OK, so you wanna be an entreprenuer. Cool. Can you sell? Your answer better be “Yes!” or “I’m gonna!”.
Simple truth: if you can’t sell, you won’t succeed. Plain and simple. Now, this really strikes most geeks really bad because any good engineer knows that sales is really the art of getting paid to spew bullshit, right? There’s nothing a geek quite hates as much as marketing people or sales people.
But at the end of the day, you, Mr/s Geek-prenuer, are going to have to sell. You’ll need to sell yourself, your product, your idea, and hopefully, finally, your company.
If you’re having a hard time swallowing that you’re going to need to be one of those bullshitters, let me give you something to think about: True salesmanship is an engineering exercise whereby the salesperson’s job is to fully understand the customer’s need and then engineer a solution using products and services supplied by the company. Once you understand that the very best sales are done as a full-on engineering exercise, it all becomes quite easy to do. But you’ll still have to shower.
Here’s a Forbes article, “Sales Lessons For Tongue-Tied Techies” that’s good food for thought.
Using Ajax on your next Web app?
/in ObservationsEver wonder how Google did that cool UI for gmail and for it’s mapping service? They used Ajax which stands for Asynchronous JavaScript and XML.
Some people think that Ajax has the potential to let people write simple applications that might replace many common functions provided by Microsoft Office. This is kinda ironic because Microsoft is the inventor of Ajax.
Anyway, if you’ve got a pretty complex UI problem, you might consider adding some Ajax to make it work a little better. Read this Wired article, “Web Software Challenges Microsoft“.
Offshore tutoring right into your home
/in Proof the Earth is FlatWant a tutor for your kids? Why not pick a PhD in India? Read this Wired story, “E-Tutors: Outsourcing the Coach” and tell me the Earth isn’t flat.
Geek-prenuers: got salesmanship?
/in ObservationsOK, so you wanna be an entreprenuer. Cool. Can you sell? Your answer better be “Yes!” or “I’m gonna!”.
Simple truth: if you can’t sell, you won’t succeed. Plain and simple. Now, this really strikes most geeks really bad because any good engineer knows that sales is really the art of getting paid to spew bullshit, right? There’s nothing a geek quite hates as much as marketing people or sales people.
But at the end of the day, you, Mr/s Geek-prenuer, are going to have to sell. You’ll need to sell yourself, your product, your idea, and hopefully, finally, your company.
If you’re having a hard time swallowing that you’re going to need to be one of those bullshitters, let me give you something to think about: True salesmanship is an engineering exercise whereby the salesperson’s job is to fully understand the customer’s need and then engineer a solution using products and services supplied by the company. Once you understand that the very best sales are done as a full-on engineering exercise, it all becomes quite easy to do. But you’ll still have to shower.
Here’s a Forbes article, “Sales Lessons For Tongue-Tied Techies” that’s good food for thought.
Is 3 billion customers enough?
/in ObservationsIf you aren’t thinking about developing mobile applications, think again. This Forbes article, “Mobile Content As Popular As TV?“, talks about how in 5 years, 3 billion people will watch content on their cell phones instead of their TVs.
Create a handly application for a cellphone and the numbers just can’t go wrong. I wonder if we can leverage our very own Henk Rogers to spawn a whole collection of mobile phone apps…
Small is big
/in ObservationsHere’s a great article that really supports my position that we can stay microscopically small here in Hawaii yet belt out really successful companies.
Guiding wisdom for startups-to-be (or being)
/in ObservationsPaul Graham is a great writer and a good guy. I’ve met him personally and really liked him. Here’s a really good essay he wrote that talks about how to come up with ideas for a startup.
If you desperate want to start up a company but are not entirely sure what the product or service is, read that essay.
Interesting model
/in ObservationsI had the honor and pleasure of meeting Paul Graham a few years ago when I presented Titan Key at MIT.
Since then he’s started a different kind of venture capital firm, “Y Combinator” . And I think he’s got some very good ideas that can apply here in Hawaii as well.
One really, really neat thing they did was to fund a collection of founders during summer break. The idea was that they would spend the summer to develop a prototype and then go for funding at the end. The results were pretty impressive. I think we can do this in Hawaii.
Apparently their summer efforts were so successful they are going to do it again in the winter. Here’s some details on their program. I think this approach deserves pretty serious consideration.
Presentation at University of Phoenix
/in PresentationsI recorded a screen video/audio of the presentation and it came out really good, EXCEPT between 2:24 and 12:12. When you get to 2:24 and hear silence, just FF to 12:12 and you’re golden.
It’s a WMV (Windows media) file. Mac users: sorry but you only get audio out of this.
Click here to play the presentation.
There’s one important typo you should know and that is on one slide I give my email address as a .org but it’s really a .com. The proper email address is shown at the top of each slide.
HUGE mahalos go out to:
and finally,
Mahalo Nui Everyone!
Slides to University of Phoenix Presentation
/in PresentationsHere’s a link to the PDF file of the slides I presented at the University of Phoenix.
Launch
/in ObservationsWell, today’s the day we start this puppy and I’m presenting at the University of Phoenix. Lets see how she goes!