With caramelised balsamic onions on sourdough bread baked by @rexromae with @2hungrybakers recipe.
Author: paolovalde
Early stage startup checklist
It’s a known fact: the vast majority of startups fail, most of them fail making the same mistakes again and again.
If you are crazy enough to be trying to beat the odds, we salute you.
At Activate Capital we have put together a programme designed to help founders like you to avoid the most common pitfalls and significantly improve your chances of success.
Here’s what we will explore with founders who will join us:
- Get Your Strategy Straight. Understand why you are doing this. Really. Not a strapline, why are you doing this, how do you want to have an impact,what concrete goals do you want to reach in the short, medium and long term.
- Business Model Design. Get clarity on how you are going to make money. How you are going to spend money. Who is going to help you doing both and how you are going to make sure that the business model will support the growth of your company.
- Your Value Proposition. Let’s understand your product or service. How does it touch people. Why would they want to use it. Why would they want to spend money for it.
- Your Market. Who are your customers? What problems do they have? What gains are they trying to get? How do you verify your assumptions?
- Impact mapping. Let’s start designing your product by creating a map of what tools are going to be needed to perform which jobs by who in order to obtain what specific goal. This will be the main guide for all your design efforts.
- Understanding the software business. Creating software is hard work, if you don’t have a background in software development it is completely different from anything you have experienced before. It’s extremely important that you understand how. And yes, there will be bugs. Lots of them.
- Prioritising for your MVP. The importance of “Minimum” in your Minimum Viable Product. It has to be embarrassing, otherwise you have spent too much time or money on it.
- Prototyping and testing. Before you start investing in a huge development project, let’s test your assumptions by building prototypes of the key moving parts of your products.
- Legal and accounting advice. It’s not only a matter of product. There are many other things that can kill you.
- Marketing & Branding. Once you will have a product you will need to get the whole world to notice. There are some key elements to keep in mind while building your marketing plan.
- Pitching. Convincing people to invest in your company is tough. We will train you to pitch your product and answer difficult questions.
- Hiring the right people. Who will be your first hire? And the second? The success of your enterprise depends on your ability to form an awesome group.
Let me know what you think about this list. And if you are one of the crazy ones: at Activate Capital applications are open for the April 2016 programme.
Cafè Duke
Happy π day!
A cure for the “tech co-founder syndrome”
One of the issues that we are trying to address at Activate Capital is the “tech co-founder syndrome” which seems to afflict so many business people trying to start their new companies.
It’s what most accelerators and investors put as a condition to their involvement when the founder of a company doesn’t have a technical background: the startup must have a tech co-founder.
This request has created an environment where founders are constantly hunting for any dude who can write a few lines of code and is available to get involved in some undefined project.
It’s not that I don’t understand why savvy investors would want that: a company based on a digital platform which doesn’t “own” its own technology is in a very shaky position.
But looking for any tech co-founder is not the solution either. In most cases an unexperienced business person just wonders off and after a long search ends up finding the wrong person.
This is one of the reasons that lead us to form Activate Capital: our intention is to invest in early stage companies and become their “tech co-founder”, but with the weight of a full team of professionals who have been developing digital platforms for a long time.
Because it’s not just about tech. These days to build a competitive digital platform you need UX designers, software architects, project managers, front-end developers, back-end developers, and the list goes on and on.
So, if you know anybody with a great business idea and the crazy impulse to start a new business, please send her or him to Activate Capital: we need to talk!
Spaghetti piccanti con gamberi e guanciale
Oh well…
At the end of the day
Introducing Activate Capital
Okay, this is the new thing I’m doing: investing in early stage startups.
I think that the methodology that we have developed both with Activate Media and M/V over the last few years is incredibly effective to maximise the chances of success of new companies.
So this is the plan: find ideas and companies that we like, put them through an intense 12 days over 6 weeks programme, then invest ourselves and/or help them rise capital to launch their product.
Further thoughts and considerations soon.
Sunny Sunday Morning
Béchamel
Friday
first radicio col poc on the Grove
In the clouds
All my bags are packedI'm ready to go
Wednesday
Tuesday
Monday
Sunday
Everybody likes it #ossobuco
Home sweet home #ossobuco
Waiting for dinner
Instagram Image
Chelsea Sunset
Make sure your iPhone backup is encrypted (if you want to save your health data)
Bye bye
Birdwatching
I'm invisible
Palazzo Aedes
Farmacia ceiling
have yourself a merry little bondage
Instagram Image
And goodnight
Good morning
Nice hike in my old 'hood
On my way home
Dutch sky
London – The City
Not too bad…
Instagram Image
Jasmine tea
WordPress.com, the desktop app
Here it is: the new WordPress.com desktop app.
There was a time when desktop apps to edit web sites were needed because editing in the browser was such a lousy experience.
But then Dave started adding buttons to the pages of his sites that read “Edit this page”. I have always thought that this was an extremely powerful tool: rather than having to dig in the bowels of the back-end of a content management system every time you needed to change something, you just went to the bit you needed to edit and hit a button. There and then.
With today browsers you can do even better: you can just click on a bit of text and, if you have the priviledges, you can edit it.
For the last couple of years we tried to use this “edit in the front end” approach for most of our projects (for example La Libreria dei Ragazzi and AgriProFocus are all edited in the front-end).
So, what do I think of a desktop app to edit a web site? Is it even more removed from the site than the back-end? Hard to say. So far I enjoyed writing this post on my blog. It has been a long time.
I don’t think anyone is reading this anymore…