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Entries for November 2007


November 1, 2007


THU
1
NOV
2007

New Seattle Startup Index - More than 200 startups!!!

By Marcelo Calbucci

 

    We are listing more than 200 startups on the Seattle 2.0 blogOpen in a new window.

 

    SampaOpen in a new window continues to climb on the list despite the fact that Compete proves once more they are out of whack because they show a drop in our reach. Alexa, Google Analytics and our own internal stats have the same growth level, which validates that we are actually growing at a steady and fast pace.

 

    We moved 1 position to #28 in Seattle, just behind BigOven, which, by the way, is getting a lot of press today.

 

    For the first time ever, our Alexa ranking is below 40,000, more specifically at 38,960. That is pretty amazing if you think about there are millions and millions of sites and services on the Internet, and we are on the top 40,000. Actually, we would be on the top 10,000 if Alexa (or Compete) was better at tracking page views because they don't count any of our IFRAME pages, which Sampa relies a lot on.

 

   

 

 

 

 

 

1:40 PM | Permalink | 1 comment


November 8, 2007


THU
8
NOV
2007

Live blogging Entrepreneur University from NWEN

By Marcelo Calbucci

    I'm going to be live blogging NWEN Entrepreneur University. Just talked to John Cook and he is doing the same.

    The morning keynote was from Peter van Oppen on reaching high altitude. It was very interesting his view on hiring people to your company. He define the "3 Es" that you should look when hiring people.

    In order of importance:

  1. Energy: People that have drive and are bouncing off the walls
  2. Excellence: People that know how to channel that energy
  3. Experience: People that have the experience to where you want to be (not where you are)




THU
8
NOV
2007

EU: Mike Mathieu - All Star Directories

By Marcelo Calbucci

    Second presentation for me was from Mike Mathieu. Ex-Microsoft guy, left and build All Star Directories.

    He didn't talk much about ASD, but about his personal ups and downs with building a company, and learning when and how to let it go.

   A very experience entrepreneur and investor once told me that founders give themselves too much credit for the value they have on their company, i.e., assuming they are irreplaceable.

    I have a good understand of what I do and my worth value. I never believe people cannot be replaced. Some people might be harder to replace because of the perfect unusual fit into the company, but companies have their blood flow, and when people leave that doesn't stop. In certain cases, even if the last person leaves the blood flow continues!



THU
8
NOV
2007

EU: Financing Strategies

By Marcelo Calbucci

    It's official: I have PDD (patience deficiency disorder). Round Table or Panel formats are too slow and that is very annoying.

    I'm here watching Bob Tassone moderate three speakers talking about "financing strategies" (although they are being quite off topic talking about everything from recruiting to selling). The panel include Mike Stull (Pacific Bioscience Lab), Doug Gorder (Gorder Consulting) and Diane Renihan (Bag Borrow or Steal).

    One people have to give their presentation alone, up there with a PPT, they prepare for it. They come knowing exactly what they are going to say. On Panels, they are there without any supporting material (visuals) and they have this sad Q&A format where a moderator throws a question and waits for two or three to respond. They respond very slowly, without passion and that triggers my PDD enzymes.

    I left for a few minutes to watch Robbie Cape from Cozi to talk about "Preparing for Take-Off". I couldn't listen much longer because I felt his advices were not applicable to a wide audience. The jewel was "you must spend 4 to 6 hours a day recruiting, if you are not doing that you are probably doing the wrong thing". Really? Well, it works well if you have a pot of gold under your desk. My advise to entrepreneurs is to spend 4-6 hours of their day building the product, and the rest raising money. On your spare time you network.



THU
8
NOV
2007

EU: Focus on the audience

By Marcelo Calbucci

    I listened to the same panel talk about how expensive IPO is, the problems with IPO, current IPOs....

    Question: How many CEOs of companies about to go public are attending this event?

    My widely uninformed guess is: zero. I'll go one step further and say that there are no one here that has raised a VC round for their current company. So, even talking about a Series B is a waste of time.

    Entrepreneurs have too much to learn, they can't learn everything so the limited space on their brain needs to be wisely filled with things that *mater*.

    Oh God, now they are talking about Earnings per Share...
11:14 AM | Permalink | 1 comment


Week 45 of 2007

EU: Craig Kinzer on Go-To Market Strategies 10 months ago
EU: Sunny Kobe Cook. Again? 10 months ago
Looking for Contact information on some companies. 10 months ago
EU: Final thoughts 10 months ago

Week 46 of 2007

Finally, we are #1 on Google 10 months ago
Predatory Lending Association - Funny or Sad? 10 months ago
Nooooo... I just deleted all my cookies! 10 months ago
Flying this holiday season? Try Yapta 10 months ago
Sampa on TechCrunch: We don't fit! 10 months ago
The biggest redesign of Sampa started today 10 months ago

Week 47 of 2007

Slow news day 9 months ago
I have a window. You don't need to tell me it's raining. 9 months ago

Week 48 of 2007

Redfin Dilemma: Is it a database or a search engine? 9 months ago
Hyphen or no hyphen? 9 months ago
The big misunderstanding of the Long Tail 9 months ago
Where can I get a version of Visual Studio 2008? 9 months ago
Why there is no GDrive yet? Because... 9 months ago
Visual Studio 2008 is amazing for developers -- and a bit of my life story 9 months ago
Cyber Monday *doesn't exist*. Help spread the word! 9 months ago
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