and a review by TechCrunch attracted a lot of interest, and Puneet started to receive serious feedback that there is a need for such a service in the corporate world, too. While I seriously believed in the future of the original student-community-type model, too, I have to agree with Puneet: a startup needs to be focused, and can not possibly build too separate businesses at the same time. That’s how ConnectBeam was born.

TechCrunch usually does a much better job in reviewing products than I do, so please read it over there.

Related posts:

Update (11/27): Robert Scoble interviewed Puneet.  Watch the interview here (Quicktime) and a product demo here.

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HieroZlango? Zlanglyphs? :-)

TechCrunch

profiled Zlango,

a cute icon-based SMS  ZMS language. Nice, who knows what the outcome will be:

  • It will not take off, since to really use it, the receiving end needs to have

    it on their phone, too.

  • Because of the above, it will spread virally

  • Since it’s so cute, it will spread among kids first, and the language

    separation will be final: we can give up any hope of understanding the 10-year

    olds ever again. 

Either way, as Ethan

points out, the idea is not quite new: Zlango = ancient Egyptian hieroglyphs + modern

technology.

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Milestones …

Digg v3 Party

Originally uploaded by Laughing Squid.



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Capitalizing On The Bio/Medical Wave – Life Sciences “BIG” Event by SVASE

Investments in Life Science companies are at an all-time high and with this sector poised to be the next Big Wave. Silicon Valley is riding high and emerging as the most innovative global BioCluster and convergence hotspot. What does this opportunity mean for Valley bioentrepreneurs? What are the key opportunities – and challenges? And how can Life Science Entrepreneurs capitalize on the BioWave?

These are some of the questions the panelists will discuss at SVASE’s BIG (Business Interface Group) event this Wednesday evening in Palo Alto. These people from the “trenches” will share the lessons they have learned in the process of founding companies; from concept to Series A and beyond into the markets and the (Wall) streets.

In addition, the event will feature a Technology Showcase, where entrepreneurs can showcase their technologies at table-top displays and deliver 4 minute pitches to the panel and audience.

The Panel:
Rich Ferrari, Denovo Ventures
Allan May, Life Science Angels
Elizabeth Holmes, President and CEO, Theranos, Inc
Dinesh Patel, President & CEO, Arete Therapeutics
Moderator – Frank Rahmani, Partner, Cooley Godward

For more information see the SVASE site. I am giving away 5 free tickets using this link, after which normal registration through the SVASE site is available.

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What do MommyBuzz and Ziki Have in Common

(Updated)
MommyBuzzMommyBuzz launched today announces Steve Rubel.

Business model? The same that Ziki started with: commission-based deals with sunglass-manufacturers. If you visit the site, you’ll see it yourself – but not for long, your eyes will burn (sans shades).

Ziki toned down there colors in a few days – let’s see how soon Mommy gets the buzz ….

Btw, in my usual Johnny-come-lately fashion I thought I would register Toddlerbuzz … too late.

Update (1029):  Mommybuzz does not seem to care.. apparently they think the eye-burning colors work. See VentureBeat on this and other Mom-sites.

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SVASE VC Breakfast Club with Ken Elefant, Opus Capital

The next SVASE VC Breakfast Club meeting is on Thursday, June 15th in Menlo Park – the VC Mecca, Sand Hill Road. As usual, it’s an informal round-table where up to 10 entrepreneurs get to deliver a pitch, then answer questions and get critiqued by a VC Partner. We’ve had VC’s from Draper Fisher, Hummer Winblad, Kleiner Perkins, Mayfield, Mohr Davidow, Emergence Capital …etc.

Thursday’s featured VC is Ken Elefant, General Partner, Opus Capital. The Zvents post has all the info and a map, and if you plan to attend, please register here.

These sessions are an incredible opportunity for Entrepreneurs, most of whom would probably have a hard time getting through the door to VC Partners. Since I’ve been through quite a few of these sessions, both as Entrepreneur and Moderator, let me share a few thoughts:

  • It’s a pressure-free environment, with no Powerpoint presentations, Business Plans…etc, just casual conversation, but it does not mean you should come unprepared!
  • Bring an Executive Summary, some VC’s like it, others don’t.
  • Follow a structure, don’t just talk freely about what you would like to do, or even worse, spend all your time describing the problem, without addressing what your solution is.
  • Don’t forget “small things” like the Team, Product, Market..etc.
  • It would not hurt to mention how much you are looking for, and how you would use the funds…
  • Write down and practice your pitch, and prepare to deliver a compelling story in 3 minutes. You will have about 5, but believe me, whatever your practice time was, when you are on the spot, you will likely take twice as long to deliver your story. The second half of your time-slot is Q&A with the VC.
  • Last, but not least, please be on time! I am not kidding… some of you know why I even have to bring this up.

Here’s a participating Entrepreneur’s feedback about a previous event.

See you on Thursday! Zbutton

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Effective Small Business Owner or Corporate BS-er?

Even after the second reading of 10 Reminders for Effective Management I can’t believe my eyes. I wonder if it’s a serious article or a satirical piece. As if the article wasn’t shocking enough, I really have a hard time believing that it’s posted on Small Business Trends – a site I came to like and even quote from time to time.

Although technically it’s advice to small business owners, it reminds me of the 80’s corporate mid-manager’s survival guides, as in “how to BS your way through your career, looking busy while doing nothing“. I know I have entrepreneurial readers – what do you think?

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Techdirt Greenhouse Launches New Social Experiment

I’m at the Techdirt Greenhouse, starting in just a few minutes. The previous one was a great experience, and now I am back to lead one of the discussion groups.

One way to measure the success of a conference (unconference?) is how often you talk about it long after it’s over. Ever since the first Greenhouse I could not attend a conference without bumping into a few participants who’d start the conversation by saying how boring the old way felt after the Greenhouse experience.

Greenhouse has become the “gold standard” for participation, interactivity – there are no speakers and audience, just participants.

And now Techdirt is taking it one step further, by launching a social experience: at the end of the day, when everyone’s left, the discussions will not be closed. Greenhouse “lives on” here– courtesy of WetPaint. The site brings the best of wikis and forum discussions together, in an easy-to use format. Feel free to navigate around, and don’t just read – participate! You all have edit rights. Registration is not necessary, but helpful, especially if you’d like to be recognized for your contribution.

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