My morbid mission for Facebook !

Just briefly! Just spoke to a long-lost friend of mine who called me out of the blue and tried to explain it to him. I feel very strongly about Facebook, not because I think it’s a great service—it’s no surrogate for real friendship, that’s for sure—but because it works well for people like me who have moved around a lot internationally over the years.

Everyone I collect in Facebook—and I sometimes do feel like a coin-collector—is someone that I have shared an experience with. Whether it’s my family, kindergarden-friends in Germany (none yet, I’m afraid), highschool-friends in the Netherlands, uni-friends in the UK, bloggers on Tech IT Easy, etc. etc. I want to keep a life-line connected to all of them.

Why? Well, I have a master-plan, which is that when I die, you will get sent an invite to my funeral !!! As a matter of fact that would make a great facebook-app, I think!

Facebook in 50 years.jpg

Now it really is the weekend! Enjoy it, folks!

Vincent

Entrepreneurial mantra: have your revenue model prove your business idea

The pavlov business model.jpgIf that phrasing sounds a little weird, let me explain. Over these last three days, I’ve been watching Dharmesh Shah’s really great presentation on what he knows about startups, in which he talks, amongst other topics, about the attention economy vs. the wallet economy. If you haven’t already, you should really check it out!

The attention economy is based on eyeballs, on non-paying visitors to your site or users of your app that, through some magical reasoning, will translate into clicks on advertising, eventually leading to income to you the entrepreneur. I call that magical because no one I know of actually clicks on adverts.

The wallet economy is based on eyeballs with little hands reaching out of it that hold cash with which they pay you. I serve product A, it costs $20, you pay, I just gained $20 (minus cost of goods sold). The feedback is instantaneous and you don’t have to wait for X000 customers to land on your site and 0.000X% of them clicking on adverts.

This is pretty much the way the world has always worked, with the exception of newspapers and, arguably, the internet is one big newspaper (seriously lacking in editors).

It’s very easy to go the attention route, because it’s very easy to build soft-/webware in the first place. When you start a business in the real world, you make real investments, usually with the help of external funding like banks, that want to see a real return on their money. When you start a “digital” startup, you need a PC, you need to know some code, you need to spend $20 on a domain and $10-50 per month on hosting. The pressure isn’t there to really push for every dollar of income, because you aren’t feeling the banks et al. pushing down on your back. As a matter of fact, you can just set up a service, and go pursue another career, waiting for it to magically attract enough eyeballs to make you millions.

It’s nice, in theory, but it’s not what entrepreneurship is about. Entrepreneurship is like the film “There will be blood.” Life is tough, you have to fight for every drop of oil, people hate you and you will probably end up killing (=divorcing) a member of your family in the process.

And that kind of work deserves the instant gratification that cash for your product provides.

The end. Have a nice weekend, y’all!

Vincent

Where do you advertise for entrepreneurs?

It’s a fair question and one which is keeping us stunned for a moment. As I already mentioned, I have recently been engaged in a business development project, in which I, along with two others, have been developing a business case for a project in the wine-industry. The advantage is that a business plan is more or less* ready (*: I’ll write a future post on how I think such projects can be improved), and that there will be a certain base-salary. The disadvantage is that, unlike most salaried positions, I know, it will be extremely hard work and you will, apart from some physical labour, be responsible for building a market (which can be fun, but requires a certain determination). And… a big and, you have to be living in the Netherlands.

Following is the text of the advert, which we have placed on a wine-university-site:

wijn ondernemer advertentie.jpg

So far we haven’t received an enthusiastic response, which leads me to believe that we have to use different platforms for our search. I put it here, even though I know that most of you aren’t in the target-audience—i.e. living in the Netherlands—and the work is also fairly low-tech: it’s a p2p—people to people—business.

But one of you maybe has some experience in this. Where would you suggest that we look for entrepreneurial folk? I’ll take the person that offers the best response out for a drink, next time they’re in Amsterdam or I”m in Paris!

Vincent

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