Journal of a First-Time Entrepreneur

A GenY's Adventures in Entrepreneurship 

Thoughts on #LeanCoffeeTO 29 – The Fast and the Focused

I went to my first-ever #LeanCoffeeTO this morning*, and it was, without a doubt, one of the most productive and meaningful startup-related conversations I've ever had the pleasure to be involved in. So, before I get into my thoughts, I should probably thank "The Leadership Team," and especially Mark Reale, who was the catalyst for my finally attending a session.

If anyone from this morning's meetup is reading, I'm sorry most of these notes are focused on my interpretations, not your situations. Since I'm new to the discussion, I found it easier to make sense of the back-and-forth by relating it to my own mental models and situations I've experienced.

1. Thought: Lean == CBT, not anti-depressants

There was a lot of talk in the beginning about the "science" of lean, and whether or not it could reliably produce results. This sparked my first meaningful thought of the morning: that lean is a process that must be followed, not a pill that will solve everything.

People who are diagnosed with Major Depression tend to be prescribed at least one of two solutions: engage in Cognitive-Behavioural Therapy (CBT) or something modelled after it, and/or take some anti-depressants. The former is a lengthy process that trains you to recognize your thoughts for what they are and disengage from your self-destructive habits. The latter is a pill that you pop.

Neither CBT nor anti-depressants are 100% successful, but I imagine that sustained effort in CBT (beyond a 12-week program) trends towards it, while continuing to take unresponsive drugs just doesn't. Further, CBT definitely protects against relapse much more than anti-depressants do.

Coming back to lean: it's a process. It's not 100% successful off the bat. But if you earnestly keep at it, you'll likely end up hitting your goals; you'll also be better protected against costly mistakes. If you see it as a magic pill, you're doing it wrong.

2. Customer development is a subset of user development

Adil, from My City Lives, subtly introduced the decoupling of these concepts. He's optimizing his current product for its users, as they're pursuing a two-sided business model.

In most cases, customer development is ideal: you want to find the people who will pay you for a product, then build the product to their specs to minimize waste. But two-sided business models – where users and/or their contributions are the valuable pieces (ex: Facebook, YouTube, Wordpress) – need to focus on the user first, since the only way to generate the value is to satisfy the users.

There is one caveat: a two-sided business that engages in user development before validating at least one way to derive value from the user base is ludicrous. I'm reminded of a friend who recently sold his startup – which still hadn't shipped product, but had secured and organized scarce resources – because he had engaged with many of the markets that could derive value from what he was building, and knew how to spin his user-centric product for them.

With the decoupling established, I started seeing customer development as a specific form of user development. With user development, you're trying to figure out how you can deliver value to your users. With customer development, you're trying to figure out what value you need to deliver in order to get paid.

Thinking of customers simply as transactions has always seemed self-destructive to me. Instead, focusing on them as a specific – and, without a doubt, the most important – subset of "users you bring smiles to" is a much more natural way for me to think.

3. Generating assumptions != validating assumptions

I had always considered "the problem interview" to be more of a validation process than a generation process, but I realize now I was mistaken. You don't have to go into a meeting with a clear enough idea of the product, then try to pivot around it. In fact, in the early stages, I realize now how self-destructive that can be.

Instead, Cameron and Max from Big Bang Technology gave a beautiful and concise description of the two possible interviews you could have:
  • Problem interviews to generate assumptions. In these, you learn about a customer**'s existing behaviours and assumptions. The goal is to supplement all of your readings about a market segment and develop a full mental model of your customer.
  • Solution interviews to validate assumptions. In these, you discuss your hypotheses (and maybe mockups/early prototypes) of your proposed solution with customers. The goal is initially to figure out what the end looks like, and becomes a process of correcting course as you approach it.
4. Market focus --> product focus --> market focus

Someone in the group was talking about scheduling software he was building for a specific niche. I stumbled across my words in an attempt to phrase the "Have you determined that this is the optimal niche for you? And if so, how did you do it?" question. Cameron rightly called me out that this comes from seeing elements of Moore's Crossing the Chasm (affiliate link) in case studies I've read and heard.

The conversation evolved into a "you need to pick a niche" talk, which is an element of what I was trying to get at, but not the question itself. Luckily (for me), someone whose name I didn't catch really clarified the two processes involved: market focus and product focus.

This guy stated that some people build lean companies with a product focus (product is king, how do we optimize our product for our customers?) while others take a market focus (markets are king, which market has an interesting and valuable problem for me to solve?).

What I've been coming to believe recently is that the strongest companies will first take a market focus to find a problem, then turn to a product focus to establish what the Minimum Viable Product (MVP) looks like, then turn back to market focus to test whether their niche is the optimal one.

The process would look something like this:
  1. Market focus. Talk to a bunch of markets: Fortune 500 IT directors, factory floor managers, concert promoters... basically, anyone you can get your hands on. Find a problem one of them would pay you to solve that you believe you can solve. Confirm with some other members of the niche.
  2. Product focus. Talk to your contacts in the niche, and maybe others like them. Find out what the MVP looks like, so you can start building. In an ideal world, build modularly.
  3. Market focus. While building, get back into exploring niches. Find out if any of them suffer from the same problem, and if the solution is even more valuable to them. For example, the factory floor managers may be willing to pay $10,000/year for your product, whereas the concert promoters who initially gave you the idea are only worth $5,000/year. You may have to shift your MVP a bit, but the difference in value generation should pay off handsomely.
The value in this approach prevents you from hitting local maxima, or from ignoring larger markets. You can eventually build the concert promoters' $5,000/year application if you want to, and chances are that that market shift would be a little easier to handle. Especially with all that extra cash...

5. How important is customer development after customers are engaged?

I don't have an example or a framework for this one yet, so this is going to be a little conceptual. Feel free to skip if that's not your bag.

At the end of the meeting, Mark pointed out that the group hasn't had a vision/re-orientation discussion in a while, and that it's about the time they assumed it would be beneficial to have such a discussion (it would be the group's third). Ultimately, the attendees thought that things were still going smoothly, so they didn't really need to.

Honestly, this struck me as a hypocritical approach: if customer validation is one of the pillars of lean, and these guys are the group's customers... why wouldn't they continue to ensure they're on the right track? Why wouldn't the group review its learnings from the past couple of months, and try to figure out what milestones they hit, and what the next few months should bring?

More broadly, how intent should a company be on check-ins with its customers? Obviously, you want to prove that you're generating value for them, however you do it. But once that value is established, should you continue checking in, even if all signs point to yes?

Not having these types of discussions in "the good times" seems like another contributor to hitting local maxima, and to the flatlining of a great company or product's growth. The best analogy I have is meditation: research into meditation's effects on well-being have shown that its effects directly correlate with a regular habit; this is why people are encouraged to practice regularly, not just when they're feeling good.

6. Conclusion

This was a long post, so thank you for making it this far. Since you've made it down here, I have a couple of questions for you:
  1. What am I wrong about?
  2. Was this interesting? If so, which of the above points would you like me to expand upon?
  3. Have you been thinking similar things? If so, what are your thoughts?
  4. If I write this type of content in the future, should I split it into different posts, or compile them as they are here? (Note: assume the actual content is exactly the same.)
---
*Admittedly, I did pass through for the last 10 minutes of a session a few weeks ago. But this was my first time for the full shebang.
**I used "customer" in this section to keep the talk relevant to current discussions. Obviously, these apply to user development, too. But let's see if that idea sticks, first...

Comments [4]

How to Kick Ass as a Conference Attendee

The TL;DR Summary

 To paraphrase The Rock: "Know your goals and shut your mouth."

The Pre-Show

Yesterday, I had the pleasure to attend AccelerateMTL. I wasn't a speaker. I wasn't in the running for the CIX Accelerator. I wasn't one of the conference organizers, nor is my company part of their portfolios. I didn't even have a big announcement to share (yet).

Even though I knew a sizable chunk of the folks in the room... I wouldn't be able to get the introductions I wanted, or the follow-up conversations I needed, unless I stood out.

So I did what any entrepreneur with some gumption would do: I wrote down my goals:

  1. To get at least 2, but preferably all 3, of the keynote speakers to call me over to chat.
  2. To enhance every attendee's experience at the event (as I wanted to be asked to follow up with most of the organizers)

Thinking about these two goals, I remembered a lesson I learned back when I promoted nightlife events in Montreal: everyone loves a good ego-stroke. (Also known as the "all great parties have a party photographer" rule.)

Then I remembered my 2010 Halloween costume, and how people loved taking photos with me. In fact, the costume is currently hanging on a wall at a friend's office, where people still occasionally pose with/next to it!

(download)

The Game-Day

Eureka. Who wouldn't love to take surreal photos with Brad Feld, Dave McClure, and Howard Lindzon? (Answer: very few people.)

(download)

Something this weird needs a partner to pull it off. So major thanks go out to David Chouinard, from TEDxConcordia, who was instrumental in pulling this all together. The conference was amazing, and speakers like Tara Hunt and Lenny Rachitsky (among others) are still seeing tons of love. So do yourself a favour: check out TEDxConcordia, and follow the guy.

A bunch of photographers also helped little ol' smartphone-less me. Thanks a ton Jordan, Jonas, RobinKaram, Lino, and Satish!

The Results

As you saw in the gallery above, we got a ton of great shots. And made people smile!

There were also a bunch of tweets and retweets, extending the experience's reach beyond the venue's walls.

And when it comes down to work?

  1. After their Q&A sesh (during which we wore the masks in the second row), Dave and Howard called us over to laugh and say hi.
  2. The conference organizers laughed, let us hang a 2'x4' poster* in the venue, and many invited me to catch them up on what's new on these fronts.

Half_poster

The Lesson

Know your goals and shut your mouth. It's not sexy to speak to a "lowly" attendee. So get sexy, not chatty.

---

*Thanks a thousand for the design, Affan!

Posted from Montréal, Canada

Comments [3]

Scheduling: the ultimate productivity hack?

The History

 Last September, after working on YouPhonics for 9-11 months (depending on where you put the start point), I decided to continue pursuing my Bachelor's degree. Most Some people called me crazy, but I had my reasons.

No, I didn't stop working on my startup; instead, I enrolled in only two courses – both of which could be applied to aspects of my business.

What I wasn't expecting, however, was the workload. Yes, I knew there would be coursework. And yes, I knew that YouPhonics demanded my time and attention. As did Cronyizm (more on that when I talk about coding), and a few other programs/opportunities I was pursuing. Not to mention some volunteer work.

Within a month, I was drowning. There weren't enough hours in the day to do anything. Some nights, I couldn't sleep – there was way too much work that had gotten ahead of me, and none of my systems could deal with it. Only one friend knows about this, but for an hour in the wee hours of some December night/morning, I was thinking about suicide. (Don't worry, I'm okay.)

I had tried GTD. Inbox Zero. Tested Pomodoro. Basecamp. Making a ToDo.txt. Writing this blog. Seriously – nothing was sticking. Somehow, I managed to ride out that wave, but I knew that, come January, I'd need a new solution.

So last night, I tried something new: meticulously scheduling every minute of my day.

And holy shit: today has been my most productive day in well over a year.

The Schedule

Here's a rough sample of what today's schedule looked like:
  • 7AM - 8:30AM // Wake up, shower, leave (bring gym clothes)
  • 8:30AM - 9AM // Transit
  • 9AM - 10AM // Workout + rinse-down (try kettle-bell swings)
  • 10AM - 11AM // Readings for PSY322
  • 11AM - 11:15AM // Chat with Doug re: radio opportunity
  • 11:15AM - 12:15PM // Answer backlog of emails (notable: SR&ED credits)
  • 12:15PM - 12:30PM // Check RSS
  • 12:30PM - 1:30PM // Lunch (Ravisoups?)
  • 1:30PM - 2PM // Play!
  • 2PM - 2:30PM // Write + send Cronyizm email
  • 2:30PM - 4PM // Move sales + recruitment prospects forward. If leftover time, do technical research
  • 4PM - 5PM // Read "Selling to Big Companies" (book)
  • 5PM - 5:30PM // Transit
  • 5:30PM - 6:30PM // Lessons in Rosetta Stone (Japanese)
  • 6:30PM - 7PM // Play!
  • 7PM - 7:15PM // Check RSS
  • 7:15PM - 8PM // Read saved articles + watch TED <-- I read articles on transit, and thus am now blogging
  • 8PM - 10PM // Drive back to campus for dinner + visiting UC Follies rehearsal
  • 10PM - 11:30PM // Carlos' birthday. Leave no later than 11:30.
  • 11:30PM - 11:50PM // Drive home
  • 11:50PM - 12AM // Wash up
  • 12AM - 12:30AM // Chat with friends OR read "Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man"
  • 12:30AM - 7:30AM // Sleep
There were a few things in here that got shifted. Notably, because of logistics, the workout ended up only being for 30 minutes, and I had to move my planned "Get pants hemmed" to tomorrow, because the tailor needed to leave before the time I had scheduled for him.

Still, all in all, I made more significant progress towards my goals today than I have... umm... in a single day ever?
  • Spent 30 more minutes in the gym than all of 2010 combined
  • Read (and lightly critiqued) two academic papers
  • Did research for (and will soon say howdy to) the student theatre company that helped turn me into who I am
  • Took the next step towards getting ~$25K back into my company
  • Talked with a friend I didn't know well enough for 90 minutes!
  • Maintained Cronyizm
  • Improved relations with sales and co-founder prospects (which will hopefully bring in 6-figure contracts and boost morale/productivity)
  • Am now 3 lessons into my goal of learning a new language (want to broaden my thinking)

The Conclusion

Admittedly, this is the effects from one day, not yet a pattern. And yes, there are definitely improvements to be made; I should have planned the tailor out better, and the transit times were just a bit off (I forgot to factor in walking to AND from the subway stations).

What's important, though: this day has already been more productive (and, surprisingly, more pleasant) than any given day last semester. If these effects can be replicated even once a week – which I'm sure they can – I'm already in way better shape.

I'll check in next week to let y'alls know if the claim held true.

Comments [15]

Reboot! (Topics to come this next week or two)

Reboot_characters

Wow. It's been a while.

I could apologize for the lack of posts, but I'm not sorry. I got kind of burned out from stuff (the specifics will remain fodder for coming posts), and what was supposed to be a school project (a study of daily blogging as a productivity/happiness tool, using this very own blog) ended up not happening.

So, for your benefit and mine, I'm writing this post separately. It's probably only worth it for my subscribers/Twitter followers, and for my own reference when I come back in a week, realizing that I've forgotten the urgency of the major lessons this past year has taught me.

This blog is taking an overhaul. No longer will it be a daily to-do list. Instead, I'm going to post less often (no more than thrice/week), and I'm going to be more insightful in doing so. Hopefully, you readers will get a lot more value out of it. I'll definitely benefit from the discussion/venting.

Topics we're going to run in the very near-future:
  • Scheduling's effects on productivity
  • Why B2C and B2B just don't fit
  • The myth of "LAZOR FOCUS"
  • Reminder: out-hustle your competition
  • "Why you need to learn to code," or "thinking like your computer"
But the general shift is more conversational. Fuck this noise. Time to signal.
Gamecu_s
WARNING! INCOMING GAME!

Comments [0]

I'm not a liar...

There's just a little something going down, which is barring me from blogging for at least another week, possibly two more.

But I'm coming back.

And, as you begin to speculate, the news is only latently sexy. You'll understand soon...

Comments [1]

Okay, for reals this time -- Aug. 30, 2010

Soooo funny story -- last week, Tuesday was a nice full day of work. As was Wednesday. Then, my internet decided to cut out on Thursday, which meant that roughly half of it was spent on the phone with Videotron, the other half spent doing non-internet-based stuff (which had a pretty limited queue). Friday was the same. But frankly, by the end of Thursday, with little progress having been made anywhere (the internet was still down), I was pretty demoralized, which probably lent to the do-little of Friday.

Fortunately, the weekend away at Bitnorth completely recharged me. It was the perfect cap to the insanity of travelling that just happened -- 48 laid-back hours, where every attendee had to contribute/present somehow. Imagine some sort of TED/Foocamp/Ignite-like event, but organized like a pot luck.

I presented, as I mentioned before, on Music & Community.It ended up being a 10-minute "chat," in which I just told a collection of short stories of my growth as a music-lover over the years, and tied it all back to three simple lessons:
  1. Build for experiences -- especially *shared* experiences -- not just consumption.
  2. Let your fans grow on.
  3. No one should ever want to sleep with me.
Hopefully, I'll get to share the talk soon, as I know it was filmed. Other awesome highlights that immediately come to mind were "Your Dog Isn't Cute, It's Inbred," Ilana's presentation on her new toy from Twonicorn Toys, Alistair's clear love for his daughter in "Tablets vs. Unions," Sean's brutal honesty in his Q&A on what it's like to have been adopted, Jonathan's history of the fall of the Incas, Rocio's tamales, Mrs. Alex's icebreakers... okay, there was a lot of greatness. And a lot of great people.

Today was spent pretty much equally catching up on the 5 or 6 days of internet-less-ness (which included finding a hiring lead! Maybe I won't have to post this job after all) and writing an awesome proposal. Tomorrow will be chock-full of administrative goodness, finishing this proposal, and starting a quick summary of some thoughts I've been having to send to a lady who will hopefully become a mentor/friend/maybe-even-advisor. 'Cuz she's awesome.

Okay, it's late, and I've got an interview in the morning. Time to close this off with something familiar...

(P.S. What do you think of this new tone? Obviously, I'll have more intelligent things to say in the future, but writing this didn't feel at all like writing my past fairly-information/opinion-less posts...)

---

Actually, hold on. While writing the "Lessons learned" bit below, I flashed back to the stark contrast of how I felt Thursday to how I felt on Saturday through today. Let me explain...

On Thursday, as I saw the work I had hoped to finish by the end of the week get pushed yet again due to external-though-related-to-me circumstances, I was demoralized. No, this ain't news -- I mentioned that above. But what I didn't explain was the extent of my demoralization.

I felt like things were stuck in a standstill. The reality of the previous 30-odd days hit me, and hit me hard: there was little in the way of objective milestones that I could proudly show off. It felt like nothing had been done, nothing had been tried, and worst of all, nothing would ever get done. I had used the saying "I've hit a brick wall" before, but that was the first time I truly, deeply felt it.

Going into Bitnorth, I was still kind of down. I don't even think Bryan, Julie, or Ray knew it when I got in the car, but I was doubting YouPhonics, doubting my resolve as an entrepreneur, doubting the assumptions I made.

I remember thinking to myself: "Shit. I've got this presentation to do, one that I still need to write, that's tangentially linked to my company. And I feel like crap about YouPhonics. What should I be doing here?"

In the end, I decided to sit and wait. I ate dinner, met new people. I laughed in the icebreaker games we played. I got all charged up on the experience.

And that's when it hit me: the togetherness I was feeling fit perfectly with the theme of "Music and Community." And, moreover, it gelled with a conversation I've been having more and more lately -- about the "generative" cycle (concisely, a positive feedback loop through Web 2.0 principles) and the fact that music is the only art form you can consume entirely passively.

Thinking of this made me remember a question Deepak Chopra asked in his book Secrets. I can't remember it verbatim, but it was something like "When you're searching for meaning, ask yourself what you think of before you go to sleep at night, and what you think of when you first wake up in the morning." Well, I had my answer. And it was this idea that powered YouPhonics.

In that moment, the answer to my conundrum was clear: YouPhonics wasn't a company or a product to me anymore. YouPhonics embodied -- embodies -- my passion, and exists to explore the questions I keep asking myself.

The next morning, I woke up, listened to people's presentations, and figured out the narrative arc for my own. And now that I'm back home... well, I'm ready for action, baby.

---

Lessons learned:
  1. For the love of God, NEVER AGAIN set so much travel time so close together.
  2. It's okay to be down. It's okay to regret. If it's too deep, don't try to power through... get back to your rootsl
  3. Apparently, I have more in me when I'm tired then I realize. Who'd'a thunk it.
Tomorrow's homework:
  1. Deal with the administrative stuff -- mainly the interview and the bank.
  2. Hiring! Chat with S, then make a gut decision on whether or not to post the job anyway (we're looking for a technical "cofounder"... experience is neato, a clear passion for music and a fun-but-reflective outlook on life is a must, and you can live wherever, though Montreal/Toronto/NYC is best).
  3. Get this proposal out the door, and hopefully that one-pager too.
  4. Respond to the comments on GetSatisfaction.
  5. Follow up with AK about the questions I had on his recent estimate.

Comments [1]

Home for a while!

Okay, that was a bust. The weekend was filled with helping my parents prep for their move, and Monday was spent doing a bit of work, napping off some of the sleep debt that remained from SF/Toronto, and packing for Vancouver. Then, thrust into conference-time I was!

Today went well. Super-short post. Sorry for the lack of, y'know, substance? Spent the day writing thank you notes (handwritten and emails), catching up on a giant backlog of emails and invitations, as well as preparing some of my old stuff for an impending move.

Tomorrow's tasks include, in no particular order:
  1. Preparing more stuff for my impending move. (2 hours, maximum)
  2. Finalizing my presentation for this weekend's Bitnorth thingie (I'm presenting for 5 minutes on Music & Community!)
  3. Responding to the remaining couple of things in my inboxes (both email and short/medium task inboxes)
If I can get those three things done tomorrow and free up Wednesday, Thursday, and Friday for pursuing more sales opportunities and recruiting, I will be super-happy.

(Oh, and I need to double-check and greenlight a bit of development, too. Can't forget that one...)

Again, sorry for the odd post. It's just been one of those non-stop, 14+ hour days by this point. Of which at least 10.5 were spent glued to this screen. Yuck.

Comments [2]

Been a long time, been a long time, been a long... you know the rest. -- Aug 13, 2010

Hoooooooo Lee.

Regular (or, at this point, formerly-regular) readers of this blog know that I'm terrible at updating while I'm on travels. Well, I just spent 24 out of the last 27 days out of town.

"But wait," you say, "that only takes us back to the 18th! Your last post was on July 9th!"

True that. But the week of the 12th was also the primetime of the Just For Laughs Festival in Montreal. And people who know me know that I have very close ties with said festival. So any non-working time was spent either at shows, or reuniting with ye olde family at the Hyatt bar. Which didn't leave much time for nightly self-reflection (who'd'a thunk it?).

BUT I'M BACK!

(Not quite. On a train at the moment. But we're ~20 minutes out of Montreal's Central Station. Which means I'll likely be posting this just as we pull in...)

"What have you been doing, Aidan? Where have you been?"

More good questions. In the interest of brevity, I'm'a post this in bullet points. It will likely still be long. And not at all comprehensive.

  • July 12-17: Montreal, Just For Laughs
    • Took Robin Ahn to see John Leguizamo. 'Twas a splendid affair!
    • Went with three friends -- one of whom recently left to Zambia for a worthy cause and is blogging about it here -- to see Noel Fielding, then to the Hyatt.
    • Organized an event for Montreal's under-30 entrepreneurs. We had an awesome time and a nice turnout at Kenny vs. Spenny, then at Benelux, then at the Hyatt. And I was super-humbled at a special entrepreneurial celebrity's guest appearance!
    • Took Jeff Talajic to "A Late Afternoon With Kevin Smith." And afterward, he taught me a bit about harnessing the power of Google Analytics! Woot.
    • Went with my brother to see Steve Martin. We even got to meet him!
  • July 18-24: NYC, New Music Seminar
    • Thanks go to the amazing David Chaitt -- and his awesome roommates -- for hosting me :)
    • Hung out a bunch with Dave and Landon, particularly at the New Music Seminar
    • Got to chat -- for nearly 2 hours! -- with the infamous Nikke Slight
    • Met with some of the lovely folks at Indaba about how we can work together and use our respective takes on online collaboration to enhance the current ecosystem.
    • After a meeting was postponed, I managed to spend a full day working! Imagine that.
    • Saw some awesome bands, and missed out on a Brooklyn Bowl experience because the wait was ridiculous.
    • Caught up with Arkadiy! It had been ages.
  • July 25-27: Montreal
    • Dealt with the to-dos that piled up while I was away.
    • Had a call with Ted Cohen about using YouPhonics with some artists' promotions -- note to self, need to follow up!
    • Properly said goodbye to Maxime (the above lady who left to Zambia) over lunch with her and Kelly.
  • July 28-Aug 2: Toronto, meetings + fun
    • Thank you, Zac, for letting me sleep on your couch yet again. Your parents are slowly becoming mine :)
    • Met with an awesome label rep about using YouPhonics for an artists' upcoming album -- note to self, need to follow up!
    • Met with some peeps about SR&ED credit applications. 'Cuz apparently what I've been doing is applicable to get 42% of my development costs back from the government! Imagine that...
    • Met Oleg Kostour and spent pretty much the entire day with him -- including a meeting with Jeff Anders -- because he's an awesome, awesome guy. No joke -- we planned a lunch at noon, and only ended up splitting around 10PM.
    • Chatted with Alkarim and Logan (two of the folks at BNOTIONS, my developers) about a couple of enhancements YouPhonics needs before we blow the doors wide open.
    • Saw off two friends -- independently -- who were leaving to England shortly (in fact, one has already).
    • Spent an entire day with only three people, in ~4 hour increments each. The breadth and depth of the conversations was fantastic, so thanks Zac, Caitlin, and Frieda!
    • Had a call with Tom Silverman about using YouPhonics with some artists' promotions -- note to self, need to follow up!
    • Met up with Gabriel Nijmeh for drinks... which was supposed to be 2 hours, but ended up being 4 (in a very good way).
  • Aug 3-10: San Francisco, meetings + fun
    • MUCHOS gracias to Andrey (and Tracy) for putting me up (and putting up with me) while I was around! They move me.
    • Virgin America (and Klout) gave me a free trip! So I went with a group of 10 others (who also had the trip), and met up with 4 other Toronto-ites down there. #ryanginger for life.
    • Met with James from Atomic PR about PR, music, and where YouPhonics needs to be in order to make use of his company's services. Within the first 3 minutes, it was clear that Atomic -- and James in particular -- are great people.
    • Went to the KloutUp and met the amazingnesses that are Megan Berry and Gregarious Narain (among many other awesome folks).
    • Had hilarious post-KloutUp shenanigans with Satish, Verne, Jon, Jo, and Ben.
    • Missed a chance to meet Debbie Landa -- note to self: need to send her an apology note, now that I have freedom to think -- because deadline'd work had piled up.
    • Went to see Phish with 7 of the guys.
    • Random road trip to Santa Cruz with Alkarim, Mark, and Guy. AMAZING.
    • Spent a day recuperating and working. Huzzah!
    • Asked a couple of questions re: a job I may soon be interviewing for (don't worry, it's very relevant to YouPhonics, and they won't be angry if I spend my spare time working on my baby).
    • Was interviewed for Hwanho's Masters thesis on Social Media + Music. 'Twas amazing.
    • Got to chat with Andrew Chen and David Hornik about their histories, what they're up to now (and/or what's exciting them these days), and what I'm up to. I felt stupid for not having anything really to ask of them, but I just wanted to meet them and hopefully start a friendly relationship. Plus, why spend favours while growth and progress are more or less on track?
  • Aug 11-13: Toronto, meetings + fun
    • Caught up on email on the flight back! HUZZAH!
    • Met Noah Godfrey for an hour-long chat. Him and Jeff Anders give me such faith in the Canadian web-entrepreneurial scene. They also set the bar nice and high for what success should look like. #mushyfeelings
    • Had a call with the always-splendid Mark Macleod -- note to self: I have a question to ask him that I forgot to pop yesterday. Email! -- about where I'm at with YouPhonics, and where him and the gang are at with Real Ventures.
    • Mike Krass interviewed me for his Anti-Resume Blog! Two pieces were recorded, and one's already up at Mike Krass Dot Com. Check it! (There may even be a third one on the way...)
    • Caught up with my old roommate and Zac over lunch before rushing to the train station to get home!
  • Aug 13: Montreal, back to work
    • Well, not tonight. Going to chat with my brother for a bit, then head out to see my friends (many of whom just returned from Europe!) and spend time with Rebecca, ze birthday girl.
    • Work on Monday, Vancouver on Tuesday!
I'll try to post some actual thoughts this weekend. And a to-do list. :)

Comments [3]

Montreal Entrepreneurs: Win a free trip to Bitnorth!

Are you a Montreal-based entrepreneur?

Are you under 30?

Are you a fan of TED, Foocamp, and/or Ignite (and a little added dash of Fight Club)?

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If you answered yes to all of the above, YouPhonics and Startupifier have got something for you.

In the wake of our recent 30 Under 30 event, where we took a group out to a Just For Laughs show and a nightcap... and raised $300. Which is exactly enough money to send one awesome person to Bitnorth.

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How to enter: Answer this question -- "What can Bitnorth do for you, and/or how can you give Bitnorth back to the community?" -- in a...

Deadline: Friday, July 30, 5PM Eastern

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The winner will be decided on Friday, July 30 by a panel consisting of myself, Riku, and Alistair. We may take an extra day or two before we announce the winner, though...

Huzzah! Can't wait to hear from y'alls :)

Comments [9]

I've been neglecting this blog -- Jul. 9, 2010

Ye olde homework:

  1. Continue with strategy-planning -- I should have, at the very least, my recruitment processes and next steps, a dream-list of advisors and how to reach them, and an easy-to-implement marketing idea or two.
  2. Start preparing the tutorial video we'll be recording -- script it out so the flow is right, and rehearse it.
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Yeah, I know. Neglect neglect neglect. If this blog were my wife, it could have sued me by now. And taken half my stuff. Which would probably mean half of YouPhonics... Garry, Sachin? Don't get any ideas, okay?
 
Quick updates, as it's nearly 2AM, and I'm going out to my friends' DJ night before they leave on a 3-week European tour:
  • DONE with the strategy work. I have printouts of the next three months covered with Post-It notes. I know what I should be doing, on a 30,000 foot and 50,000 foot level, for the next three months. It feels awesome.
  • I've started planning Phase 2. Phase 0 (late-August 2009 to December 2009) could be dubbed "Assembling the Allies." Phase 1 (January 2010 to end-of-July 2010) would be "Birthing the Baby." Phase 2, which will be starting in mid-August (it needs a bit of setup before actual progress) will be all about "Crossing the Chasm" (thanks, Ian!).
  • I'm going to be home for a maximum of 10 days in August. Fuuuuuuuck. Throwing myself into a bloody cage match against my travel habits. I'd better come out victorious.
  • After one of my two last investment-talks today, I've finally started to draw up a list of common issues with my business, my philosophies, my business model, and my ask. Here are a few of them, in paragraph form:
Nobody likes to invest in the music business. So few people have won in the past, and wins have been smaller than they should be. Everybody that does like to invest in music is likely doing so already (see: Foundry holding both Topspin and Next Big Sound). The pool is way, way smaller.
 
This is something I'm just going to have to deal with if I continue to look for investment. If, however, I bootstrap and start making the revenues I need to break even, it will likely get a lot easier to convince the non-believers.
 
Investors truly hate single-Founder companies. I get it. Paul Graham says it's bad. You want to see a team working behind a product. You want to see that the Founder can inspire others.
 
My gut tells me that this desire for multiple-Founder companies lies in a heuristic, not a law. But it's become so prevalent that it's almost impossible to break free of. I've already shown that I have a compelling, inspiring vision. I've got an amazing team working behind me. In fact, my moral weakness (not feeling right asking someone to make the sacrifices I've been making this past 11 months) has become an amazing strength (a development and design team that I can scale up or down, as necessary)!
 
I truly, deeply believe that this multiple-Founder, in-house team approach is akin to hosting one's own web servers. Sure, you need it when you need it, but AWS or Rackspace are much more efficient when you're not a behemoth. This is something I'm not going to easily budge on.
 
(That said, I am now considering hiring a full-time, in-house bridge between me and my development family over at BNOTIONS. If this ends up being the road we travel, it's going to be because the right person -- for both sides -- bubbles up when he/she's needed. We're keeping our eyes open while powering on.)
 
Our business model needs more proving. I don't want to get too detailed about this, as it's kind of our competitive advantage. But there are assumptions that we're making that we need to further flesh out in customer development, or bringing on deep-industry advisors.
 
No arguments here. I believe in what we're doing, but some more external validation (and maybe even some letters of intent) would boost everyone's morale!
 
We're asking for too much money. We've been asking for $600K. We were looking at that for a 12-month burn, plus any extra runway we could get by making sales and applying for all applicable tax credits.
 
That's wayyyyy too much. And, after seeing firsthand what one-and-sometimes-more developers working full-time-ish can do, this can easily be cut. I was looking at way too much manpower, and looking at salaries that should be paid after Series A, not seed funding.
 
We've cut things by 25%. We're now looking at $150K for the year. This would pay two full-time salaries (me + tech lead), near-full-time contract development (scaling up and down as needed), a bit of design work, way more money than we'll need for conferences/travel for two (and guerrilla promotions at said conferences), high estimates for our server needs, a fair bit of legal work, and allows for potential computer upgrades if we make a minor sale.
 
Not perfect, but muuuuuuuuch better.
 
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Lessons learned:
  1. People will always critique. Triangulate the advice between multiple sources, and see how it fits with you.
  2. Sitting back and looking at the high-level stuff is so satisfying after months of near-gruntwork.
  3. I'm tired of writing and need to leave my house!
Weekend homework:
  1. Email the remaining SF people (see Post-It) and NYC people (also see Post-It, plus Jay Frank) about possibly meeting up when I'm in town.
  2. Invite friends! They've been neglected for too long.
  3. Start scripting the video.
  4. Start wireframing the partnered implementation we've started discussing...
(I don't necessarily plan on doing both 3 and 4. But at least one of 'em needs to get at least a bit of thought into it.)

Comments [3]



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