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July 23 2010

dizablo
17:30

Questions You Should Ask Before You Quit Your Day Job [Jobs]

dayjob.jpg"Don't quit your day job" may be a running joke for folks who enjoy but can't necessarily make money from their passion, but how do you decide when quitting your day job is actually a viable option?

Personal finance blog Get Rich Slowly offers a few thoughtful suggestions for determining whether or not you're ready to quit your day job. For example:

Chasing a dream isn't for everyone. There are plenty of people who prefer the stability and security of a job. Many creative, interesting, passionate people like the advantages of a steady paycheck, good benefits, and the ability to leave work behind at the end of the day.

Before you consider quitting your day job to follow your passions, ask yourself:

  • How comfortable am I taking a risk with my livelihood?
  • Am I willing to maintain a business?
  • How will I handle the business management aspects of my new career?
  • Do I want to do this all day, every workday, or will that strip the joy from it?
  • Will my family and friends support this move?

In all, it's a well-reasoned post that delves far beyond those questions to discuss further realities, suggesting, for example, taking your dream job for a test job (it may not be as great as you expected). The post is written with your financial health in mind, but also keep in mind that sometimes quitting your day job—even when you don't have "substantial savings built up to cover the financial risk of quitting your regular job"—is a risk worth taking. (I never would've ended up at Lifehacker if I'd followed that advice.) Whether or not you agree with every piece of advice, it's a worthwhile read if you're considering leaving your 9-to-5. Photo by Y.

July 22 2010

dizablo
12:00

Consider What Your "Top Idea" is Making You Do [Thinking]

Consider What Your "Top Idea" is Making You DoEssayist and programmer Paul Graham realized that the idea one thinks about when allowed to think freely—in the shower, for example—is more than just a quiet obsessions. It's a "Top idea," and it influences every other thought, too.

Photo by stevendepolo.

Actually, what Graham argues in his excellent essay is that if you've got a top idea in your head, that idea is getting all kinds of free, enthusiastic thinking that other ideas aren't getting. That can be fine if it's a good idea that comes from a good place, but all too often, Graham writes, we find ourselves letting non-priorities become our top ideas.

I'd noticed startups got way less done when they started raising money, but it was not till we ourselves raised money that I understood why. The problem is not the actual time it takes to meet with investors. The problem is that once you start raising money, raising money becomes the top idea in your mind. That becomes what you think about when you take a shower in the morning. And that means other questions aren't.

Graham's full essay is definitely worth the read, especially if you're wondering where your own "shower" idea is coming from.

July 21 2010

dizablo
23:40

Penny the Princess

DanIzzo posted a photo:

Penny the Princess

Penny in her party outfit

dizablo
17:59
Penny the Princess
Penny in her party outfit
Tags: potd penny eyefi
dizablo
15:49

Growing Your Business: 5 Tips From the Founder of Blip.tv


This post originally appeared on the American Express OPEN Forum, where Mashable regularly contributes articles about leveraging social media and technology in small business.

Dina Kaplan co-founded Blip.TV, a video sharing platform for independent web shows, five years ago. In those five years, Kaplan has seen her business grow from a really small niche of video bloggers who were producing original video shows, to thousands of users using the site to host their own shows and upload produced videos.

The New York-based company, which shares revenue 50/50 with content producers, has scaled to 96 million video views a month and is now seeing more of its shows making more than $10,000 a quarter than ever before. In fact, Kaplan said payouts to content producers have increased 77% from Q1 to Q2 of this year.

In the last five years, Kaplan has learned quite a bit about what it takes to grow a business, with or without the help of funding. Here are 5 things Kaplan recommends to entrepreneurs.


1. Don’t Try To Be All Things To All People


Kaplan said that when Blip.tv was just starting in 2005, the company went after a discrete market. “We didn’t try to be all things to all people,” she said. Blip.tv targeted a group of people who were producing original shows for the web and saw an opportunity to make their experience better. They saw a problem that could be fixed. The market they chose was very small, she said, but one that they knew would grow.


2. Learn From Your Customers


Once the company identified their target market, they studied it. They spent time with key users who were producing original video for blogs. Kaplan said it was just a handful of people at that point, and they hung out with them, got beers with them, and did a lot of listening to learn exactly what they were looking for in a platform that would host their shows.

“We did a lot of listening and built tools that would make their lives easier,” Kaplan said. “As the market grew, we did more listening and adapted the platform to the needs of the producers of video content.”


3. Hire Experts


Kaplan stresses hiring as one of the most important aspects to growing your business. At the beginning, the founders are doing everything, but it’s important that as you grow you hire experts in the different fields your business requires. Use your personal network, friends, cousins, a professional contact, and go to industry events and meet with people in your field.

“Hiring sets up your company to be much larger than yourself,” she said. “Give it all you got. You will benefit from good recruiting.”

She also noted that the reputation and culture of the company is important in hiring. People talk, and if your company is a good place to work and has a great environment, treats its employees well, people will hear about it, she said. One of the things that Blip.tv has done is give all of its employees free lunch every day. “Sure it costs a lot of money, but it brings our company together,” she said.


4. Engage and Connect With Your Community


Connecting with your professional community is not only important in hiring, but in doing business in general. It can generate leads, partnerships, and opportunities that you may not have known were available. Kaplan said that some time should be spent with your “head down” focusing on the product, and a good chunk of the time should be spent with your “head up” meeting with people in your industry, communities of professionals, companies and other entrepreneurs.

“You should spend some of your time learning from other people and making connections,” Kaplan said. “Your business shouldn’t exist in a vacuum.”


5. Don’t Obsess Over Funding


Kaplan said companies often obsess on the funding, often at the expense of the product. She said business owners should focus on the product and market, and if the product is a great idea, the money will follow. She thinks focusing on building the product, especially for Internet companies, is the first step and then looking for revenue or funding should follow.

“The funding isn’t the scarce resource. The scarce resource is good ideas, and more importantly, good execution,” Kaplan said.


More Business Resources from Mashable:


- Growing Your Business: 5 Tips From the Founder of Foursquare
- 10 Tips for Corporate Blogging
- 5 Lessons to Learn from Web Startups
- 11 Essential Online Resources for Consultants
- 5 Online Tools for Answering Your Small Business Questions


Reviews: BLIP, Internet

More About: blip.tv, business, dina kaplan, entrepreneurs, List, Lists, small business, tips

For more Business coverage:

July 13 2010

dizablo
16:11

HOW TO: Use Game Mechanics to Power Your Business

Game Pad Image

Shane Snow is a regular contributor to Mashable and tweets at @shanesnow. This post was co-authored by Phin Barnes, a principal at First Round Capital, SneakerheadVC and creator of the Xbox game, Yourself!Fitness. He has also served as a consultant to MTV games.

Before Foursquare managed to storm social media, GPS friend finders and city guides did in fact exist. But, Foursquare quickly became a star, engaging hundreds of thousands of users in just a few months and turning them into evangelists for its product. It did this by taking the existing geo-social concept and turning it into a game. Video game-esque elements like “badges” and “mayorships” hook you long enough so that you discover the true utility of the app, and stick with it long-term.

Common game elements like points, badges, leaderboards, and levels are proven (and increasingly popular) ways to engage customers and encourage profit-driving consumer behavior. Foursquare is a great example of why these work. However, many proponents of this type of “funware” in product development and marketing miss the larger point: “How” you incorporate game mechanics is just as important as “Why” you should. A leaderboard alone does not make for a worthwhile or engaging game.

Trip Hawkins, founder of game companies Electronic Arts and Digital Chocolate, says that compelling games need to be “simple, hot, and deep.” They should be easy to pick up, instantly engaging, and offer you somewhere to go once you are engaged. Creating these kinds of games takes work.

Legions of online businesses are following this trend right now as they attempt to integrate game mechanics into their products. Investors used to hear customer acquisition plans that included, “and we’re going to make it social” or “and we’re going to make it viral.” But lately, these pitches have changed to include, “and we’re going to use game mechanics” to address customer acquisition and engagement.

Many of the “games” being built in this flurry, however, are certainly not going to be fun. Many will distract the user from the core value proposition of the application or service. At worst, copycat “game mechanics” will quickly become annoying and trite — destroying value for users and creators alike.

“One of the greatest risks is being unoriginal,” says Gabe Zichermann, author of the 2010 book Game-Based Marketing. In the short term, he says, adding soon-to-be-cliche elements like badges is OK, because any amount of additional enjoyment is good for a product. “But a good design takes into consideration the long-term scalability. If you think you can end with badges, that’s where you’re [expletive].”

Poor or late planning gives rise to boring (too easy) or frustrating (too hard) games. Since the goal of game mechanics is to keep customers coming back and doing what you want them to do, you want to stay far away from those two zones.

Game Chart Image

So how can you use game mechanics the right way and supercharge your business? We’ve distilled the process down to four steps.


1. Start With Your Vision and Work Backwards


Effective games cannot be bolted onto a service after the fact. They must be integrated into the product from the start. To work, they need to be designed with your vision in mind, or they’ll be largely meaningless.

The first thing you need to do is define your end goal. What is it you want to accomplish? What’s the big vision?

Here’s a cheesy example:

Business Vision Image


2. Make a List of Required User Actions


Now that you have defined the vision, you need to figure out what specific user actions will be required to realize it. What behavior patterns would they need to adopt in order to sustain your business model?

Think in verbs, not nouns. What do you need people to do?

Behaviors Image

Once you have this list, rank the items from most critical to least and also score them from most plausible/natural to least. Now you know where to focus your game-based psychology experiment.


3. Motivate the Most Important Behaviors


Games can be used to drive almost any user behavior. As Marc Metis, President of Digital Chocolate puts it, “Games have the potential to tap into the full range of human emotions and motivate a wide range of behaviors.” That’s the beauty and value proposition of game mechanics. Take the specific behaviors you’ve defined and plan some games that will make people do what you want. No matter what type of game you are designing, a few key principles will help:

  • Sid Meier, developer of the Civilization game franchise, defines a game as “a series of meaningful choices.” Consumers will naturally explore the choices you give them (if they believe it is worth it). Motivate them with rewards and then teach them to do what you want.

    A great example of this is Foursquare’s Newbie badge, which gives users a taste for rewards the moment they start using the service.
  • Foursquare Newbie Badge

    Mechanisms should be layered. Users should constantly be starting one task as a beginner and enjoying a sense of discovery, be in the middle and deeply engaged by another task, and mastering (i.e. getting bored with) a third. The online multiplayer game World of Warcraft is an excellent example of this. Players are constantly working on short-term quests and heat of the moment battles while long-term upgrades keep them logging back in day after day.

    These layers can exist in both tasks and in time. If you can create a sense of shared past, present, and future, your user experience will be more “sticky,” with customers/players investing time and coming back for more to deepen their history with your product.
  • Pull the consumer toward the most critical behaviors with rewards. Additionally, adjust the rewards so that the most enticing prizes are offered in exchange for the behaviors that are hardest to motivate. Zichermann says, “There’s no question that today’s tweens are going to have to be rewarded to do anything.” Make sure you’re offering rewards for the essentials.
  • Mechanisms should be designed for flexibility and growth.

Game Mechanics Image


4. Evaluate and Adapt


As with any lean startup process, you’ll only succeed if you’re willing to evaluate and adapt both the game mechanic layer and the behaviors that are critical to motivate. Both will change as you learn about your consumer, and as they learn how to play your game.

“Running a social game is a bit like being a head of a country’s Central Bank, so you are always adjusting,” says Metis. “You really have to pay attention to the finest details of user experience and merchandising.”

Re-rank and reevaluate often. Take honest looks at what users do and why. Remember, make it fun for them, not for you. Zichermann reminds us most entrepreneurs think their users’ primary motivation is to achieve. But, he says, most people — especially on the web — just want to socialize. “They’re not in it to win it, they just want to make friends.”

Make sure you understand your audience, and design your mechanics accordingly.


The Promise of Game Mechanics


Ultimately, game mechanics are not about simply having fun. They’re about helping users discover the utility in your product. Like Wile E. Coyote from the old cartoons, you want to get your users to run through the air without noticing the ground’s not there, until they reach the other side. Games can help get them to cross that ugly gap of “Why should I learn about and adopt this product?” And once they’ve crossed, you’ll have them, because they’ll feel the utility of your service and understand why your product is great.

To finish with our initial example, Foursquare’s game mechanics alone aren’t that fun. But they’re fun enough to get you to stick with the service while you figure out how useful it can really be. That’s how Foursquare nailed it.

Right now, too many companies are building a bridge to nowhere with their games simply because games are trendy. Design an experience that will delight your users and use game mechanics to show them something useful that will add value and make their lives better.


More Social Business Resources from Mashable:


- Top 5 Ways to Make Your Site More Fun
- 5 Social Media Trends to Watch Right Now
- Beyond the Checkin: Where Location-Based Social Networks Should Go Next
- What the Future Holds for the Checkin
- Are Location-Based Services All Hype?

Image courtesy of iStockphoto, Lobsterclaws


Reviews: Foursquare, iStockphoto, video

More About: business, foursquare, game mechanics, games, gaming, location, small business, social media

For more Business coverage:


July 03 2010

dizablo
22:02

Tips on Finding and Approaching Angel Investors

investment_jul10.jpgAngel investors help bridge the gap between early funding generated from friends and family and from the venture capital you hope to secure down the road. Although angel investing is arguably more informal than professional venture capital, angel investors still look for startups that can give them a return on what is a high-risk investment.

For first-time entrepreneurs, then, seeking and securing angel funding is likely their first foray into the investment process. As such, there can be lots of questions about how to find, approach, and pitch to angels. And so we've rounded up some advice from other angels and entrepreneurs on how to proceed:

Sponsor

Venture Hacks' AngelList

"AngelList pwns." That was the assessment of the founders of Blockchalk when they wrote their "lessons learned" blog post following their seed round.

Founded by Naval Ravikant and Babak Nivi of Venture Hacks, the AngelList is a curated list of angel investors, and can help facilitate introductions between angels and entrepreneurs.

Jason Calacanis on FOAFing

Entrepreneur, investor, and CEO of Mahalo, Jason Calacanis founded the Open Angel Forum late last year in order to provide investors and entrepreneurs. And angel investing was the topic of Calacanis's most recent missive to the "Jason Nation" email list.

In it, Calacanis discusses a lot of aspects of angel investing, including tips on contacting known angels directly. But here is Calacanis's suggestion on an alternative strategy, as he writes that "direct contact is super tricky, since angels get pounded when they are out in public, and they may ignore things sent directly to them by email (typically due to email overload, not malice)."

According to Calacanis, the best way to connect with an angel "is not to." Rather, he suggests, make contacts with the people angels know, respect, and do business with. "Your goal," writes Calacanis, "is to become a FOAF: a 'friend of a friend.'" Calacanis suggests the following path to FOAFing angels:


  1. Build a social media presence - via a blog, Twitter, Facebook page, comments on Hacker News, Digg and so on -- that is memorable.

  2. Pursue and engage angels' friends. Engage in conversation those individuals with whom an angel regularly communicates. Join in conversations on blogs and news sites, for example. According to Calacanis, "Every angel has their 50 trusted advisors, and it's your job to develop a credible relationship with them over a couple of months." Once that relationship is established, you can ask for an introduction to an angel.

  3. Blog about an angel's portfolio companies rather than about the angel her or himself.

  4. Challenge the angel. Although you certainly don't want to write things that make you enemies (and make you eminently unfundable), you do want to be seen as a "passionate, independent critical thinker."

Guy Kawasaki's The Art of Raising Angel Capital

Guy Kawasaki offers the following advice when approaching angels:


  1. Make sure they are "accredited" investors. In Kawasaki's words, "'accredited' is legalese for 'rich enough to never get back a penny," but their are SEC guidelines on exactly what this means and who qualifies.

  2. Don't underestimate them. Kawasaki urges entrepreneurs to find sophisticated investors who are familiar with the industry. Not only do you want their money, after all, you will benefit from their advise and connections. But don't underestimate them, Kawasaki cautions, and assume that because they're not VCs that somehow the process will be "easier."

  3. Understand what motivates them. Kawasaki suggests that this is one of the things that differentiates angel investors from venture capitalists: "Typically, angel investors have a triple bottom line," he suggests: wanting to make money, stay current with technology, and "pay back" society by helping the next generation of entrepreneurs.

ReadWriteStart Pitching Tips

We've written about pitching on ReadWriteStart several times - no surprise as it's a common concern for first-time entrepreneurs. Here are links to some of the posts where investors and entrepreneurs share their advice on how to present your case to investors effectively:

  • The Art of the Elevator Pitch: Tips on how to crystallize your presentation into a short - very short - pitch.

  • The Art of the Email Pitch: Tips on how to approach a potential investor via email.

  • The Art of the VC Pitch: A Roundup of Advice from 6 VCs: While this post addresses VC funding, some of the advice about how and when to pitch remains the same when you're approaching angels.
  • Discuss

    Tags: Tips
    dizablo
    05:03

    Indinero: A Realtime Financial Dashboard for Small Businesses


    Web technology has revolutionized finance by making it easier than ever to monitor cash flow and track trends in your spending. Mint.com has been a leader in this realm for personal finance: its technology helps you track multiple accounts, analyze spending trends, and manage financial goals.

    There isn’t a clear counterpart to Mint for businesses, though. That’s where inDinero, a Y-Combinator-funded startup, comes in.

    inDinero, which launches today, is a web-based financial dashboard for small businesses. Like Mint, it aggregates financial data from bank accounts, investments, and other sources and places them in a simple, easy-to-navigate interface where you can quickly see your income, spending, recent activity, and your financial runway.

    The app is divided into five parts: Dashboard, Income, Spending, Planning and Trends. Dashboard provides an overview of your business finances, Income provides detailed information about your income streams, Spending breaks down your different costs, Planning helps you set goals for your business, and Trends analyzes and graphs out spending and income trends in order to provide useful insights.

    Businesses need this type of information in order to minimize costs while maximizing revenues. While solutions such as Mint also aggregate financial information and analyze it, they are not focused on small businesses. We look forward to seeing inDinero’s business toolset grow and evolve.

    Image courtesy of iStockphoto, jwohlfeil


    Reviews: Mint, iStockphoto

    More About: finance, Financial, Indinero, mint

    For more Business coverage:

    July 02 2010

    dizablo
    00:55
    Multimedia Message

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    00:54
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    00:53
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    00:52
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    June 29 2010

    dizablo
    00:05

    Learning about Term Sheets

    penny_jun10.jpgEven if you plan to bootstrap your company, you should have a good understanding of financing term sheets. That's what DuckDuckGo founder and Hacker Angel Gabriel Weinberg argues in a blog post today that gives some clear and detailed instructions on where to go to learn more about investor term sheets.

    Sponsor

    As Weinberg points out, most companies will raise money at some point, and it's better to enter financing situations with a grasp of how things work so that you're less prone to make mistakes. And as such Weinberg lays out a fairly comprehensive lesson plan for gaining an understanding of the terminology in term sheets.

    Introduction to Term Sheets:
    1. Brad Feld's Term Sheet series
    2. Venture Hacks' Term Sheet Hacks

    Weinberg also points to links to sample documents (such as this Series Seed Term Sheet) so you can see what actual term sheets look like as you read these series. Having a concrete example will help you learn the definitions of key terms ("conversion," "liquidation preference," and so on).

    Intermediate Study:
    Once you understand the terms of the seed documents, Weinberg says to move on to the venture term sheets:

    1. The Startup Company Lawyer's definitions and explanations of how the terms differ in across these documents
    2. The WSGR Term Sheet Generator

    Advanced Materials:
    1. The Startup Company Lawyer's comparison of Y Combinator and traditional Series A documents
    2. Chris Dixon's advice "Don't shop your term sheet"

    Weinberg also points to the book Term Sheets & Valuations, but notes that, indeed, most of the necessary information can be found online.

    Take a week to study the material, in half-hour increments, says Weinberg. And yes, this will be on the final exam.

    Discuss

    Tags: How-Tos

    June 19 2010

    dizablo
    00:00

    June 18 2010

    dizablo
    01:41
    Penny
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    dizablo
    01:41
    Penny
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    dizablo
    01:41
    #3
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    dizablo
    01:41
    #3
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    01:41
    #3
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