February 4, 2012

The Onsite Visit, Tips for Selling Your Startup

In late March we hired an investment banker to help us run a process to sell one of our startups. One of the last things a potential acquirer conducts (after the term sheet) is the on-site visit to meet the broader team. We have been through a few of these meetings – the last one [...]

China just declared war on American investors!

Yahoo, which is considered by some a holding company for Chinese internet companies, learned in late March that Alibaba Group (they own 43% of the company) sold one of the company’s most valuable assets Alipay without notifying or seeking approval from Alibaba’s board of directors. The CEO, Jack Ma, of Alibaba owns the company that [...]

Pitching a business idea? Check this list first:

I got this summary of business ideas/models that persistently fail from Quora. Got an idea that solves one of these ‘problems’? Don’t bother pitching me (or anyone else). Here is the answer summary: Social recommendations and/or Recommendations based on what your friends like Why? 1) too much noise/low priority, lack of personal relevance 2) Forced [...]

Don’t be a First-Person Founder

When I was raising money for my first startup in the late 90s and I caught myself explaining how “I” was doing this or doing that. That “I” had the best this or the best that. Finally someone pointed this out to me and I realized how arrogant I sounded. Not only did it make [...]

ShopKick Comment Spam Update

Back on April 19th I wrote a ‘scathing’ post against ShopKick and their CEO Cyriac Roeding. I alleged that ShopKick was promoting their app by inserting comment spam in market reviews for ShopSavvy. I assumed they were paying a firm to insert this comment spam as it was VERY plentiful. Cyriac responded by explaining it [...]

Vote for ‘shft’ for a Webby

We began a project with Adrian Grenier a couple of years ago, but it stalled out for a bunch of reasons (mainly because ShopSavvy took off so fast). Adrian’s got a new project to support sustainability thoughout pop culture called ‘shft’. He reached out to me earlier today and let me know his company was [...]

Screwed up incentives in the Valley

Connie Loizos wrote a piece a couple of days ago titled, “Concern Grows Over Founders Cashing Out Too Much, Too Early.” Evidently investors in the Valley are allowing founders to ‘cash out’ as they are making their first investments. Investors like Paul Kedrosky think the practice is insane suggesting, “It [isn't] just an alignment issue; [...]

When should you raise money? NOW!

Garrett Camp, the co-founder of Stumbleupon, recommends, “Stay self-funded as long as possible.” I think I have been quoted saying the same thing, but over the past year I have come to realize that you can wait too long to raise outside capital. When I founded LayerOne I raised money first and then built the [...]

Startup Pressure = Ethical Dilemmas (Update)

Pascal said, “Things are always at their best in their beginning.” I think the reason they are ‘best’ is because they are simple. When you start a company everything is black and white. Over time things become more and more complex and the ‘right’ decisions are not always obvious. I would argue this makes doing [...]

Regulate and Tax Online Poker, Don’t Send it Underground

Today the Obama administration effectively shut down Internet poker in the United States by indicting 11 people including the founders of three of the largest sites. The crackdown makes almost no sense. Some form of gambling is allowed in all 50 states – many states like California allow poker rooms. I contend that two things [...]