Sunday, March 30, 2008

We think we know, but we have no idea.

They say what we don't know won't hurt us. I say what we don't know will hurt us, but at least we know that we don't know. We can always learn. What we should fear is what we don't know that we don't know. The worst of all is we don't know that we don't know something, and on top of that, we don't know what it is. They say think outside the box. I say think inside the box; just assure we expand it. The box represents discipline and foundation. Just about everything in this world succed because of discipline and foundation. The universe is a box, and we live inside it. They say knowledge is power. I say knowledge is danger. When we don't know, we go obliviously; we learn as we go; we don't know what to expect; we don't make up our mind; we have fun along the way. When we know, we procrastinate; we brag; we cut corners; we get overconfident; we don't execute.

Saturday, March 29, 2008

Early startups should bootstrap even with outside funding

Regardless if you're bootstrapping, or get outside funding, an early startup should always bootstrap. Bootstrap to me is to spend every dollar bill like it was your last. Now, when you start a startup, you won't have time to cook (good way to save money, but not good way to save time), instead you can spend that time coding. Going to a restaurant is out of the window (way too expensive). The best way to save money, and save time is to buy pre-cooked food. I think noodle is the best in that case. I love noodles; just throw it in the microwave for 2 minutes, and it's ready. You can even eat it while you're coding. Trust me I've experienced it before. Noddle will save you time and money.

Thursday, March 27, 2008

The time is now.

After months of working on this prototype, we finally have something to show for. It's been an on and off project; I'm at Harvard; my soul mate works full-time as one of the lead engineers at Depaul University. After this semester, I'm taking a leave of absence from school, and he'll quit his job to work full time on this startup. It might not be the best prototype, but it's a starting point, we promise we will build from it. http://www.woozai.com:8080/woozai/collab.swf

Wednesday, March 26, 2008

We think we know, but we have no idea.

They say what we don't know won't hurt us. I say what we don't know will hurt us, but at least we know that we don't know. We can always learn. What we should fear is what we don't know that we don't know. The worst of all is we don't know that we don't know something, and on top of that, we don't know what it is. They say think outside the box. I say think inside the box; just assure we expand it. The box represents discipline and foundation. Just about everything in this world succed because of discipline and foundation. The universe is a box, and we live inside it. They say knowledge is power. I say knowledge is danger. When we don't know, we go obliviously; we learn as we go; we don't know what to expect; we don't make up our mind; we have fun along the way. When we know, we procrastinate; we brag; we cut corners; we get overconfident; we don't execute.

Tuesday, March 25, 2008

There's room for one more startup.

When starting a startup, we shouldn't worry about if there's room in a particular market or not. If we're solving a problem, there's always room. Who would have thought google would become the biggest software company in the world. Software moves to the web, and google is the leader in that world. Almost everyone uses goog applications in one way or another. When our startup is in the idea stage, many companies can emerge into our market, and we wouldn't have time to track all of them down. If we have a competitive advantage, there's always room. We don't start a startup to be 20% better than the competitors; we start a startup to be 20 times better than the competitors. When goog started, there were excite, lycos, aliweb, altavista, webcrawler..., but goog came in and kick ass. If we have to know something about our market, make sure we know if the market is new, or declining. Trust me, if we're solving a problem, and we have competitive advantage, there's plenty of room.

Monday, March 24, 2008

Startups high pre-money valuation is a killer

Startups like to raise fund at a high pre-money valuation. It's understandable; founders want to give up little % of their company for a lot of money. But that could be very dangerous, even fatal for startups/founders. When the company is new and unproven, it's better to raise capital at a low pre-money valuation. Founders know when the company is a few thousand line of code, or barely bringing revenue, it shouldn't be valued as high, but they raise the valuation bar anyway. Let's say the founder's wish come true, and the company gets acquired, which is the new business model for most startups now these days. Investors will get the money they invested and more, before founders get anything. Sometimes founders get nothing. It's never about founders get 45%, investors get 65% of the company's stocks. Investors always want to get their investment back, and possibly more... If taking 65% is higher than taking 10X their investment, they'll take 65%; if taking 10X their investment is higher than taking 65%, they'll take 10X their investment. Investors get paid before founders. In an acquisition, the higher the pre-money valuation is, the more likely investors will take all, if founders don't sell as high as their company pre-money valuation. Now days, before a startup gets out of beta phase, it's already valued at millions. Facebook barely bringing $200 million in revenue is valued at $15 billion. Even Mark Zuckerberg doesn't think his company worth that much. Digg.com barely has a business model, is valued at $200-$300 million. What happen to the good old fashion of buying low to sell high? Startups need to buy investor's money at a low pre-money valuation to exit the company high to make a profit.