Jun 01

Ruby on Rails has made a really important contribution to reducing the barriers for web software start-ups, and for this @DHH and the core Rails team deserve the highest accolades.

Rails is a main component of the technology stack behind many hot Web 2.0 companies, including 37 Signals and Twitter, so it’s hard to not get excited about using Rails to build a startup–unless you are a Windows user.

The mainstream Rails crowd is unabashedly Mac users, and I respect their preference. Rails IS available for Windows, but this is a totally different (and much more difficult) experience than in the Mac world. Rails development on a Mac is kewl; Rails development in the Windows world is not.

To my delighted surprise, Microsoft gets all this–the game-changing simplicity (and low costs) of the “Rails way” and the market opening on the Windows platform. They get it all the way, and they put their money where their mouth is via their BizSpark program.

BizSpark allows starving startups free access to all Microsoft products for three years, and they have fully embraced the MVC application architecture popularized by the Rails crowd.

If you are an aspiring start-up who would rather leverage your existing Windows machines than triple your hardware costs in order to effectively use the free Rails stack, you owe it yourself to check out BizSpark.

I am not normally a Microsoft cheerleader, but this is one really important area in whch they get it. Congrats to whomever in Redmond had the courage to show true leadership.

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Mar 13

One of my HaggleWire co-founders and I got “out of the building” this morning to work the Customer Discovery phase of the Customer Development process as first defined by Steve Blank. (See Essential  Resources for a more complete list of references.)

As a repeat entrepreneur, I have experienced the value of talking to potential customers before building something (see Entrepreneurial Rebirth, Part 1), but I had forgotten about the raw thrill it is to talk to someone about how my passion might be able to help them with their passion. What a rush!

Our prospect–let’s call him John–runs a busy shop selling products and services to consumers. This is a classic bricks & mortar retail operation like found in every community. As is the case for most consumer-focused businesses, Saturday is a peak-traffic day at John’s shop, but we managed to get his attention for a couple of chunks of time totaling about 30 minutes. (He’s a generous guy; my partner knows how to pick ‘em.)

Setting Expectations–Almost Too Late

When we tried to set the tone of the conversation by mentioning that we chose him to run some ideas by because one of us is a happy customer and we noticed he is already interacting with consumers on a couple of the ratings sites like InsiderPages, he immediately assumed we were there to sell him advertising.

I just committed all of my co-op advertising dollars for this year on <legacy phone book ad provider trying to join the 21st century>.

We quickly retraced our steps, assuring him that we were not there to sell him anything and that our concept did not involve advertising. This worked, but he was immediately pulled away to do business for about the next hour.

Elevator Slap

When he returned, we summarized our basic idea with an elevator pitch approximating “Our idea is to create a web site which will be an online marketplace where merchants compete for consumers’ business.”

In reply to my question of “Does this idea resonate with you?” he said

“I have no idea what you are talking about, but I do know that I get 10-12 deals a week right now from <SomeVerticalSight>, and I don’t have to do any work to get that business.”

He added:

“Don’t expect me to go use some web site to pitch for business. I barely know my e-mail address, and I rarely use the Internet.”

Pivot Time

Regrouping quickly, we asked him to describe the process he uses to respond to telephone calls from customers interested in his products and services. After some give & take Q & A’s with us, it was apparent that his process to clinch a deal from an inbound phone call followed a repeatable pattern. Tapping what we had originally thought was our “2.0″ feature wish-list, I asked him:

“What if we provided a service which could respond automatically–using your quoting rules and pricing–to requests consumers make on a web site. This would mean you would not have to spend time on the phone for those deals, and —”

He cut me off with

“I’ll give you X percent of each of those deals.”

MVP Marching Orders

One interaction does not Customer Development make, but I can tell you that the “X” from the quote above is a meaningful number, so we feel confident that we defined a value proposition for at least one member of our target audience (i.e., merchants, the market segment which will pay the bills).   We now know what to build as our first iteration of a “minimum viable product.”

As we concluded our visit, John agreed to actively work with us in the coming weeks to validate our prototypes and help us refine our offering. We offered to cut him a sweet deal for a while in exchange for helping us do all this, and we floated out of his shop on our entrepreneurial high.

Some Lessons Learned

We had prepared a set of questions for this meeting, but we assumed we would need to be flexible about how the conversation evolved; we obviously nailed that one. Here are our take-away lessons from today’s Customer Discovery session:

  1. Shut Up, but Listen Actively – It was only by repeatedly engaging John, but letting him speak most of the time, that we kept ourselves positioned to shape the conversation.
  2. Be Flexible – We were intruding on John’s busiest time, so we cheerfully invested about two hours of time–and morphed our questions quickly–in order to mine this priceless feedback.
  3. Keep Focused – We may have landed our first customer (that jury is still out), but our objective was to uncover what value proposition–if any–our idea had for this prospect. We were prepared for that answer to be “none,” and getting that answer (not a customer) was our primary goal. Every question we asked was focused on that goal.

Next

During the next week or so, we will be building the first iteration of our MVP for “review” with John. I use “review” (with quotes) because John already told us that he will not use a web site, so we will actually be showing John the outcome (i.e., the direct benefits to him) of our prototype. (Who would have thunk that a real customer would be focused on the business benefits above the kewl technology, eh?)

In Part 2 of this series, I’ll share the highlights of that process. Stay tuned.

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Feb 05

I have been devouring every bit of current wisdom about the current state of the start-up art the past few weeks (see Essential Resources for links)–including the debate about the pros and cons of taking on co-founders. (Answers.onstartups.com has several posts on this topic, including this one.)

I have also been struggling with getting as passionate about my initial ideas as I need to be.

To tackle both of these issues, I had lunch the other day with a colleague I respect and trust, and I asked him if he had ever thought about doing a start-up. His eyes lit up, and we are brainstorming several ideas. (He did not do back-flips of excitement over my initial ideas, so that issue is resolved nicely.)

Doing a start-up part-time and on a shoestring has its own set of special challenges I will hopefully write about extensively later, but I already feel renewed energy (which is saying something, given my stratospheric baseline energy levels) now that I have a partner.

Stay tuned for occasional updates about this dimension of the adventure.

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Dec 20

While I have not been blogging the past couple of weeks, I have been narrowing down my ideas for what to “start.” In the process, I discovered Eric Ries and his “Lean Startup” movement, and this perfectly describes my approach to this process.

Anyway, I have settled on a company name: 42fingers and its first two product ideas:

  1. DoneWisely: GTD  with the Wisdom of the Crowd;
  2. FloorPlansDatabase: Online Real Estate Floor plans with a unique, long-lasting, twist.

I have been thinking about the online floor plans idea for years, and I discovered during the past few weeks that the software tools to make it practical have recently become available. This is very exciting, but this idea will take a bit more effort to validate than the GTD idea, so I am focusing my initial prototyping and market validation efforts on DoneWisely.

In the spirit of the Lean Startup philosophy, however, I will determine quickly whether this idea has legs. I really think it does (despite–or perhaps because of–the competition in this space), but if not, I’ll quickly move on to the next idea.

Confused? Check out that Eric Ries blog. He explains it much better than I can, and I need to get working on my first idea.

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Dec 09

Us start-up types probably need to have at least some hyperbole in our veins to be in this world, but “re-birth” may not be a stretch in describing my journey.

About 20 years ago, I was a very young and impatient business (marketing/sales) guy who understood software technology–at least on paper. I had worked at a few technology companies, and I was really itching to do a start-up. On business trips (we did lots of those back then), I would lug a few programming books to study at night and on airplanes. I also made it a point to hang around with the smartest programmers at work to understand their perspective about software and how their talents were being used and appreciated (or not).

Before I jumped into the start-up world, I pitched my idea to senior management at my employer (a pretty great company); they declined, but–despite the fact I was becoming a competitor in the lower end of their market–they wished me all the best. 

Armed with boundless energy, my plan for using software to bring dramatic innovation to a willing market, and my nest egg of zero dollars, I willingly became unemployed and devoted 80-hour weeks to finishing my business plan. (Yes, most people really serious about start-ups back then did 20+ page business plans, and those plans included tedious maket analysis and countless hours invested in financial forecasting out to five years or more. And yes, this exercise was of zero value compared to actually launching the business and living the resulting lessons.)

To be fair to my history, I need to remind myself that despite the software-driven “secret sauce” of my business idea, the actual business was capital-intensive, requiring hundreds of thousands of dollars of equipment. As a result, my initial focus had to be on finding seed funding. At about this time, Saddam Hussein invaded Kuwait, and the availability of funding immediately dried up.

Having no money for a cash-devouring start-up just as Gulf War 1.0 was rocking the capital markets was not about to get in my way, and I did manage to scrape up enough cash to buy some used equipment, sweet-talk a former colleague into writing some key software libraries for the price of  a new laser printer and build out a production facility for next to nothing–all because I secured a signed letter-of-intent (“if you build it, I will pay”) from my first  customer. (FYI to younger readers: Back then, all customers were paying customers).

This customer–a leader in his market niche who later picked up the phone to get us into several more customers in that market–committed to risk the timing of his cash flow on the concept I was pitching. (I went to the sales call with the letter-of-intent language on a floppy disk, and I printed it out on his letterhead for him to sign.) As proud as I still am of that moment, this product launch experience was not all soft puppy-dogs and roses for either of us. Before we were solidly live, I put his cash flow in serious peril, and I silently listened to him threatening (as he pounded on my locked office doors on a Saturday afternoon) to break my legs if I didn’t resolve the problems yesterday.

That I became arguably proficient in C programming over that weekend-long “do-or-die” marathon is what preserved this guy’s cash flow, allowed me to make payroll and positioned us to get our next customer. 

And I was hooked on the adrenaline-fueled exhilaration of the start-up experience.

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Nov 30

Yeah, I know: I haven’t even really done anything yet, and I’m already whining.

Here is why:

  1. I drive about 60 miles each way to my real job; in Washington DC area traffic, that burns 3 hours each day for the round trip. (Unfortunately, my work location is not near trains or subway, so I cannot take advantage of that kind of “idle commute” time.)
  2. Many evenings, I have a kid to pick up or shuttle somewhere. We live out in the country, so nothing is closer than 20 minutes each way.
  3. I have a toddler, and I am not able to even think about non-toddler activities until 9:00 or so on most nights.
  4. I have to get up by 6:00 weekday mornings to make it to the office at a decent time.
  5. I am not as focused as I need to be, so when I finally do spend some time on start-up stuff, I am not very productive (and I’m tired, and whiny, etc.)

Pitiful, isn’t it? So here is what I’m doing about it:

  1. Start collecting (and playing) podcasts most relevant to the process, ideas under consideration, technology topic du jour, etc. to listen to while driving.
  2. Enjoy these opportunities to be with my (older) kids while I still have them.
  3. Savor every moment until toddler bedtime, then FOCUS for a good hour or two.
  4. Get up at 5:00 or 5:30 to start the day with a burst of focus.
  5. Stop acting like a big-company employee slacker, and get back into that kick-butt “zone” this stuff takes. (Just subscribed to RescueTime to see if the external nudge can help sharpen this.)
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